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Boy with Bubble

Helen Levitt

Photography

Helen Levitt's photograph of two children on a New York street is a wonderful example of her prolific engagement with street life. The capacity to transform the documentary into poetry, to interpret a scene on the street from a humanistic perspective and give it a new meaning, is a key feature of Brooklyn-born Levitt's lifelong photographic practice, always more artistic than journalistic.

The seemingly simple structure of this image reveals a skillful sense of composition. The graffiti and the many layers of advertisements on the back wall echo the black scribbles on the face of the boy on the left, his vertically striped pants juxtaposed with the horizontal bands of the wall in the background. Quietly and full of concentration, he is gazing at the other boy, slightly out of focus, carefully handling a bubble.

Levitt studied with Walker Evans in New York in the late 1930s and began photographing city children in the 1940s, always imbuing her subjects with characteristic warmth. In 1970, she was one of the first street photographers to begin working in color.
MEDIUM Chromogenic (Ektacolor) print
DATES 1972
DIMENSIONS sheet: 14 x 17 in. (35.6 x 43.2 cm) image: 10 3/4 x 16 1/8 in. (27.3 x 41 cm)  (show scale)
SIGNATURE Signed, titled, and dated on verso.
COLLECTIONS Photography
ACCESSION NUMBER 1990.66.2
CREDIT LINE Purchased with funds given by Richard Menschel, Eileen and Adam Boxer, Dr. Joel E. Hershey, Harry Kahn, Marilynn and Ivan Karp, and Merrill Lynch & Co., Inc.
MUSEUM LOCATION This item is not on view
CAPTION Helen Levitt (American, 1913–2009). Boy with Bubble, 1972. Chromogenic (Ektacolor) print, sheet: 14 x 17 in. (35.6 x 43.2 cm). Brooklyn Museum, Purchased with funds given by Richard Menschel, Eileen and Adam Boxer, Dr. Joel E. Hershey, Harry Kahn, Marilynn and Ivan Karp, and Merrill Lynch & Co., Inc., 1990.66.2. © artist or artist's estate (Photo: Brooklyn Museum, 1990.66.2_PS2.jpg)
IMAGE overall, 1990.66.2_PS2.jpg. Brooklyn Museum photograph, 2008
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RIGHTS STATEMENT © Helen Levitt
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