A retrospective of Dawoud Bey’s career over the last 40 years, “An American Project” features around 80 works that represent the renowned photographer’s focus on capturing African American history, underrepresented communities, and themes of identity. Organized with the help of the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art and New York’s Whitney Museum of American Art, the exhibition includes works from Bey’s eight major series, spanning back to his earliest street portraits taken in Harlem during the 1970s. In the years since, the photographer has become known for his work on projects like “The Birmingham Project,” a series of portraits of high schoolers across America entitled “Class Pictures, and “Night Coming Tenderly, Black,” which references the Underground Railroad.
MORE IN CITY
Designed by the film director Wes Anderson, Bar Luce is a restaurant that evokes the atmosphere of a typical Milanese café.
Whitewaller New York is highlighting EN Japanese Brasserie—a lively West Village bar, restaurant, and music bar.
First opened in 1863, Grand Hotel et de Milan represents comfort and sophistication.
Named for Abraham Cruzvillegas's essay reminding us that everything is subject to evolution, "The Willfulness of Objects" features a series of works from The Bass's collection.
“Presence: The Photography Collection of Judy Glickman Lauder”
The collection of Judy Glickman Lauder at the Norton Museum of Art lends itself to a sweeping narrative of 20th-century photography.
In Green’s debut solo show at AND NOW, viewers will be taken on a journey through the subconscious.
SUBSCRIBE TO MAGAZINE
THE SPRING ARTIST ISSUE
2023
Subscribe
SUBSCRIBE TO NEWSLETTER
Go inside the worlds of Art, Fashion, Design and Lifestyle.