Wooster Projects featuring Contemporary and emerging artists. Warhol

               

Nat Finkelstein 


We mourn the death of internationally renowned photographer – NAT FINKELSTEIN, who passed peacefully at his home in Upstate New York on Friday October 2, 2009.    He was 76.

Born in Coney Island, Brooklyn in 1933, Nat Finkelstein was a graduate of Stuyvesant High School and attended Brooklyn College.    He studied photography and design under Alexey Brodovitch, the legendary art director of Harper's Bazaar.     Throughout the 1960s, Finkelstein worked as a photojournalist for the PIX and Black Star photo agencies, reporting primarily on emergent subcultures and the civil rights movement.    In 1964, Finkelstein entered Andy Warhol's Factory as a journalist and remained for three years.   His photographs from this period are now regarded as some of the most iconic of the time.

Finkelstein abruptly retired from photography in 1969, when a federal warrant was issued for his arrest, due to the incendiary nature of his civil rights activity.    He left the United States, and lived as a fugitive for fifteen years, following the Silk Road through the Middle East.     During this time, all charges against Finkelstein were dismissed, and he returned to New York City in 1982.

Nat Finkelstein resumed his photographic career, and has since exhibited his work worldwide.     While best known for his images of Warhol's Factory, Finkelstein's subjects ranged from dog shows for Sports Illustrated and civil rights protests for Life Magazine in the 1960s, to the “club kids” of the 1990s, to timeless rock & roll icons, as well as his extensive portraiture of women.    Experimentation with new photographic technology was a lifelong interest, and in recent years, Finkelstein had championed the use of digital printmaking.

Finkelstein's photographs have been appeared in major publications since the 1960s.     His photographic books include The Andy Warhol Index (with Warhol, 1968), Girlfriends (1991), Merry Monsters (1993), Edie Factory Girl (2006), and Andy Warhol: The Factory Years.   In addition to his photographic work, Nat Finkelstein was an author.   His as-yet unpublished memoir, “The Fourteen Ounce Pound,” will be completed by his closest friend and collaborator, writer David Dalton.

Finkelstein's photographs are in the permanent collection of The Metropolitan Museum of Art, NYC; the Andy Warhol Museum, Pittsburgh; The Victoria & Albert Museum, London; The Ludwig Museum, Cologne; Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris; and the Smithsonian Institute, National Portrait Gallery, Washington DC, among many other public and private collections.    His work can be seen in upcoming exhibitions, including “Who Shot Rock” at the Brooklyn Museum this Fall, and a retrospective at Idea Generation, London in December 2009.

Nat Finkelstein is survived by his wife, Elizabeth, and brother, Howard.    

 

 

For further information on the artist – www.natfinkelstein.com and www.woosterprojects.com

 

 

 

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