Jul 30, 2013
Jul 30, 2013

New York at Night

New York at Night

1936

Ilse Bing

(American, 1899–1998)

Gelatin silver print

Image: 18.9 x 28.3 cm (7 7/16 x 11 1/8 in.); Mounted: 35.7 x 41.8 cm (14 1/16 x 16 7/16 in.); Paper: 18.9 x 28.3 cm (7 7/16 x 11 1/8 in.); Matted: 40.6 x 50.8 cm (16 x 20 in.)

Gift of George Stephanopoulos 2012.393

Location

Description

In 1936 one of Ilse Bing’s patrons arranged for her to spend almost two months in New York City. In this daytime view of Manhattan’s skyscrapers shot from an elevated train platform, a self-portrait is hidden in the glass cover of the coin-operated scale. Bing also photographed the skyline by night, declaring the city’s lighting “phosphorescent.” The scale of the metropolis made her feel, she recalled, like “an atom wandering in the universe.” Bing and her work were enthusiastically received there. She had a solo exhibition of her photographs and met with magazine officials at Fortune, Time, and Life, which was then still in the conceptual stages. Despite possible employment, she returned to Paris to be with her fiancé, pianist and musicologist Konrad Wolff.

See also
Department: 
Photography
Type of artwork: 
Photograph

Contact us

The information about this object, including provenance, may not be currently accurate. If you notice a mistake or have additional information about this object, please email collectionsdata@clevelandart.org.

To request more information about this object, study images, or bibliography, contact the Ingalls Library Reference Desk.

All images and data available through Open Access can be downloaded for free. For images not available through Open Access, a detail image, or any image with a color bar, request a digital file from Image Services.