
Bruce Gilden
Bruce Gilden
Fotografiska Berlin
Oranienburger Str. 54, 10117 Berlin, Germany 10117
Mon–Sun 10am–11pm
Admission
Tickets
Tickets available at https://tickets-berlin.fotografiska.com/
About
Bruce Gilden’s photos don’t flatter. They confront. A flash. A stare. A face you can’t forget. His subjects, outsiders, misfits, the overlooked, aren’t just photographed; they’re seen. His exhibition _Why These?_ isn’t just a question about his work. It’s a question about us. Why do these images unsettle? Why do we avoid these gazes but still cannot look away? _Why These?_ brings together 41 photographs, handpicked by Bruce Gilden. Iconic images from his major projects in Coney Island, Haiti, New York and Tokyo take you on a visual journey through his career. Another selection of large-scale prints showcase his bold shift to digital color in 2013, a move that adds a contemporary edge to his signature style. Born in Brooklyn just after World War II, Bruce Gilden grew up in a turbulent household. As a child, he spent hours watching the “tough guys” on the street below, shaping his lifelong fascination with the “characters” he would later photograph. In 1968, he bought his first camera – a Miranda – and taught himself how to use it. His perspective pulls you into the grit of urban life: the daily routines, the fleeting encounters, the trips to the corner store. Through his lens, you don’t just see these moments – you feel the tension, smell the cigarette smoke, and take in the raw reality. > "Since I started photographing I adopted Robert Capa’s mantra “If the photo is not good enough you were not close enough”. A good street picture will smell of the street." _– Bruce Gilden_ A Magnum photographer since 1998, Bruce Gilden has walked the streets of cities all over the world. His photos often taken with flash are raw and real. He cares deeply about the people he portrays. His bold approach has taken him to places and people that most would never get close to. His subjects often trust him enough to let him take their picture. From New York to Tokyo and Mexico City, he has photographed gang members, homeless people, sex workers, and others living on the fringes of society. Bruce Gilden’s ability to connect with these worlds comes from that same Brooklyn upbringing. Like him, the people in his photos have “experienced the streets.”