Exploring Post-WWII Life In New York Through Captivating Street Photos

New York City has always been a place of contrasts, but perhaps no time captured its spirit of transformation more than the years following World War II. 

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Photographer Todd Webb, an unassuming yet extraordinary street photographer, preserved these moments with his lens. His work, now celebrated in two concurrent exhibitions, brings to life a city emerging from the shadows of war and finding its new identity in the modern world.

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Webb’s images, taken between 1945 and 1960, offer a unique window into everyday New York—its bustling streets, quiet corners, and the resilient people who lived there. 

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Through his photographs, we see not just a city, but the human stories that defined post-war American life.

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A City On The Edge Of Change

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New York in the late 1940s was a city on the verge of transformation. The war was over, soldiers were returning, and the economy was beginning to boom. Webb’s photographs capture this pivotal time, showing a city in transition. 

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The streets are filled with activity, from vendors peddling their wares to children playing in the streets, all against the backdrop of a city that was shedding its old skin to emerge as a modern metropolis.

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Todd Webb: The Eye Behind The Lens

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Born in 1905, Todd Webb had a life filled with adventure long before he picked up a camera.

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After losing everything in the Stock Market Crash of 1929, Webb spent years prospecting for gold before finally returning to Detroit, where he discovered photography in 1938. 

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His talent was quickly recognized, and after serving as a Navy photographer during World War II, Webb moved to New York City in 1946 to pursue his passion.

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His first solo exhibition at the Museum of the City of New York, held just a year later, solidified his place in the world of photography. Walker Evans and Alfred Stieglitz, giants in the field, were quick to acknowledge Webb’s mastery. 

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A press release from his exhibition stated, "He works with swift precision, directly and honestly recording what he sees... his straightforward, unmanipulated contact prints convey a maximum sense of authenticity."

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Stunning Photos Capturing The Spirit Of Post-War New York

1. Children playing in water sprayed from open fire hydrant, Upper West Side, New York

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2. LaSalle Street and Amsterdam Avenue, Harlem, New York, 1946

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3. PROUD…Peanut Man

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4. TEEMING…Suffolk and Hester

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5. STICK ‘EM UP…boys with toy guns

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6. ‘NONCHALANT’…5 boys in Harlem

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7. Near Fulton Fish Market (Four Boys), 1946

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8. Lexington Avenue, Near 110th Street, Harlem, 1946

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9. Fulton Fish Market Wharf, 1946

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10. 125th Street, Harlem, New York, 1946

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11. 3rd Avenue from 42nd Street El Station, New York, 1945

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12. Mazie, Queen of the Bowery, New York, 1946

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13. 125 Street and Broadway (Summer Streetcar), Harlem, New York, 1946

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14. Dreaming of summer!

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