Happy Birthday John Cage


David Seidner, [John Cage and Merce Cunningham’s 18th Street loft, New York], ca. 1994


David Seidner, [John Cage and Merce Cunningham’s 18th Street loft, New York], ca. 1994


David Seidner, [John Cage and Merce Cunningham’s 18th Street loft, New York], ca. 1994

About a dozen of David Seidner’s photos of John Cage and Merce Cunningham’s 18th Street loft illustrate a beautiful new book:
Love, Icebox: Letters from John Cage to Merce Cunningham, Edited with text by Laura Kuhn. Photography by Emily Martin. New York: The John Cage Trust, 2019

John Cage was born September 5, 1912. The John Cage Trust is here.

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Happy Birthday Ruth Orkin


Ruth Orkin, American Girl in Italy, 1951 (535.1983)


Ruth Orkin, Man in rain, from my window at 53 W 88th St. N.Y.C., 191 (546.1983)


Ruth Orkin, From Gansevoort St. Pier, Boys Swimming in Hudson River, New York, ca. 1948 (549.1983)

Ruth Orkin was born September 3, 1921. The Ruth Orkin Archive is here.

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“Pouring the Heat”


Margaret Bourke-White, [Heavily tattooed chest and arms of workman at the Bethlehem Ship Building Co.], 1938 (1738.2005)


Margaret Bourke-White, [Heavily tattooed chest and arms of workman at the Bethlehem Ship Building Co.] [verso], 1938 (1738.2005)

Baltimore dry dock plant of Bethlehem Ship Building Corp. Leonard Long – workman formerly on S.S Chilore.

The S.S. Chilore, an American cargo steamer built in 1922, was torpedoed by a German submarine (or U-boat) off North Carolina at around 8:20 PM on July 15, 1942. The ship survived, but as she was heading for a safe place to anchor she struck two defensive American mines. Two people died while abandoning the ship. Near Chesapeake Bay the S.S. Chilore capsized then sank; she was sold for scrapping in 1954. The German submarine, (U-boat 576), that struck the S.S. Chilore, sank off Cape Hatteras on July 15, 1942 and all 52 men on board were killed.


Margaret Bourke-White, [Molten steel cascading in Otis Steel Mill, Cleveland, Ohio, in historic “Pouring the Heat” photo], 1929 (1739.2005)


Margaret Bourke-White, [Molten steel cascading in Otis Steel Mill, Cleveland, Ohio, in historic “Pouring the Heat” photo] [verso], 1929 (1739.2005)

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Happy Labor Day


Unidentified Photographer, [Violinist], ca. 1870 (2008.81.20)


Unidentified Photographer, [Banjo Player], ca. 1870 (2418.2005)


Unidentified Photographer, [Cellist], ca. 1870 (2008.81.9)


Unidentified Photographer, [Trumpeter], ca. 1870 (2008.81.32)


Unidentified Photographer, [Harmonica Player], ca. 1870 (2008.81.1)

Strike up the band…

Happy Labor Day!

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“I don’t know.”


W. Eugene Smith, Rail worker Joseph Hunter, Ohio, 1949, (1559.2005)

Rail Worker Joseph Hunter, long time Republican, is switchman on line that serves Bessemer converters at Youngstown. He has three-word opinion of Taft, “I don’t know.”


W. Eugene Smith, Refinery man, Sohio Plant, Cleveland, Ohio, 1949 (1560.2005)


W. Eugene Smith, [Helmeted worker in overalls holding wrench by valves], 1949 (1561.2005)

TAFT AND OHIO
“Mr. Republican” fights for himself and his party

With the defeat on Nov. 8 of John Foster Dulles and scores of lesser Republicans throughout the land, the morale of the G.O.P. sank to a dismal low. There were a few members of the Republican high command who could look forward to 1950 and 1952 without gnawing their knuckles.

