The Chrysler Museum of Art brings renewed attention to a singular modernist vision with
Ilse Bing Between Paris and New York, an exhibition tracing the transatlantic journey of a photographer who shaped the visual language of the twentieth century. Running from June 5 to October 18, 2026 at the Frank Photography Gallery, the presentation draws on the museum’s rich holdings to examine how
Ilse Bing navigated two of the era’s most dynamic urban centers. Curated by Mia Laufer, the selection places Bing’s work within a broader network of avant-garde practitioners, revealing a vibrant dialogue that unfolded between Paris and New York during the interwar years.
Arriving in Paris in 1930, Bing immersed herself in a creative milieu defined by experimentation and speed. Armed with a Leica camera, she adopted a mobile, intuitive approach that allowed her to photograph the city from oblique angles and unexpected vantage points. Her images capture not only the architectural elegance of Paris but also its fleeting gestures: reflections in shop windows, the geometry of staircases, and the quiet drama of everyday life. By the early 1930s, her mastery of the medium earned her recognition among peers, positioning her at the forefront of a generation redefining photographic practice.
A trip to New York in 1936 marked a decisive expansion of her visual vocabulary. Bing turned her lens toward the vertical ambitions of the American metropolis, documenting landmarks such as the Chrysler Building alongside scenes of performance and spectacle. The city’s energy resonated with her sensibility, infusing her work with a new sense of scale and rhythm. Yet this momentum was interrupted by the upheavals of war, which forced her displacement and eventual return to New York in 1941 under dramatically altered circumstances.
By presenting Bing’s photographs alongside those of contemporaries including
André Kertész, Brassaï,
Man Ray, and
Berenice Abbott, the exhibition situates her within a constellation of influential figures who collectively reimagined modern photography. The result is a nuanced portrait of an artist attuned to movement, light, and the pulse of urban life, whose work continues to resonate with clarity and immediacy.
Image:
Ilse Bing (American, born Germany, 1899 - 1998) Self-Portrait with Leica 1931 2025.74.1