"Foreigners see things that natives don't" says Wolfgang Suschitzky
While Suschitzky's and Bohm's work are widely known, Neil Libbert's work is less so. The youngest of three at 78 years old, Libbert studied as a photographer and opened his own studio in 1957. He first visited New York in teh early 60s wile working for the Sunday Times and New York Times, where he went, with camera in hand to the Upper East Side tot he ghetto's of Harlem. It was during that period that he documented the 1964 race riots. Photographing at close quarters and with an unbiased point of view, his work holds the sensibility of a poet but the curiosity of a reporter.
Show runs until 27 August at London's Uri Gallery & museum