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New York City’s Street Life in the 1970s through the Lens of Camilo José Vergara

New York City in the 1970s was a city in flux, a far cry from the polished, tourist-friendly metropolis it is today. It was a time of economic hardship, social unrest, and urban decay. The Bronx was burning, crime rates were soaring, and the city teetered on the brink of bankruptcy. Amidst this turmoil, Chilean-born photographer Camilo José Vergara set out to document the city’s changing landscape and the lives of its inhabitants.

Vergara wasn’t interested in capturing the glamorous side of New York. He was drawn to the marginalized neighborhoods, the forgotten corners of the city where poverty and neglect were rampant. He focused his lens on the people who lived in these communities, capturing their resilience and their struggles in the face of adversity.

His photographs from the 1970s offer a raw and unfiltered portrait of New York City. They show us the crumbling buildings, the graffiti-covered walls, the vacant lots filled with debris. They show us the faces of the people who called these neighborhoods home, their expressions etched with hardship and hope.

Vergara’s work is a social commentary, a visual record of a city in crisis. He captured the impact of urban decay on the lives of ordinary people, documenting the loss of community and the erosion of hope.

Through his lens, Vergara captured the essence of a city in transition. He showed us the faces of the people who lived through those turbulent times, and he challenged us to see the world through their eyes.

#28 View of Lower Manhattan from the Manhattan Bridge

#29 View of the World Trade Center under construction from Duane Street

Written by Makayla White

An amateur content creator and dreamer. I Run, Cycle, Swim, Dance and drink a lot of Coffee.

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