Like a Plant, His Roots Are Showing

The New York Times
In the rambling Upper West Side apartment where the photographer Bruce Davidson has lived for almost 40 years, he and his wife keep an extra little bedroom reserved for their grandchildren, done up with flowery bedspreads and dolls flopped on a dresser. Showing a visitor through the apartment recently, Mr. Davidson stopped in the room and eased the closet door open carefully, as if a Fibber McGee-type avalanche awaited. Inside was a small museum’s worth of boxes of vintage prints from his storied career of more than half a century. “The stuff is crowding us out,” Mr. Davidson said. “I’m like a cancer that spreads.”
He enjoys comparing himself to things, animate and inanimate. For most of his photographing life — which began at the age of 10 in Oak Park, Ill., after his mother built him a darkroom in the basement — he was, as he says, “a coyote, a wolf,” prowling for the perfect picture in a succession of circumscribed worlds he found and entered: tent circuses, Brooklyn gangs, East Harlem tenements, Jewish cafeterias, the civil-rights-era South.
Mr. Davidson is 76 now, a vigorous, round-faced man given to wearing heavy work shirts and boots that lend him the appearance of a carpenter. And as contemplative landscape photography increasingly dominates his time, he describes himself these days as being more like a plant. “Plants kind of speak to me, and trees, particularly palm trees,” he said, smiling as he listened to himself. “Birds less so, but I’m getting very interested in them too.”

Another description, especially now, might be heavyweight. This month the German art-book publisher Steidl will issue a door-stopping three-volume retrospective of Mr. Davidson’s work, books for which he painstakingly reprinted thousands of images from his archives, eventually choosing more than 800 pictures, some never seen before. The publication coincides with two Manhattan exhibitions. One, at the Howard Greenberg Gallery on East 57th Street, recreates a sequence of pictures chosen by the curator John Szarkowski for the 1970 Museum of Modern Art exhibition of Mr. Davidson’s “East 100th Street” series, an unflinching — and hotly debated in the context of the times — examination of urban poverty and perseverance in the late ’60s.

The other show, at Bryce Wolkowitz Gallery in Chelsea, surveys Mr. Davidson’s career, but the gallery has decided to do so in an elliptical and unusual way: by blowing up a dozen or so of his images to contemporary-photography proportions, big 30-by-40-inch prints, some of which — like a 1958 picture of a circus dwarf named Jimmy Armstrong — take on a vaporous Seurat-like ethereality at that size.

“I wasn’t sure about it at first,” Mr. Davidson said one afternoon, watching an assistant with a paintbrush carefully touching up the poster-size circus print, which blanketed a big swath of his dining-room table. “I didn’t want them blown up just for the sake of blowing them up, for size. But now I look at them as completely different pictures, accomplishing something that a smaller print doesn’t do.”

 

Bruce Davidson in his Upper West Side apartment.

Credit Damon Winter/The New York Times

From almost the beginning of his career Mr. Davidson’s pictures have accomplished a lot. He was among the leaders of a loose-knit new wave of photographers — including Lee Friedlander, Danny Lyon, Garry Winogrand and Diane Arbus — who emerged in the early 1960s with the desire to tell stories that didn’t fit neatly, and often didn’t fit at all, into the art world or into the magazine picture-essay tradition.

Mr. Davidson’s work has always been marked by a quiet sympathy that balances even his more caustic visions — gaudy Los Angeles, waitresses in a topless restaurant, the dead-end members of a Brooklyn gang called the Jokers — and by a sophisticated, undramatic sense of form. The critic Michael Brenson, writing in 1982 in The New York Times about a highly regarded series of pictures taken in the subway, a rare foray into color for Mr. Davidson, called his brand of realism “almost novelistic in its multilayered ambition.”

The artist’s life has not been easy. For most of his career, even after becoming a marquee member of the Magnum photo collective, Mr. Davidson paid the bills mostly by shooting for corporate annual reports or other business publications, work he liked better than magazine assignments “because it really kept me out in the world, seeing how things worked.” For a short time in the early 1960s he did fashion work for Vogue magazine, but it never kept his interest.