The man who had most cause to be scared was Senator Robert Alphonso Taft of Ohio, “Mr. Republican,” who has been nominated as the prime candidate for extinction by the Administration, by organized labor and by internationalists. Even the usually Republican farmers have to be won back to the party. But Taft is not scared. The Democratic deluge has come and gone, and there he stands. He has already drawn his chalk line and begun serious work for the 1950 fight. If anyone takes Taft’s Senate seat next year, he will have to lick a tough man to get it.

As fall turns into winter in Ohio, Taft is in the midst of a 100-day campaign which began on Sept. 4 – a full 14 months before the state goes to the polls. For the first time since 1938 he is swinging through everyone of the 88 counties in the state, repairing his fences with the thoroughness that has long been characteristic of him and with a charm that has not. In the farmlands along the Indiana border, in the big industrial cities of the north and the river towns in the south, taft faces a complete cross section of voters. Ohio is the U.S. in miniature – because its people are so diverse in occupation and background, their ballots check and balance each other like the ballots of the nation as a whole. In every election since 1896, with only one exception (1944), the presidential vote in Ohio has paralleled the nationwide vote. What Taft is doing now, because of Ohio’s status as a testing ground and because Taft is the front runner in the race for the G.O.P.’s presidential nomination in 1952, will effect the whole future of the Republican party.
LIFE, November 29, 1949, p. 101.


W. Eugene Smith, [Portrait of Mike Modny, foreman at Republic Steel’s coke ovens.] 1949 (1562.2005)

Foreman Mike Modney at Republic Steel’s coke ovens in Cleveland is another independent. Modney was once a Democrat and C.I.O. man, is now neither.


LIFE, November 29, 1949, pp. 104-105 (Photos by W. Eugene Smith)

Labor Opposition Is Far From Solid

When the Taft-Hartely Act was passed, labor leaders all over the country swore they would defeat Taft when he ran again. But these threats have not yet hurt Taft and have helped him by making him an underdog – even in the eyes of many union men. Seizing the role, Taft dwells on “the millions that will be spent to defeat me” and asks, “Do you want officials like Petrillo to tell you how to vote?” Thus far none of the workers in the steel mills and the rubber and glass factories has thrown any rocks at Taft when he stood up to speak.

Rail Worker Joseph Hunter, long time Republican, is switchman on line that serves Bessemer converters at Youngstown. He has three-word opinion of Taft, “I don’t know.”

Refinery Men on a truck at Sohio Plant No. 1 in Cleveland are of Slovak, Dutch, Scottish, Syrian, German, English, Russian, Greek, Hungarian, Irish, Czech and Italian descent. They typify northern Ohio’s melting pot, and most of them are against Senator Taft.

Foreman Mike Modney at Republic Steel’s coke ovens in Cleveland is another independent. Modney was once a Democrat and C.I.O. man, is now neither.

Skilled Worker Ernest Assman, of the Gruen Watch Company [1894-1958] in Cincinnati, will vote for Taft. So will many others in the higher-paid ranks of labor.
LIFE, November 29, 1949, pp. 104-105

Spoiler alert: Robert Taft, son of President William Taft, a conservative Republican, did win his 1950 re-election campaign with a significant victory margin. Taft unsuccessfully sought the Republican presidential nomination a few times. As portrayed in W. Eugene Smith’s photos Taft’s campaign was thorough and exhaustive, he visited every county in Ohio, and spoke at factories, farms, schools, and with the editors of scores of local Ohio newspapers. At the end of July 1953 Taft died of pancreatic cancer in New York, four years after Smith’s photos were made and published in Life.

On the W. Eugene Smith timeline the “Taft and Ohio” story was sandwiched between “Country Doctor” (1948) and “Spanish Village” (1950), and two years before “Nurse Midwife” (1951).


