NEW YORK, NY.- CLAMP is presenting Young & Old, the gallerys first solo exhibition devoted to the late New York photographer Arlene Gottfried (19502017). Drawn from the artists archive, Young & Old brings together portraits that treat age not as a fixed category, but something elasticwhere youth can carry striking wisdom and advanced age can still be full of play.
In Gottfrieds Westbeth studio, decades of work were stored in archival portfolio boxes. One was simply labeled Young & Old. The photographs found inside were portraits of children and people of advanced yearssometimes together in the same frame. But they also reflected Gottfrieds curiosity about specific individuals and their embodiment of youthfulness and maturity.
Gottfrieds photographs are often described as acts of encounterimages made not from distance but proximity and trust. As she put it: My photographs were like souvenirs; I liked to collect moments and remembrances. Her portraits offer those moments as shared space: people meeting the camera head-on, asserting style, vulnerability, humor, and self-possession in equal measure.
Young & Old sits within the broader arc of Gottfrieds practice, increasingly recognized as essential to the visual history of late 20th-century New York. A recent solo exhibition at The New York HistoricalPicture Stories: Photographs by Arlene Gottfriedhighlighted her ability to capture the citys communities with candor and empathy. CLAMPs exhibition extends that legacy through a resonant theme, emphasizing the artists sensitivity to the ways time registerson faces, in posture, in the friction between public performance and private interiority.
Over the course of her career, Gottfried published five booksThe Eternal Light (1999), Midnight (2003), Sometimes Overwhelming (2008), Bacalaitos & Fireworks (2011), and Mommie (2015). Together the publications form a portrait of New Yorks social worlds and the photographers own life moving through them.
The artists work is represented in many prestigious public collections, including the New York Historical, Brooklyn Museum, New York Public Library, Virginia Museum of Fine Arts, North Carolina Museum of Art, Southeast Museum of Photography, Tang Teaching Museum and Art Gallery at Skidmore College, Haverford College, Lehigh University, Bibliothèque nationale de France, Maison Européenne de la Photographie, Maison Valdôtaine de la Photographie di Aosta, Musée Arthur Batut, and Museum Folkwang, among others.