ABSTRACT

In 1929, Abbott returned to New York for a brief visit only to find her former home irrevocably altered. She was fascinated by the city’s rapid transformation and decided against returning to Europe. She settled her affairs in Paris and embarked upon one of the most ambitious photographic projects of the twentieth century: to document in a comprehensive and precise manner, the face of modern, changing New York. As she stated in 1932 she sought to dramatize the contrasts of ‘‘the old and the new and the bold foreshadowing of the future.’’ Keenly aware of the scope and essential significance of the nascent modernity and urbanization of the city, Abbott desired to ‘‘crystallize’’ its transition in ‘‘permanent form’’ (O’Neal 1982, 16). Abbott’s first New York photographs appeared

in Architectural Record in May 1930, but during the five years that followed she was unable to procure funding from any of the private and institutional sources she approached. Throughout this period, Abbott supported herself working for such magazines as Fortune and Vanity Fair. In 1934, the New School for Social Research offered her a job teaching photography. She accepted a one-year contract little knowing that the position would supply her main source of income for many of the next 24 years. This year also witnessed the first major exhibition of Abbott’s New York photography. Mounted at the Museum of the City of New York, the show helped raise the profile of Abbott’s New York project and greatly contributed towards a successful funding application. In 1935, Abbott applied for funding to the Fed-

eral Arts Project (FAP). In part, her proposal read:

To photograph NYC means to seek to catch in the sensitive and delicate photographic emulsion the spirit of the

metropolis, while remaining true to its essential fact, its hurrying tempo, its congested streets, the past jostling the present. The concern is not with an architectural rendering of detail, the buildings of 1935 overshadowing everything else, but with a synthesis which shows the skyscraper in relation to the less colossal edifices which preceded it [...] it is important that they should be photographed today, not tomorrow; for tomorrow may see many of these exciting and important mementos of eighteenth and nineteenth century New York swept away to make room for new colossi.