Sam Falk (January 19, 1901 – May 19, 1991) was an Austrian-American photojournalist. He worked for The New York Times from 1925 to 1969, and also contributed to various other publications.
Life and career
Born in 1901 in Vienna and emigrating early in life to America, Sam Falk was a self-taught photographer who at 16 years old sold his first photo of lightning taken with a simple box camera, to the New York Morning World for $10. Two years later he left school to work for a commercial photographer, and for him covered the Shamrock IV-Resolute yacht race.[1]
He joined the staff of The New York Times in 1925 and remained for more than 40 years.[2] In the 1940s he pioneered the use of 35-mm photography at the Times finding the usual press camera cumbersome, like the Anniversary Speed Graphic with 5-inch Graflex Optar f4.7 telephoto that he used to record a stumbling steeplechase horse throwing its rider at the Far Hills Races, N.J.[3] He had to purchase his own 35mm camera, such was the prejudice against them at the newspaper, though editor Lester Markel liked his 'miniature' format pictures and often gave him 35mm assignments.[1] The smaller camera became accepted after the Herald Tribune announced that their photographers were switching to the compact camera. Falk also used a Rolleiflex medium-format camera.[4]
Falk documented street life in the United States and in Austria (around 1955); England; Paris, France; and Italy from the 1940s to the 1960s. Falk photographed landmarks of New York City, such as Central Park; Chinatown; Grand Central Station; Greenwich Village;[6]Harlem; John F. Kennedy International Airport; and Times Square. On April 2, 1951 Falk made black-and-white pictures for The New York Times Magazine of amateur photographers photographic landmarks in the metropolis. These images were the subject of a rephotography exercise carried out 68 years later, in digital colour, over April 1–3, 2019 by Tony Cenicola, a Times staff photographer, and paired with Falk's originals for an installment of the newspaper's 'Past Tense', an archival storytelling project.[7][8]
New York Times Photo Archives; Dreishpoon, Douglas; Trachtenberg, Alan; Weinstock, Nancy; Albright-Knox Art Gallery (2001), The tumultuous fifties a view from the New York Times Photo Archives (1st ed.), Buffalo, NY Albright-Knox Art Gallery in cooperation with the New York Times Photo Archives and Times History Productions, a division of the New York Times, ISBN978-0-914782-99-5
Collections
The Museum of Modern Art holds three works in The New York Times Collection: 10:50 P.M.- And So Back Home (Mayor La Guardia), October 1941; On the Sidewalks of New York, June 21, 1942; The Return of Andy Warhol, 1968[18]
The Smithsonian Institution holds around 5,000 of Falk’s negatives, transparencies and prints, donated by him in 1965 and 1968[19]
References
^ abcdefJacob Deschin, 'Vewpoint: Show of Prints By Sam Falk, 80, Highlights His Rich Career in Press Photography'. In Popular Photography, Jan 1981, Vol. 88, No. 1, pages 10-19, 119, ISSN 1542-0337
^Gilbert, George (1996), The illustrated worldwide who's who of Jews in photography (1st ed.), G. Gilbert, ISBN978-0-9656012-0-7
^Popular Photography, Dec 1951, Vol. 29, No. 6, p.211
^'Notes on the Pictures'. Popular Photography, Aug 1951, Vol. 29, No. 2, p.84
^Gee, Helen (1997), Limelight : a Greenwich Village photography gallery and coffeehouse in the fifties : a memoir (1st ed.), University of New Mexico Press, ISBN978-0-8263-1817-6
^'Worlds Fastest Film?', Popular Photography, Feb 1949, Vol. 24, No. 2, p.20
^American Photography, Volume 47, Camera Club of New York, Boston Photo-Clan, Photo-Pictorialists of Buffalo (Society), American Photographic Publishing Company, 1952
^U.S. Camera Combined with Travel & Camera, Volume 22. U.S. Camera Publishing Corporation, 1959
^Camera: A Practical Magazine for Photographers, Volume 68, Columbia Photographic Society., 1946
^Steichen, Edward; Sandburg, Carl; Norman, Dorothy; Lionni, Leo; Mason, Jerry; Stoller, Ezra; Museum of Modern Art (New York) (1955). The family of man: The photographic exhibition. Published for the Museum of Modern Art by Simon and Schuster in collaboration with the Maco Magazine Corporation.
^Hurm, Gerd, 1958-, (editor.); Reitz, Anke, (editor.); Zamir, Shamoon, (editor.) (2018), The family of man revisited : photography in a global age, London I.B.Tauris, ISBN978-1-78672-297-3{{citation}}: |author1= has generic name (help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
^Sandeen, Eric J (1995), Picturing an exhibition : the family of man and 1950s America (1st ed.), University of New Mexico Press, ISBN978-0-8263-1558-8
^'Sam Falk, 90, Is Dead; A Times Photographer', Obituaries, The New York Times, May 21, 1991
^Smithsonian Institution; O'Connor, Diane Vogt; Redding, Joan (1989), Guide to photographic collections at the Smithsonian Institution, Smithsonian Institution Press, ISBN978-0-87474-927-4