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All Walks of Life The
Phatory is pleased to announce an exhibition of the work of New York street photographer and
video maker Richard Sandler. It will be open July 21 - 31, and resumes September 8 - 25, 2005.
An artist's reception will be held July 21, from 7 – 9:00 P.M.
Like the streets he has been photographing for thirty years Richard Sandler's photographs
are blunt and to the point and lyrical and poetic. The product of a daily wandering through the
streets of New York for so many years, his work simultaneously documents, transforms, celebrates,
and criticizes the city's street level vibrancy. Emphasizing Sandler's photographs from the 1980s,
the exhibit looks back on a city that was still rebounding from the brink of collapse yet still
resonated the extraordinary explosion of creativity in art and life of that period.
In 1992 Sandler expanded his work into video, first making "The Gods of Times Square," (1999) a
prize-winning documentation of the street religious life at one of the city's traditional centers
of energy. As part of the Phatory exhibition, there will be a continuous projection of a second video,
Brave New York (2004), which chronicles twelve years of the Lower East Side's change and honors those
who have struggled to retain the neighborhood's original character in the face of rampant gentrification.
Whitmanesque in its scope, Sandler's photographs and videos are marked by an intense involvement
in that neighborhood and the city as a whole and a deep acceptance of its many perspectives. He writes
of the photographic tradition of which he is a part: street photographers are the eyes of the city.
We wander around town in all weather and seasons looking for light, courting chance. We take the pulse
of the times, feasting on humorous juxtapositions and stark contrasts. We are a complex mix of amateur
anthropologist, historian, diarist and athlete.
Sandler studied briefly with New York street photographer Garry Winogrand. His work is included in
the collections of The Brooklyn Museum, the Houston Museum of Fine Arts, and the New York Public Library
and he has received two photography fellowships from the New York Foundation for the Arts. His video work
has won awards at Chicago Underground Film Festival, the Rotterdam Film Festival, the Popcorn Film Festival
(Stockholm, Sweden, 1999) the Digital Talkies Video Festival (New Delhi, India), and the Dahlonega,
Georgia Film Festival. He has taught street photography and photojournalism at the International Center
of Photography, Parson's School of Design, and the Catskill Center of Photography. He curated the group
exhibition Living for the City: 20 Years of New York Street Photography at the Parsons School of Design in
1997.
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