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09 January 2025
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Weegee
Sailor and Girl at the Movies, New York
, 1943
8 x 7 in. (20.3 x 17.8 cm.)
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Weegee
American, 1899–1968
Sailor and Girl at the Movies, New York
,
1943
Weegee
Sailor and Girl at the Movies, New York
, 1943
8 x 7 in. (20.3 x 17.8 cm.)
close
Contact the gallery
for more images
View to Scale
Zoom
Medium
Photographs, Prints and multiples, Silver gelatin print
Size
8 x 7 in. (20.3 x 17.8 cm.)
Price
Price on Request
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Caviar20
Toronto
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About this Artwork
Movement
Post-War
Exhibitions
09/20/2021–11/20/2021 Blackout
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Description
Weegee (1899-1968) was equally fascinated and inspired by cinema and all of its tangents, from Hollywood movie stars to ordinary civilians going to the movies. While Weegee is typically associated with crime/disaster images, the broad theme of "entertainment" is a major component of his oeuvre.
An interesting and provocative sub-genre of his cinema-related work are his images of couples (often heavy-petting) in movie theatres.
Recent scholarship has established that many of Weegee's supposed clandestine images were actually staged or arranged with friends or co-operative strangers.
Nevertheless, Weegee created these photographs in the dark with an array of clever techniques including infrared film, filtered flashbulb and triangular prism lens. Employed in shots such as this one, the prism lens would allow the artist to “see around corners,” useful at times when his subjects were in compromising locations.
These images of kissing couples, Weegee wrote in 1959, were “his best seller, year in and year out.”
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