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Reading: Barbara Mensch Tells the Epic Story of the Brooklyn Bridge
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NEW YORK DAWN™ > Blog > Art > Barbara Mensch Tells the Epic Story of the Brooklyn Bridge
Barbara Mensch Tells the Epic Story of the Brooklyn Bridge
Art

Barbara Mensch Tells the Epic Story of the Brooklyn Bridge

Last updated: April 30, 2025 12:07 am
Editorial Board Published April 30, 2025
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When Barbara Mensch was invited to stage an exhibition of her images within the public gallery at the USA District Courtroom for the Jap District of New York, curiosity led her to think about the features of the courtroom. Most of all, she was drawn to the magnitude of its naturalization ceremonies, when, a number of instances every week, 100 or so folks from throughout the globe enter a courtroom to grow to be United States residents. In response, Mensch drew on her 2018 e-book, Within the Shadow of Genius, which pairs her personal black and white images of the Brooklyn Bridge and its environs with the story of its creators. The 12 images on view, together with a pamphlet containing excerpts from her e-book, inform the epic story of the bridge’s designer, John Roebling, who traveled from a medieval city in Germany to create one of many world’s most treasured icons. Mensch was on a quest to grasp the bridge’s inexplicable non secular energy.

The Brooklyn-born artist has been photographing the Brooklyn Bridge in all seasons, in and out, for a number of a long time. Within the Eighties, she moved right into a maritime warehouse in Decrease Manhattan beside its stone anchorage. Resolving to be taught extra concerning the bridge’s designer, she traveled to Roebling’s birthplace in Germany and traced his journey to the US to higher perceive what impressed him to check the bridge. An in depth-up shot of its diagonal cables, which echo a ship’s sails, welcomes the viewer to think about his 10-week voyage throughout the Atlantic Ocean in 1831, whereas a hen’s-eye view of a river carving by way of wilderness dramatizes his 300-mile canal-boat journey to Butler County, Pennsylvania. There, he established a village with different immigrants, a number of of whom assisted him in making the wire rope that was later utilized in establishing the good bridge. 

Barbara Mensch, “The New York Tower” (2008)

Roebling’s relentless drive resonates with Mensch, who lets her intuitions information her. Her pictures mirror the deeply held concepts of the bridge’s creator, equivalent to his perception that each human endeavor is non secular. A quintessential instance within the present is her picture of the bridge’s New York tower. The pointed arch mimics the Gothic church Roebling attended as a baby; a sliver of sunshine coming by way of creates an virtually otherworldly environment. However after studying Mensch’s accompanying textual content, which describes the human prices of actualizing Roebling’s imaginative and prescient, one can not assist however think about the tower’s basis, the place immigrants of German, Italian, and Irish descent toiled under the water’s floor, a few of whom died from decompression sickness. Mensch’s picture speaks to the interconnectedness of life and loss of life.

Mensch’s imaginative and prescient of New York seems romantic, however she is aware of that the individuals who constructed it are below fixed risk of being swept apart by adjustments within the metropolis. The second wall of the exhibition reveals three images of employees from her waterfront venture — offered in her books South Avenue (2009) and A Falling-Off Place (2023) — throughout which she targeted on the Fulton Fish Market, the most important seafood hub in North America, as town investigated its ties to organized crime within the Eighties and ultimately moved it to the Bronx. Beside these portraits are images of buildings in New York which were reworked or demolished since she photographed them, together with a movie show in Spanish Harlem with a marquee that’s lacking a number of letters however as soon as stated “The Party Never Stops.”

A wall textual content by city theorist Jane Jacobs brings the present into the current: “Diverse, intense cities contain the seed of their own regeneration.” “Where is that seed now?” I requested Mensch. “It’s up to the viewer to find it,” she replied. I went searching for a solution on the second ground of the courthouse, the place a choose was conducting a naturalization ceremony. Ninety-four new residents from 31 nations, together with their households, stuffed the big courtroom. Behind them was a mural of immigrant employees constructing a railroad, which used to hold above the doorways at Ellis Island. The choose counseled the folks and named each nation represented within the room, and when she requested the brand new residents to face, they rose like a wave.

Mensch Harry The Hat Under the Brooklyn Bridge 1982

Barbara Mensch, “Harry The Hat Under the Brooklyn Bridge” (1982)Mensch Installation 1 1

Set up view of Themes For A Courthouse In Brooklyn (picture Scott Schomburg/Hyperallergic)Mensch The Mysterious Piano 2016

Barbara Mensch, “The Mysterious Piano” (2016)Mensch Installation 3

Set up view of Themes For A Courthouse In Brooklyn (picture Scott Schomburg/Hyperallergic)

Themes For A Courthouse In Brooklyn continues on the Charles P. Sifton Gallery at the USA District Courtroom for the Jap District of New York (225 Cadman Plaza East, Downtown Brooklyn, Brooklyn) by way of Could 5. The exhibition was curated by Decide Robert M. Levy.

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