Request to view

This object can be requested via email from the Prints & Drawings Study Room

We don’t have an image of this object online yet.

More about images

V&A Images may have a photograph that we can’t show online, but it may be possible to supply one to you. Email us at vaimages@vam.ac.uk for guidance about fees and timescales, quoting the accession number: E.3029-2004

The Daily News Building and Chrysler Building Tops

Photograph
1936 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

Ilse Bing (1899–1998) was one of several leading women photographers in the inter-war period. Born into a Jewish family in Frankfurt, she initially pursued an academic career before moving to Paris in 1930 to concentrate on photography.

In the 1930s Bing was championed in the USA by the writer Willem Hendrik van Loon, who introduced her work to the editors of Harpers Bazaar magazine and the influential gallerist Julian Levy. In her scenes of New York, made during her visit in 1936, Bing resolved her interests in Modernist design and the comedies of urban randomness. Her skills as a photojournalist are evident in vernacular sidewalk scenes such as this – gatherings of ethnic minorities, card schools and barber’s shop frontages, reminiscent of contemporary American realist painting. This populist iconography is combined with responses to modern architecture – a subject also shared with contemporary American photographers such as Alfred Stieglitz and Berenice Abbott.

Object details

Categories
Object type
TitleThe Daily News Building and Chrysler Building Tops (generic title)
Materials and techniques
Gelatin-silver print
Brief description
'The Daily News Building and Chrysler Building tops', photograph by Ilse Bing, 1936, vintage gelatin-silver print
Physical description
Black and white photograph of the tops of four soaring New York skyscrapers against a grey sky.
Dimensions
  • Width: 27.9cm
  • Height: 20cm
Style
Marks and inscriptions
'161-53-c5' (Archival reference from cataloguing prior to acquisition by V&A)
Gallery label
(April 2009-April 2010)
Bing was one of several leading European women photographers of the inter-war period. Her immediate and highly successful use of the world's most advanced camera, the Leica, earned her the title 'Queen of the Leica'. Bing supported herself through commercial photography, gaining a reputation as a photojournalist and a fashion photographer. This image of New York, with its minimalist composition and extreme vantage point, highlights the city's soaring modern architecture.
(11 03 2014)

Gallery 100, ‘History of photography’, 2012-2013, label texts :

Ilse Bing (1899 – 1998)
‘Rockefeller Center and Chrysler Building Tops’
1936

Bing was one of several successful European
women photographers of the inter-war period.
She supported herself through commercial
photography, gaining a reputation as a
photojournalist and a fashion photographer.
This image of New York, with its minimalist
composition and extreme vantage point,
highlights the city’s soaring modern architecture.

Gelatin silver print
Bequeathed by Ilse Bing Wolff
Museum no. E.3029-2004
Credit line
Bequeathed by Ilse Bing Wolff
Production
Vintage print
Place depicted
Summary
Ilse Bing (1899–1998) was one of several leading women photographers in the inter-war period. Born into a Jewish family in Frankfurt, she initially pursued an academic career before moving to Paris in 1930 to concentrate on photography.

In the 1930s Bing was championed in the USA by the writer Willem Hendrik van Loon, who introduced her work to the editors of Harpers Bazaar magazine and the influential gallerist Julian Levy. In her scenes of New York, made during her visit in 1936, Bing resolved her interests in Modernist design and the comedies of urban randomness. Her skills as a photojournalist are evident in vernacular sidewalk scenes such as this – gatherings of ethnic minorities, card schools and barber’s shop frontages, reminiscent of contemporary American realist painting. This populist iconography is combined with responses to modern architecture – a subject also shared with contemporary American photographers such as Alfred Stieglitz and Berenice Abbott.
Collection
Accession number
E.3029-2004

About this object record

Explore the Collections contains over a million catalogue records, and over half a million images. It is a working database that includes information compiled over the life of the museum. Some of our records may contain offensive and discriminatory language, or reflect outdated ideas, practice and analysis. We are committed to addressing these issues, and to review and update our records accordingly.

You can write to us to suggest improvements to the record.

Suggest feedback

Record createdJune 23, 2004
Record URL
Download as: JSON