W. Eugene Smith, [Perspective of steel mill, smoke pouring from stacks, all reflected in water along side mill.], 1949 (1557.2005)

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“a home run over the fence”


W. Eugene Smith, [Herman Stegos, age 11, hitting a home run over the fence, New York], ca. 1940 (1565.2005)


W. Eugene Smith, “Pap” Lettieri, 10, “Chinky” Leone, 10, Italo Ablondi, 10 and Salvo Visioni, 10, pitching candidates at the top of their windup, New York, ca. 1940 (1566.2005)


W. Eugene Smith, Jano Cardillo, age 9, missing for the third strike, New York, ca. 1940 (1567.2005)

Jano Cardillo lived with his mother and father, seven brothers (ages 5-27) and one sister (age 3) in the tenements, surrounded by 35th and 36th Streets on the north and south, 10th Avenue and Dyer Avenue on the east and west, in Hell’s Kitchen, Manhattan. The sign behind the young slugger reads: “West Side Center Division. Rookie Baseball School of the Children’s Aid Society.”

A Sandlot Baseball League was run by the Children’s Aid Society from 1933 to around 1947. The Children’s Aid Society was “founded in 1853. Children’s Aid operated lodging houses, fresh air programs, and industrial schools to support an estimated 30,000 poor and orphaned children living in the city’s streets…” childrensaidnyc.org.

According to the first annual report, the founding was motivated by concern over the burden upon city resources caused by unprecedented numbers of immigrants, and over concern that impoverished immigrant children were turning to crime or barely surviving as homeless vagabonds selling matches or sweeping streets. The founders believed that gainful work, education, and a wholesome family atmosphere would transform New York’s street children into self-reliant members of society. The organization raised substantial funds from the public and many wealthy philanthropists including members of the Roosevelt, Astor, and Dodge families, and immediately began opening lodging houses for homeless youths, as well as industrial schools to teach cobbling, sewing, and many other trades. (Guide to the Victor Remer Historical Archives of the Children’s Aid Society at the New-York Historical Society.)

W. Eugene Smith (1918-1978) worked for the Black Star photo agency for five years, from 1938 until 1943. This delightful sandlot baseball story was one of many that he produced during his productive years at Black Star. This was a time was the early, intense, and productive period before he started working for Life magazine. Analogous to the young sporty ragamuffins playing sandlot baseball under the auspices of the Children’s Aid Society, Smith’s career as a photographer was just starting and developing rapidly. Smith was a baseball-loving giant fan of Jackie Robinson and the Brooklyn Dodgers, who sometimes, in the early 1950s, played the game at his Croton-on-Hudson home (with a ping-pong table in the furniture-free dining room) with his children after being coaxed out of the darkroom for food, family, friends, and of course, baseball.


W. Eugene Smith, Jano Cardillo, age 9, missing for the third strike, New York, ca. 1940 [verso] (1567.2005)


W. Eugene Smith, Left to right, “Frankie” Prinzo, age-8, Jano Cardillo, age 9, “Junior” Benevento age 7, and Jerry Moretto, age 8, New York, ca. 1940 (1568.2005)

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Louis Faurer, New York, late 1940s


Louis Faurer, Playground, New York, New York, 1947 (2013.99.46)


Louis Faurer, [Woman on street with newspaper, New York], 1947 (2013.99.36)


Louis Faurer, 42nd Street, New York, ca. 1948 (2013.99.31)


Louis Faurer, Indian Summer, New York, 1949 (2013.99.50)

One hundred and three years ago today Louis Faurer (1916-2001) was born in Philadelphia.

From Mr. Faurer’s New York Times obituary, written by Margarett Loke:

While running to catch a bus in 1984, Mr. Faurer was hit by a car and never fully recovered from his injuries.

In his unforgiving perfectionism, he might have been expected to cast a jaundiced eye on everything that crossed his path, but he was surprisingly generous when it came to the subjects of his work. For the catalog of a 1981 solo exhibition of his work at the Art Gallery of the University of Maryland in College Park, he wrote, ”My eyes search for people who are grateful for life, people who forgive and whose doubts have been removed, who understand the truth, whose enduring spirit is bathed by such piercing white light as to provide their present and future with hope.”


Louis Faurer, [Woman, with two dogs on a horse, and a street photographer, New York], ca. 1948 (402.1983)

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