Label TextBerenice Abbott’s straightforward, dynamic depiction of the Queensboro Bridge captures the energy of 1930s New York with strong contrasts and dramatic angles. A Midwesterner who came to New York in 1918, Abbott moved to Paris in 1921 and became a darkroom assistant for the American Surrealist Man Ray, soon achieving fame for her own photographs of artists and Modernist writers such as James Joyce. Inspired by Eugéne Atget’s (French, 1857–1927) photographs of medieval neighborhoods of Paris razed and transformed by the modernization campaign known as Haussmannization, Abbott returned to New York in 1929 and embraced the city as her most enduring subject. With the financial support of the Federal Art Project, she created more than 300 photographs that were later published as a book, Berenice Abbott: Changing New York. Organized in eight geographic sections, many of her iconic photographs of New York—along with line drawings, period maps, and background essays—present a time capsule of urban design. (Suzanne Weaver, 2018)