Photograph of fixed scenes of townscapes such as New York for nearly 40 years
Camilo Jose Vergara, a Chile born photographer, kept taking pictures for nearly 40 years at Harlem in New York and elsewhere. It is very interesting to understand the change of the town.
Details are as follows.
Invincible Cities
It is seen in New YorkHarem,Canada'sRichmond, New JerseyCamden.
It is around 65 east of 125th Street. I am doing something in 1977, but I'm not sure what it is.
The door is painted black.
A fish tip shop opens.
A clothing store opens on the right.
The right store closed in about two years.
Shops in tobacco and grocery stores opened.
The left side looks like a grocery store handling cupboards and clothing items. It is said that "every day is a special sale day".
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Shop left, the store on the left that is scribbled down to the sign.
The store enters again on the left and the signboard is renewing on the right.
About 1999. The shop is swapped on the left.
But in 2001, both were closed.
I'm breaking and making something.
What was completed was "SLEEPY'S". It seems to be a store dealing mattresses, and it seems that we are still doing this place now.
I shoot 125th street. 1977.
1988, about 20 years ago.
In 1992, the banks that were on the right side gone and got in the ground.
In 1994, the warehouse in front was also vacated.
A building was built in about 1995, and in 2001 it looked something like this. There is no window on the side, what kind of building is it?
Camden.
There are changes in the seasons, but there is not much change in the cityscape.
It was a residential area, so there were no major changes, but trees are growing bigger and bigger.
Wikipedia contains things that shoot Camden's town. The house that remains in the changing cityscape is amazing.
Image: Time lapse series n camden. Jpg - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
In 1980 a place where a little old apartment was built.
She seems to have become a furniture shop in 2002.
Because it is in town, the change of shops and rebuilding of buildings are conspicuous. Do you see in the urban areas of Japan that tall buildings are building up?
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in Art, Posted by logc_nt