Compiled in a new photo book, Tod Papageorge’s timeless photographs capture an intoxicating cocktail of sun, sand and surf. “I look at these pictures and they are alive,” he says
In the 1980s, Massachusetts photographer Sage Sohier hit the road. She was 20-something years old, recently graduated from Harvard University, and enamored with the street. She approached strangers, toting around a clunky medium-format camera with a flash in search of serendipity.
In the late 1960s, 25-year-old Tod Papageorge came to New York as a photographer in the making. Every day he would spend time taking photographs all over the city with his fellows.
h/t: vintag.es
Papageorge's reportage style was in black and white, but his friends advised him to shoot in
“Within Central Park, New Yorkers can find what they need,” says Scott Rossi, whose first photo book captures the idiosyncratic people and places within the city’s iconic landmark