Photographer - Steven Kasher : “Positively 4th Street,” 1961
Anything worth thinking about is worth singing about.
Bob Dylan, The Essential Interviews

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Photographer - Steven Kasher : “Positively 4th Street,” 1961
Anything worth thinking about is worth singing about.
Bob Dylan, The Essential Interviews
A Black Panther Party member prepares bags of food for distribution at the Black Panther Community Survival Conference, 1972. Photo credit: Steven Kasher Gallery — in Oakland, California.
Gottfried Jäger, Lochblendenstruktur (Pinhole Structure)
(Camera obscura work, 3.8.14 C 2.5) , 1967/2015
Courtesy Steven Kasher Gallery, New York
Resurrection City, 1968. New York
Cuban Woman with Cigarette, 1968. Shawn Walker/Courtesy of Steven Kasher Gallery.
Shawn Walker, Cultural Anthropologist
A visit with the photographer and activist, whose first solo retrospective is now on exhibit at Steven Kasher Gallery. By Roslyn Bernstein
https://www.guernicamag.com/shawn-walker-cultural-anthropologist/
Keyezua in 'Refraction: New Photography of Africa and its Diaspora' at Steven Kasher Gallery
Angolan artist Keyezua’s ‘Fortia’ series (translated as ‘Strength’) features female figures in handmade masks and dramatic red gowns posing in an eroded landscape outside Luanda. Citing her father’s disability and early death, the artist aims to explore how her own identity developed as a young woman experiencing loss. (In ‘Refraction: New Photography of Africa and its Diaspora’ at Steven Kasher Gallery in Chelsea through June 2nd). Keyezua, Fortia (1), giclée print on Hanhemuhle paper, printed 2018, 35 ½ x 23 ¾ in, 2017.
Martha Cooper at Steven Kasher Gallery
Chelsea’s skyline – dotted with construction cranes – is a constant reminder of how much the neighborhood and city is transforming; for an even more eye-popping view of how much the city has changed, visit legendary street photographer Martha Cooper’s photos at Steven Kasher Gallery from the 80s. Here, Cooper captures a two-car painting by Duster Lizzie that demonstrates how transgressive ambition changed the landscape of New York. (At Steven Kasher Gallery in Chelsea through June 3rd). Martha Cooper, Two Whole Cars in Straight Letters and Wild Style by Duster Lizzie, Bronx, NY, 1982, archival pigment print, 30 x 40 inches, printed 2017.
Thomas Roma is a fantastic photographer who likes to use writing alongside his artwork. His son, Giancarlo T. Roma, writes for some of his photo books.
His exhibition, Plato’s Dogs, opens November 3rd in the Steven Kasher Gallery.