I don’t believe I’ve seen anything here on these artists. I’d run across this photographer who very recently passed, Simpson Kalisher, and near me. One photo in MOMA‘s The Family of Man. Post-war urban. Had a good history with the street photographers of the day. I especially enjoy the 1959 image of the man pushing his stalled car in the wet rain. Wicked what a photo.
www.nytimes.com
His son Jesse Kalisher sadly pre-deceased him in 2017 and had created a seemingly incredible commercial business (outside the gallery he had). Wiki says his were the first photographs of Barack Obama acquired by the Smithsonian.
He creatively applied his marketing and photography interests into a winner. The company is ongoing w his staff of some 100 who work in the spirit of his DNA.
kalisher.com
and one of his interviews that showcase what he did.

Simpson Kalisher, Photographer Who Captured Urban Grit, Dies at 96 (Published 2023)
He emerged from a largely commercial background to join the towering figures who defined an art form — street photography — in the 1950s and ’60s.
His son Jesse Kalisher sadly pre-deceased him in 2017 and had created a seemingly incredible commercial business (outside the gallery he had). Wiki says his were the first photographs of Barack Obama acquired by the Smithsonian.
He creatively applied his marketing and photography interests into a winner. The company is ongoing w his staff of some 100 who work in the spirit of his DNA.
Kalisher | Original & Custom Fine Art
We’re a team of more than 100 artists, eccentrics, and engineers who create, commission, and manufacture comprehensive art collections for properties worldwide.

and one of his interviews that showcase what he did.
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