In 1959, a young photographer followed a gang of Brooklyn teenagers and created a lasting portrait of Brooklyn street life. Sean O’Hagen who blogs about photography in the Guardian UK sent me his post about renowned photographer Bruce Davidson, who took pictures of a Brooklyn gang. Here’s an excerpt:
In 1959, there were about 1,000 gang members in New York City, mainly teenage males from ethnically-defined neighbourhoods in the outer boroughs. In the spring of that year, Bruce Davidson read a newspaper article about outbreaks of street fighting in Prospect Park and travelled across the Brooklyn Bridge from Manhattan in search of a gang to photograph.
“I met a group of teenagers called the Jokers,” he wrote in the afterword to his seminal book of insider reportage, Brooklyn Gang. “I was 25 and they were about 16. I could easily have been taken for one of them…
…The saddest story belongs to Cathy, the blonde and beautiful young girl whom Davidson photographed several times and whose reflection he caught unforgettably in a cigarette machine as she fixed her hair while waiting for the Staten Island ferry. “Cathy was beautiful like Brigitte Bardot,” Bengie remembers. “Cathy always was there, but outside … Then, some years ago, she put a shotgun in her mouth and blew her head off.”
When you get to know Davidson’s book and pictures, it’s hard to *not* think about the Brooklyn Gang when walking down Fifteenth Street or along Prospect Park West in Windsor Terrace.