News and Announcements | September 16, 2022

Guided Tour “Isaac Diggs & Edward Hillel: Time in Harlem” Exhibit – Wed 9/28

Wall of pictures from "Isaac Diggs and Edward Hillel: Time in Harlem" at Hunter East Harlem Gallery

Credit: Photography by Argenis Apolinario.

Please join us on Wednesday September 28, 2:30-3:30pm to explore the exhibition “Isaac Diggs & Edward Hillel: Time in Harlem,” which just opened in Hunter East Harlem Gallery. Director and Curator Arden Sherman will lead a guided tour of the exhibition for Hunter faculty and staff. Hunter East Harlem Gallery is located on the ground floor of the Silberman School of Social Work at 119th Street and 3rd Avenue.

RSVP is appreciated, but not required to attend the event. 

About “Isaac Diggs & Edward Hillel: Time in Harlem”

“Two men with a camera, thoughtfully observing the visual cacophony of one major thoroughfare and the complicated interplay of its history, its present, and the certainty of change, have laid the groundwork for a dialogue and a vision that reaches farther than human eyes can see.” — Vicki Goldberg, 125th: Time in Harlem by Isaac Diggs & Edward Hillel (IDEH, 2014).

From 2008-2011, Isaac Diggs & Edward Hillel made photographs of one of the most iconic streets in New York City: 125th Street. Working collaboratively on film with a 4×5 field camera, the two artists meticulously captured the street during a tumultuous time in NYC after the financial crisis.  The images document Harlem when the neighborhood was being sanctioned for rezoning by Mayor Mike Bloomberg and swallowed up by the ever-expanding Columbia University campus, forever changing this “main street” in profound and long lasting ways. The exhibition at Hunter East Harlem Gallery features a selection of the duo’s large-format photographs from their comprehensive 2014 publication, 125th: Time in Harlem. The exhibition re-contextualizes the book into the three-dimensional space of a gallery, showcasing a wall mural comprised of the entirety of their book in sequence as well as archives from the project itself. Through intentional and considered image-making, the duo confronts the audience with the challenges of urban flux, gentrification, the loss of cultural memory, the production of space and the preservation of community.

The exhibition coincides with the release of Hunter East Harlem Gallery’s publication, 125th Street: Photography in Harlem (Hirmer Verlag, 2022), which features many of Diggs & Hillel’s images as well as dozens of other artists who have documented the historic thoroughfare.

This exhibition is curated by Arden Sherman. Generous support has been provided by the Hunter College Department of Art and Art History, the Anna-Maria and Stephen Kellen Foundation, and the Hunter College Advanced Certificate in Curatorial Studies Program.

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