The decades between the 1930s and 1970s were some of the most important periods in the history of twentieth-century photography. Transformative events such as the Great Depression, World War II, and the civil rights movement changed the course of history—and the lives of millions—forever.
Capturing the Moment celebrates a major gift of over five hundred photographs from collectors Marie Brenner and Ernest Pomerantz and features approximately seventy primarily black-and-white photographs and a selection of films. The exhibition will be divided into three sections: people; war and conflict; and landscapes (rural and urban). It will explore key practices such as straight, street, documentary, and photojournalist photography and highlight the technological advancements, socio-political upheavals, and cultural influences that motivated the era’s artistic innovation.
For example, the 1924 invention of the lightweight, portable Leica 35mm camera afforded photographers the flexibility to enter any landscape and to document major wars and conflicts. They could capture the “decisive moment”—the split second that reveals a subject’s larger truth—a concept conceived by the great French photographer Henri Cartier-Bresson. Other artists in the exhibition include Dmitri Baltermants, Ilse Bing, Paul Caponigro, W.E. Dassonville, Mike Disfarmer, Leonard Freed, Danny Lyon, Joel Meyerowitz, Arthur Rothstein, Stephen Shore, and Louis Clyde Stoumen.
Photography—and its power to tell stories that appear truthful—continue to be ever present in our lives. In the five decades covered in Capturing the Moment, photography transformed the way we see the world and the way we see ourselves. The exhibition will be complemented by lectures, films, and workshops.