Recently discovered work of Vivian Maier on view at Steven Kasher Gallery in New York
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Recently discovered work of Vivian Maier on view at Steven Kasher Gallery in New York
Untitled (Vivian Maier’s Shadow on Shoreline),ca. Late 1960s. Photo: Courtesy of Steven Kasher Gallery, New York.



NEW YORK, NY.- Steven Kasher Gallery again presents the recently discovered work of Vivian Maier. Vivian Maier: Unseen Images features 35 black and white prints. When Maier died in 2009, she left behind more than 120,000 negatives and 2,000 undeveloped rolls of film. Last year, a couple hundred of these rolls, shot in the 1960s and 1970s, were finally developed. A selection of these images make their debut in this exhibition.

Maier, whose day job was as a nanny, made over 100,000 distinctive street photographs, mostly in New York City and Chicago. What is known about Ms. Maier is that she was born in New York in 1926, lived in France (her mother was French) and returned to New York in 1951. Five years later, she moved to Chicago, where she worked for about 40 years as a nanny, principally for families in the North Shore suburbs. On her days off she wandered the streets of New York and Chicago, most often with a Rolleiflex camera. She did not share her pictures with others. Many of them she never saw herself: she left behind hundreds of undeveloped rolls.

A large collection, including 12,000 negatives and 70 homemade movies, is in the hands of Jeff Goldstein and his collaborators at Vivian Maier Prints. The first boxful of Maier’s negatives was acquired for $400 at an auction in 2007. They had been in a commercial storage locker whose contents were seized for non-payment. After being posted on Flickr they received accolades, and have been featured in numerous exhibitions and publications worldwide.

“The images are wonderful, with a keen but unvarnished empathy for their subjects, who include children, women, the indigent and the elderly…they may add to the history of 20th-century street photography by summing it up with an almost encyclopedic thoroughness, veering close to just about every well-known photographer you can think of, including Weegee, Robert Frank and Richard Avedon, and then sliding off in another direction. Yet they maintain a distinctive element of calm, a clarity of composition and a gentleness characterized by a lack of sudden movement or extreme emotion.” - Roberta Smith, New York Times, Art in Review, January 19, 2012










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