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Weegee's New Yorkers

Criminals, drunks, murder victims… a Jewish immigrant photographed them all - and turned them into works of art.

December 10, 2009 11:13
Weegee captured this fire at a sausage factory in 1937. The title of the image echoes the sign on the building— Simply add boiling water

By

Melanie Abrams ,

Melanie Abrams

2 min read

At any murder, car crash or arrest in New York during the 1930s and 1940s, Weegee was invariably the first photographer on the scene. Often, he arrived before the authorities — getting early information about crimes from monitoring the police radios he had installed in his car and home, or from tip-offs from his network of bookies, pimps, call girls, and con men.

This seeming foresight gave him his nickname, Weegee — adapted from ouija boards used at seances. His real name was Usher (he changed it later to Arthur) Fellig, from Austrian Galicia, now part of the Ukraine.

Like many other Jewish immigrants to New York, his family settled in the Lower East Side which provided the backdrop for many of his images. “He captures the quintessential New York and the experience of living here,” says Denise Bethel, head of photographs at Sotheby’s New York.

Now some of Weegee’s iconic images are on show at the Michael Hoppen Gallery in London, including photographs of Jewish personalities from the Lower East Side — personalities like Harvey Stemmer and Henry “The Moustache” Rosen, suspected traffickers in stolen goods who were arrested for trying to fix a basketball match, and like the customers and entertainers at Sammy’s Bowery Follies, a notoriously seedy cabaret club.

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