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Alice Allie

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Alice Attie, Harlem on the Verge Series.

About:

Alice Attie (born in 1950) is a visual artist and published poet from New York. Her photographic work and drawings on paper can be found in collections at The Whitney Museum of American Art, The Studio Museum in Harlem, The Jewish Museum, all in New York, The Getty Museum in Los Angeles and The Museum of Fine Arts in Houston, Texas, among others.

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“………these vivid and entrancing color photos radiates intelligent enthusiasm for Alice Attie as a social documentarian who captures Manhattan’s black and Latino city-within-a-city when it seems about to be transferred from its traditional, predominantly poor denizens to a bourgeoisie who may be multicultural but aren’t and won’t be poor. Kelley is very good at pointing out the traces of reconnoitering class imperialism (the scrawled “Derrida” amid other graffiti) and the poignant scrawlings (the moved-to message sprayed over an impromptu elegy) of indigenous retreat. But before or after seeing the photos with Kelley, peruse them for their formal properties, which are bold and masterly. Every composition is oriented upon a cross–a strong central vertical axis and a strong horizontal one above the center of the frame–though a visible crossing of two lines is seldom present; this property unifies the whole suite of photographs, and any symbolic accents it adds are usually pertinent. Illumination is equal throughout the frame, establishing a rock-solid ground on which the figures deploy and refusing to “privilege” any object in the frame. Colors are utterly equally weighed; no reds or yellows or blacks punch out or retreat from the eye. Image after image evokes the response, “Man! That’s a beautiful picture.” Now look at the people and things Attie shows us. Unforgettable. Ray Olson

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Copyright: the photographer.