Posts Tagged ‘Judith Henry’
THURSDAY
Back in 1976, when Warhol’s aesthetic was taking things from pop culture and putting them in a high culture context, Wooster Enterprises were doing just the opposite. They were taking ideas from high art and putting it in Macy’s. Churner and Churner presents the first exhibition of the complete works of Wooster Enterprises (1976-1978), the [...]
Who I Saw in New York
Come check out Working Class contributor Judith Henry's photo installation of people she has been shooting around the city since 1970. We published a handful of her subway photographs a couple years ago in The Old School Issue that give a glimpse of what the subway system was like before Giuliani came in and changed the city. Check out the A [...]
Analysis
Brooklyn-based artist Judith Henry’s multi-media art is and has always been a mirror of her idiosyncratic and deeply personal vision of human experience as seen through the eyes of an outsider. For decades she listened to and recorded people telling intimate and personal stories of their lives. Several of these have been made into short [...]
A TRAIN
Photography by Judith Henry In 1977 Judith Henry took these photographs of people unsuspectingly while they commuted on the west side A-train. The candid portraits represent a piece of New York’s history when the subways were still covered in graffiti, but aside from that it wouldn’t be too different from the subways, styles and [...]











