Beschreibung
42nd Street, 1979 contains Langdon Clays 1979 photos of a quintessential strip of 42nd Street near New Yorks Times Square, showing its gritty neon charm before it became the more Disney/Las Vegas hub for theater concoctions that we know today. Clay recalls the drab and dusty mood in New York City at the end of the 1970s: the once-exciting political sea change wrought by the Vietnam War and the Haight Ashbury drug experiment had given way to a sense of apathy, intensified by the aftermath of an oil crisis and the lingering Cold War. The particular stretch of 42nd Street between 7th and 8th Avenues had now shifted from the glorious home of gilded movie palaces of the 1940s to the shadowy site of porn theaters which many saw as the areas ruin. Yet here real-estate moguls saw potential to transform this heart of Manhattan into a mecca of tourism, framed by skyscrapers and shaped by commerce and fast pleasures. It was with this coming change written on every wall that I sought to record for posterity that famous block between 7th and 8th Avenues, says Clay, My only regret is that I didnt do the south side of the street.
Autorenportrait
Born in New York City in 1949, Langdon Clay was raised in New Jersey and Vermont and attended school in New Hampshire and Boston. Clay moved to New York in 1971 and spent the next sixteen years photographing there, throughout the US and in Europe for various magazines and books. In 1987 he moved to Mississippi where he has since lived and worked with his wife photographer Maude Schuyler Clay and their three children. Clay's work is held in the Victoria and Albert Museum in London and the Bibliothèque nationale de France in Paris. Steidl published Clay's Cars. New York City, 1974-1976 in 2016.