"Twilight on the Waterfront" at the Brooklyn Library

From June 18 through August 30th, 2008, the Brooklyn Public Library featured an exhibition of my photographs titled "Twilight on the Waterfront: Brooklyn's Vanishing Industrial Heritage." This exhibit documented off-limits industrial sites along Brooklyn's waterfront, shedding light on what Brooklyn has lost to development over the last five years. The exhibit was drawn from my long-term photography project about Brooklyn's industrial waterfront and was displayed at the Central Library at Grand Army Plaza, in the Grand Lobby. The official library page for the show can be seen here.

"Twilight on the Waterfront" was featured in a New York Times article and slideshow. It was described in a Gothamist review as "an impressive body of work" which "vividly documents the accidental beauty of decaying buildings." The Architects Newspaper stated in its review "the Brooklyn waterfront is strangely easy to overlook since the Manhattan skyline tends to dominate the view. But as Kensinger's photographs show, its texture and variety reward a closer look..."

The exhibit was also featured on Brownstoner, which has described these photographs as "urban guerrilla" photography and "well worth checking out." Finally, the Brooklyn Eagle writes in their review "after... years of documentary filmmaking, Park Slope resident Nathan Kensinger has, with admirable success, added still photography to his repertoire."

Ironically, this exhibit opened the same day as the new Red Hook Ikea, and featured photos from the historic Todd Shipyard and the Revere Sugar Refinery, two structures destroyed during Ikea's construction process. Brooklyn's entire industrial waterfront was recently listed as one of America's "11 most endangered" historic places by the National Trust For Historic Preservation.




Also this past summer, a photo exhibit by my frequent collaborator Nate Dorr was featured at the 139th St. Branch Gallery. Dorr - who also posts as Mercurialn on flickr - has been intensively photographing New York City during the last 3 years. Together, we have documented many locations along the edges of the city, including The Revere Sugar Refinery, inside the Atlantic Yards, and - in our film collaboration Covered Tracks - The Freedom Tunnel. Nate's exhibition featured some truly great Urban Exploration photographs, as well as a dynamic set of photographs covering Brooklyn's underground rock-and-roll scene.


Portrait of Nate Dorr

Urbex Photography by Nate Dorr


139th St. Branch Gallery

2 comments:

Richard Nickel, Jr. said...

The show is very well put together. Congratulations!

pressure vessels said...

your photo exhibit looks amazing. congratulations.

pv