I am a social painter or photographer. . . .
I find difficulty in making distinctions between photography and painting. Both are pictures.
Ben Shahn


A surge in radical political movements, efforts at social reform, and attempts by diverse populations to establish a national identity contributed to the upheaval that engulfed the United States during the Depression. Many artists who were radicalized by the events of the day became activists and sought work on New Deal relief programs. Among them was Ben Shahn (1898–1969), an artist whose socialist Jewish family had fled czarist Russia in 1906 and settled in Brooklyn.

In the early 1930s, Shahn abandoned his interest in European modern art, creating instead incisive realist images, depicting what he called the "social view," that addressed the issues dominating public debate. The development of Shahn’s social-realist vision was infused by his commitment to leftist politics and his interest in the cultural force of mass media during the 1930s. Shahn first became interested in photography at a time when rotogravure reproductions of photographs in newspapers and magazines served as essential source material for his polemic paintings and satiric caricatures. News photographs inspired Shahn to imbue such works as his famous gouache series The Passion of Sacco–Vanzetti as well as The Mooney Case with a quality of reportage that was favorably noted by many of his contemporaries. Although he became widely known at this time as a painter, muralist, and graphic artist, he was also making formidable photographs.

Between 1932 and 1935, Shahn joined the vanguard of the social-documentary movement, making street photographs that defined life in New York City through the prosaic activities and expressive gestures of ordinary people. In addition to photographing activity on the sidewalks of lower and midtown Manhattan, he documented demonstrations for expanded work-relief programs and protest marches against social injustice in and around Union Square and City Hall. In preparation for one of his earliest murals, he also photographed inmates and prison officials at Blackwell’s Island Penitentiary and the New York City Reformatory. All of Shahn’s New York photographs address such topical issues as unemployment, poverty, immigration, and social reform and their connection to race and class.

Shahn used a handheld 35-millimeter Leica camera. This tiny, lightweight apparatus allowed him to move unobtrusively through the crowded immigrant neighborhoods of New York City, documenting daily life. He oriented his camera horizontally and tended to photograph at eye level and at fairly close range, thereby placing the viewer in the midst of the scene. He found that by affixing to his camera a miniature periscope-style attachment known as an angle viewfinder, he could capture passersby unaware. The artist could thus present his subjects "immersed in a private world," as Bernarda Bryson Shahn observed. This "arresting of unconscious mood," she affirmed, constituted "one of the distinguishing marks of all of Shahn’s photographic work."

Compelling examples of social-realist art in their own right, Shahn’s New York photographs also inspired many of his most important paintings, murals, and drawings. Ben Shahn’s New York explores how the artist’s earliest photographs provided him with a fundamental means of interpreting urban life in modern times and shaped a highly influential documentary aesthetic that would influence and characterize his work for decades.

Deborah Martin Kao
Richard L. Menschel Curator of Photography, Fogg Art Museum, Harvard University Art Museums
Laura Katzman
Assistant Professor of Art and Director of the Museum Studies Program, Randolph-Macon Woman’s College
Jenna Webster
Curatorial Assistant, Department of Photographs, Fogg Art Museum, Harvard University Art Museums

Untitled (East Twelfth Street, New York City), 1932-35, Fogg Art Museum, gift of Bernarda Bryson Shahn

Ben Shahn’s New York: The Photography of Modern Times was organized by the Fogg Art Museum, Harvard University Art Museums, Cambridge, Massachusetts. The exhibition has been made possible in part by a major grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities, a federal agency dedicated to expanding American understanding of history and culture. Its presentation at the Grey Art Gallery is made possible by The Horace W. Goldsmith Foundation and the Abby Weed Grey Trust, and realized with the special cooperation of Duggal Color Projects Inc.