Bruce
Gilden (born 1946) is a noted street photographer, known
for his work in New York City.
While
studying sociology at Penn State, he saw Michelangelo Antonioni's
film Blowup in 1968. Influenced by the film, he purchased his first
camera and began taking night classes in photographyat
the School of Visual Arts of New York. Fascinated with
normal people on the street and the idea of visual spontaneity,
Gilden turned to a career in photography. He routinely uses
a flash, alerting his subjects to his presence, unlike most
street photographers. His first major project was documenting the
sensuality of the bodies of the people at Coney Island.
A
member of Magnum Photos since 1998, he shot images of Japan's yakuza
mobsters, the homeless, prostitutes, and members of bike gangs
between 1995 and 2000. According to Gilden, he was fascinated by the
duality and double lives of the individuals he photographed. Gilden
is also the subject of Misery Loves Company: The Life and Death
of Bruce Gilden, a documentary produced in 2007. He has also
photographed rural Ireland and horseracing there,
as well as voodoo rituals in Haiti.
In
2013, Gilden became a Guggenheim Fellow.
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