NEW YORK, NY.- Steven Kasher Gallery presents Sandra Weiner: New York Kids, 1940-1948. The exhibition features over 20 rare vintage black and white prints, many exhibited for the first time. Weiners photographs are celebrated for their perceptive depiction of everyday life in New York City's close-knit neighborhoods of the 1940s. Her photographs of children at play create a palpable sense of place. Weiners photographs reveal random moments of grace, transforming social documentation into a broadly humanist mode of street photography. Her sensitive and subtle renderings of neighborhood atmosphere make her photographs of New York heartwarming. Also on view is the exhibition Dan Weiner: Vintage New York, 1940-1959. This is the first time that exhibitions of the husband and wife photographers have been on view concurrently.
Weiner focused on New Yorks poorer children, possibly because she identified with them but more so because she wanted to tell a story of perseverance and hope. Weiners work highlighted social concerns of the era, however she focused her lens specifically on the citys youngest denizens. For Weiner, children surviving the rough-and-tumble city streets became a symbol of fortitude. She strolled the citys streets or posted at the edge of vacant lots where children play and caught them absorbed in their own worlds. Included in the exhibition is an extended essay in which Weiner followed a young boy named Mickey through his daily life in the tenements of East 26th Street. This is Weiners work at its most penetrating. Through this extended study, defining aspects of the boys life are revealed. The subtle details that emerge in these images give us a clear sense of the familys hardship. However the young boys palatable joy and energy shines through, triumphing over his circumstances.
In the early 1940s, Sandra Smith joined Paul Strand and her future husband Dan Weiner as a member of the Photo League, a group of socially minded photographers. She was especially influenced by Walker Evans, Henri Cartier-Bresson and Helen Levitt and set out to capture the daily drama on the sidewalks and stoops of the citys tenements.
It was through her experiences with the Photo League that Weiner was exposed to other female photographers. The League was a rare entity at the time. Although there are no official records, there were thought to be at least 100 women who were closely involved, if not full members. Among them were Lisette Model, who later taught Diane Arbus and Larry Fink, and Berenice Abbott. Being a photographer allowed Weiner the opportunity to place herself within the primarily male field of art. The democratic nature of the Photo League gave Weiner the ability to have an imprint and make a difference.
Sandra Weiner (1921-2014) was born in the town of Drohiczan, Poland and immigrated to the United States in 1928. She met the photographer Dan Weiner in 1940 and took photography courses from him as well as from Paul Strand at the Photo League. She and Weiner were married in 1942. In 1947 she began working with her husband on his freelance assignments for Fortune, LIFE, Sports Illustrated, Harper's Bazaar, and other publications. They continued collaborating until his death in in 1959. Sandra Weiner worked as one of the earliest picture editors for Sports Illustrated Magazine. Weiner published four childrens books, illustrated with her own photographs, It's Wings That Make Birds Fly (1968), Small Hands, Big Hands (1970), They Call Me Jack (1973), and I Want to be a Fisherman (1977). Weiner taught photography at New York University and at the City University of New York. Her work has been exhibited at the Akron Museum of Art and the Port Washington Public Library.