The Life and Work of Sid Grossman

The Life and Work of Sid Grossman

Sid Grossman

By Keith Davis

 

Sid Grossman (1913–55) and his work were largely forgotten after his untimely death in 1955. Labeled as a communist by the FBI after the war, his hard-earned reputation as a free-thinking photographer quickly fell into oblivion for the rest of the century and beyond. Grossman was one of the founders of the famous New York Photo League and a notoriously demanding and capricious teacher who always challenged his students.

 

This monograph, the first comprehensive survey of Grossman’s life and work, contains more than 150 photographs that demonstrate Grossman’s enduring talent. The images range from his early social documentary of the late 1930s to the more personal, dynamic street photography of the late 1940s, as well as later experiments with abstraction in both black and white and color. It features an essay by renowned historian Keith F. Davis, and concludes with excerpted transcripts from recordings of a course Grossman taught in 1950.

 

Hardbound
Pages: 256
Size: 10.2 x 10.5 x 1 inches
Publisher: Steidl/Howard Greenberg Library
Publication Date: November 2016

 

Available from the gallery for $35