“All I cared about was, ‘Can I make enough money here to pay for my livelihood, so I can get back out on the streets and shoot what I want?’ ” he recalled.

But the life has also paid him back richly in experience. His first daughter was conceived (as his wife, her mother, smirkingly confirmed, sitting at their kitchen table) in Death Valley, Calif., while Mr. Davidson was taking pictures on the set of Antonioni’s “Zabriskie Point.” He can talk about shooting Marilyn Monroe in 1960, or about Richard Avedon and André Kertesz helping him 

teach workshops at his Greenwich Village loft. Or about when Arbus took him to Atlantic City for a burlesque show, or the time he kept Isaac Bashevis Singer’s parakeet. (Mr. Singer was a friend and a neighbor in the Belnord, Mr. Davidson’s building, and Mr. Davidson made a short film about him in 1972.)

The impetus for a book project encompassing his career came partly from Mr. Davidson’s daughters, Jenny and Anna, who told him once, surveying the mountains of his prints and film that his assistant, Amina Lakhaney, helps him keep in order, “ ‘You’re not going to leave all this for us to sort out, are you?’ ” Over the last three years, as Mr. Davidson printed in his home darkroom, Gerhard Steidl, the legendarily exacting founder of Steidl, would sometimes bring a box to the Belnord on his trips to New York and fill it with prints to take back to Steidl offices in Germany.

Mr. Davidson’s initial plan was to give the volumes a title commensurate with their weight and with his feelings about the importance of photography to the world and to himself: “Journey of Consciousness.” “Everybody gagged when they heard it,” he said. So the title was changed to “Outside/Inside,” a good description of Mr. Davidson’s work approach, which often involves long, immersive dives into the lives of his subjects, some of whom, like Robert Powers, a former Brooklyn gang member known as Bengie, have stayed in touch. (Mr. Davidson’s wife, Emily Haas Davidson, is working on a book about Mr. Powers.)

“I always felt that my best way with the camera was to stay longer, to get to know things,” he said. “Not for a picture story, per se, but for a series of images that are kind of like charcoals that catch fire and burn into each other.”

In an essay accompanying a book of the subway pictures, the curator Henry Geldzahler described how he had once asked Mr. Davidson whether there was a message implicit in the photographs, a strangely beautiful collective portrait of a weary, graffitied, enduring city.

“ ‘Lift your head,’ he shot back, as quick as that,” Mr. Geldzahler wrote. “And that’s it.”

Over the last several months Mr. Davidson has been making frequent trips to Los Angeles to further his landscape interests, what he describes as a “lifelong urban rat’s” preoccupation with nature meeting the manufactured, which he has also pursued for many years in Central Park and in Paris. Though the work mostly requires waiting patiently for the right light, one recent trip to the West found him equipped with rappelling gear, navigating his way with a helper down a steep slope in the Hollywood Hills to shoot the back of the Hollywood sign, which looks like a strangely familiar minimalist sculpture in his pictures.

“It’s not that I’ve given up on photographing people,” he said of his turn to landscape. “But I guess I just need a break from it for a while.”

Mostly for himself, as a kind of therapy, he said, he has been photographing the same gnarled oak tree on Martha’s Vineyard, where he vacations, over a period of 40 years. Of his recent fascination with palm trees, he said he still can’t quite understand the attraction: “They’re absolutely useless. They don’t give shade or coconuts. They’re 100 feet tall, and there aren’t even enough leaves to do much in the way of photosynthesis.”

Mr. Davidson takes pains to emphasize that, retrospective or not, he has no intentions of winding down his career anytime soon. His mother is 98 and doing quite well, he said. Then he pointed to a long bank of shelves in his apartment filled with books of his contact sheets arranged by year, going back to 1954. “I think I have space here for about another 10 to 20 years,” he said. “And then that’ll be it.”