Arthur Tress | The Ramble brings to light a long-hidden chapter of New York City’s cultural and social history through a remarkable body of photographs made in Central Park at the end of the 1960s. Created during a period of profound social tension and quiet transformation, the series documents the Ramble as both a physical location and a symbolic refuge. Overgrown, neglected, and partially concealed from the city surrounding it, this wooded enclave became a meeting ground where desire, risk, and anonymity coexisted within the shadows of urban life.
Working with a medium-format camera,
Arthur Tress approached the Ramble not merely as an observer, but as a visual poet. His images move fluidly between candid distance and deliberate staging, capturing fleeting gestures alongside carefully constructed scenes. Men appear partially hidden by foliage, light, or movement, their bodies suspended between exposure and concealment. This oscillation reflects the realities of queer life before liberation, where intimacy unfolded in secrecy and the landscape itself became an active participant in the encounter.
The photographs reveal Tress’s deep engagement with both documentary traditions and surrealist aesthetics. Informed by his background in ethnographic work and his interest in psychological states, he treated the Ramble as a distinct social ecosystem. Desire, vulnerability, and imagination are rendered with equal weight, producing images that feel at once tender and unsettling. References to art history subtly surface, yet the work remains firmly rooted in lived experience rather than allegory alone.
Long withheld from public view due to their subject matter, these photographs now emerge as a crucial visual record of queer existence in a city on the brink of change. Seen today, they resonate as both historical testimony and timeless meditation on longing and belonging.
The Ramble affirms Arthur Tress’s enduring ability to merge social observation with imaginative depth, offering images that continue to challenge, move, and quietly illuminate the complexities of human desire.
Image:
Biding Time
The Ramble, Central Park, 1969/2025. Gelatin silver print. © Arthur Tress