REVIEWS/Helen A. Harrison Fred Stein’s black-and-white photographs
deal with remembrance. Mr. Stein fled Nazi Germany – first to Paris
in 1933 and then, in 1941, to New York. He viewed both cities with
an outsider’s fascination and curiosity, as well as a deeply humanistic
interest in urban life. Like all great street photographers, he interpreted
as he observed.
Wartime New York reflects many of Paris’
qualities – the grittiness, the paradoxical sense of community and
isolation in a city. The children and the old people look remarkably
similar; perhaps Mr. Stein was attracted to the same types in both
cities. The youngsters sharing a snack in “Friends, New York, 1943”
are all the more touching for being generic. Shelter Rock Art Gallery, 48 Shelter Rock Road, Manhasset. Through Jan. 27 |