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B&H Photography Podcast

Somewhere Between Love and Obsession - The Photography of Stanley Greenberg

B&H Photography Podcast

Jill Waterman

Podcast, Photography, Arts, Visual Arts, Bh, Photo

4.62K Ratings

🗓️ 14 April 2022

⏱️ 45 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

It has been a hope of ours for some time to speak with photographer Stanley Greenberg and, considering he’s made three books in the past three years, there is a lot to talk about. Greenberg is known for his large-scale series on subjects like the New York City reservoir and water systems, on giant particle accelerators, telescopes, and dams. His recent projects, however, are an interesting blend of urban exploration and 19th-Century history. We speak briefly about his 2019 book, CODEX New York, and the typologies he identified walking the whole of Manhattan, but we concentrate our conversation on his work, Springs and Wells - Manhattan and the Bronx, and after a break, we discuss his latest book Olmsted Trees.

Greenberg, who started his professional life working in city government, is a Guggenheim fellow and no stranger to prestigious grants and commissions. He’s also no stranger to libraries and the research that informs his work. It was during a research visit to the New York Historical Society that he came across a book written and photographed primarily in the 1890s. The Springs and Wells of Manhattan and the Bronx (1938) is a survey made by James Reuel Smith, who located, described, and photographed hundreds of water sources throughout New York City, often traveling by bicycle. Greenberg commented: “My first response was that this had to have been done by a crazy person. [But] five minutes later, I knew I was going to map out all of his sites and photograph what was there now.” And this is what he did, often also by bicycle. His 2021 book blends the work of Smith with his own contemporary photos from the same locations.

In the second half of the podcast, we discuss the project Olmsted Trees, which Greenberg photographed with a Hasselblad medium format digital camera after using Sony and Leica M cameras for CODEX and Springs and Wells and 4x5 film cameras in previous work. For this series, he photographed the oldest trees of the great public parks designed by Frederick Law Olmsted. These images are a study in black-and-white, in texture and form, almost portraits, that ask you to soak up the power of the trees themselves and consider the genius of the parks’ design. Join us for this enjoyable conversation and find more of Greenberg’s work here.

Guest: Stanley Greenberg

Above photograph © James Reuel Smith. Courtesy of Stanley Greenberg

https://www.bhphotovideo.com/explora/podcasts

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

You're listening to the B&H Photography Podcast.

0:04.1

For over 40 years, B&H has been the professional source for photography, video, audio, and

0:09.0

more.

0:10.0

For your favorite gear, news, and reviews, visit us at bnh.com or download the B&H app to

0:15.5

your iPhone or Android device.

0:17.7

Now here's your host, Alan White.

0:22.2

Greetings and welcome to the B&H Photography Podcast.

0:25.2

My name is Alan White, and today, John Harrison, I welcome photography Stanley Greenberg to

0:29.7

the show.

0:30.7

Stanley Greenberg has a way of getting into places that most of us don't even know about

0:34.6

late-alone gain access to.

0:37.1

But curiosity and persistence are among the attributes that enabled him to capture powerful

0:41.8

photographs of projects as grand as the New York City Waterwork System and the world's

0:46.4

great telescopes.

0:47.9

Check out the links to his website in our show notes so you can see exactly what Stanley

0:51.5

has been up to going back to the early 1990s.

0:54.5

But today, we're going to be speaking about two of his most recent books, Springs and

0:58.1

Wells in Manhattan and the Bronx, from 2021, and is soon to be released, Olmsted Trees.

1:04.7

Springs and Wells in Manhattan and the Bronx is a book that retraces requests to find 160

1:09.6

drinking wells located around Manhattan and the Bronx, and the subjects of his new book

1:14.4

are the original trees planted in the great parks designed by Frederick Law Olmsted.

1:19.8

Before we get into our conversation, let's note a few of Stanley's bonafitus.

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