Helen Levitt "New York", c.1940 © Film Documents LLC, courtesy Zander Galerie, Cologne
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09/24/2025 - 02/01/2026

Fundacion MAPFRE_Barcelona 
Avenida Litoral, 30 
 
08005 Barcelona

https://www.fundacionmapfre.org/en/art-and-culture/exhibitions/kbr-photography-center/helen-levitt/ 

 
Helen Levitt (1913–2009) began photographing the streets of New York, her hometown, in the late 1930s, focusing mainly on poor neighborhoods such as Hispanic Harlem and the Lower East Side, where the street clearly takes center stage as the setting for everyday life. Her camera was directed mainly at children and their games in the streets. These scenes of children occupy a central place in a body of work that, as a whole, captivates us with its ability to transform everyday scenes into images that convey all the emotion, mystery, and humor that life can contain, and with which the viewer establishes an immediate connection even though they lack an explicit narrative. Her work soon gained the recognition it deserved, and in 1943 the MOMA in New York organized her first solo exhibition (Photographs of Children).
Curator: Joshua Chuang