Joel Meyerowitz American, b. 6/3/1938
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30 × 40 in / 76 × 101 cm
Umbrella edition of 25
48 × 60 in / 121 × 152 cm
Edition of 5
60 x 75 in / 152.4 x 190.5 cm
Edition of 3
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The photograph New York 1968 fixes a fleeting intersection of fantasy and grit on a Lower East Side corner.
A motorbike idles at the curb, its rider masked and costumed like an escapee from a sideshow, while two boys in striped shirts linger nearby, caught between fascination and wariness.
Behind them, boxy sedans and a distant bus mark the ordinary rhythm of the city, indifferent to this small spectacle. On the right, a bridal gown glows in a shop window, its tulle and satin promising romance at odds with the litter-strewn gutter below.
Meyerowitz builds the scene on these collisions: childhood and adulthood, performance and routine, dream and decay. The masked rider leans toward the boy with a gesture that could be playful or menacing, yet the child’s body stays taut, ready to bolt.
The second boy, half-hidden by the lamppost, hangs back as if embodying hesitation itself. Above them, a forest of signs—“DO NOT ENTER,” “MANHATTAN BR”—tries to impose order on a corner already slipping into disorder.
Grainy black and white compresses 1960s New York into one charged contradiction: a mannequin-bride reigns in a glowing vitrine while real lives unfold on cracked pavement a few feet away.
Depth pulls the eye down receding streets and stacked fire escapes, hinting that such odd encounters occur on every block.
The shutter holds the city mid-breath, turning a passing moment into a tense, comic, and faintly melancholic tableau—a reminder that the street’s everyday theater is stranger than anything staged indoors.