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Reissue of an acclaimed collection of images from photographer W.
Eugene Smith's time in a New York City loft among jazz musicians.
In 1957, Eugene Smith walked away from his longtime job at Life and
the home he shared with his wife and four children to move into a
dilapidated, five-story loft building at 821 Sixth Avenue in New
York City's wholesale flower district. The loft was the late-night
haunt of musicians, including some of the biggest names in
jazz-Charles Mingus, Zoot Sims, Bill Evans, and Thelonious Monk
among them. Here, from 1957 to 1965, he made nearly 40,000
photographs and approximately 4,000 hours of recordings of
musicians. Smith found solace in the chaotic, somnambulistic world
of the loft and its artists, and he turned his documentary impulses
away from work on his major Pittsburg photo essay and toward his
new surroundings. Smith's Jazz Loft Project has been legendary in
the worlds of art, photography, and music for more than forty
years, but until the publication of this book, no one had seen his
extraordinary photographs or read any of the firsthand accounts of
those who were there and lived to tell the tales.
New edition of poignant selected images from famed Life
photographer W. Eugene Smith’s Pittsburgh project. In
1955, having just resigned from his high-profile but stormy career
with Life Magazine, W. Eugene Smith was commissioned to spend three
weeks in Pittsburgh and produce one hundred photographs for noted
journalist and author Stefan Lorant’s book commemorating the
city’s bicentennial. Smith ended up staying a year,
compiling twenty thousand images for what would be the most
ambitious photographic essay of his life. But only a fragment
of this work was ever seen, despite Smith's lifelong conviction
that it was his greatest collection of photographs. In
2001, Sam Stephenson published for the first time an assemblage of
the core images from this project, selections that Smith asserted
were the “synthesis of the whole,” presenting not only a
portrayal of Pittsburgh but of postwar America. This new
edition, updated with a foreword by the poet Ross Gay, offers
a fresh vision of Smith's masterpiece.
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