2 minute read
gallery
from May SouthPark 2022
by SouthParkMag
Teenage Boys, Circa 1946-1950, Spanish Harlem
STILL CAPTURING OUR ATTENTION
by Sharon Smith
At age 102, it’s been years since Sonia Handelman Meyer picked up a camera, but she still talks about photography — and future exhibits — with clarity, specificity and exciteYet, for the better part of 50 years, her photographs sat in boxes, untouched. The Photo League disbanded, a victim of the McCarthyism era, and Handelman Meyer focused on family. It wasn’t ment. One can almost picture her walking the streets of New York City decades ago, quietly capturing candid images of people going about their everyday lives. Some of her favorite “street scenes” line the wall of her home at Waltonwood, a continuing-care community in Cotswold. Many others are housed permanently in museums like the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Jewish Museum in New York and the Mint Museum.
“I never thought I was good,” Handelman Meyer says with a halfshrug and small smile. But, she quickly speaks to why the people in her images are important — many of them immigrants, minorities and children in Harlem, Brooklyn and the Village.
Handelman Meyer got her start in the 1940s as a member and secretary of the New York Photo League, a forum and incubator for world-renowned photographers. As her artist statement reads, “Mostly, I photographed children and reflections of my city — roughedged, tender and very beautiful in its diversity.”
This year, part of her collection is scheduled to be on exhibit in Poland. Her son, Joe Meyer, who manages the Sonia Handelman Meyer Photography Archive, says his mother’s works will also be part of an upcoming PBS documentary. Two books are also in the works. until she moved to Charlotte in her 80s, that she and her son connected with local photographers and gallery owners who helped put Handelman Meyer’s work on exhibit. Even now, Handelman Meyer says she’s stunned by the public interest. Her son sees it differently, noting the historic importance of the images coupled with his mother’s first-person narrative. “Once she gets going, it’s beautiful — the way she speaks,” Meyer says about his mother. Then, speaking directly to her, “You have a message behind these images that you want to be perpetuated. Those moments are locked in time, thanks to you, and they’re very meaningful.” SP
View more of the archive and learn about how it came to be on exhibit in Charlotte at southparkmagazine.com/ capturing-our-attention.