Ruth Orkin American, 1921-1985

Works
Biography
Ruth Orkin (1921-1985) grew up in Hollywood in the heyday of the 1920s and 1930s. At the age of 10, she received her first camera, a 39 cent Univex.  At 17 years old she took a monumental bicycle trip across the United States, from Los Angeles to New York City, to see the 1939 World’s Fair, and she photographed along the way.
 
Orkin moved to New York in 1943, where she worked as a nightclub photographer and shot baby pictures by day to buy her first professional camera. She worked for all the major magazines in 1940s, and also went to Tanglewood during the summers to shoot rehearsals. She photographed many of the worlds’ great musicians including Leonard Bernstein, Isaac Stern, Aaron Copland, Jascha Heifitz and Serge Koussevitzky.
 
In 1951, Orkin  went to Italy, and it was in Florence where she met Nina Lee Craig, an art student and fellow American, who became the subject of  American Girl in Italy. The photograph was part of a series originally titled Don’t Be Afraid to Travel Alone about what women encountered traveling alone in Europe after the war.
 
On her return to New York, Orkin married the photographer and filmmaker Morris Engel. Together they produced two feature films, including the classic Little Fugitive which was nominated for an Academy Award in 1953. From their New York apartment overlooking Central Park, Orkin photographed marathons, parades, concerts, demonstrations, and the changing seasons. These photographs were the subject of two widely acclaimed books, A World Through My Window and More Pictures From My Window
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