Frank Paulin: Unseen Color, 1956 - 2008 brings to light a body of color work that remained largely hidden for decades, even as Paulin built a reputation for his black-and-white street photographs of New York. On view from June 25 to August 15, 2026, the exhibition gathers twenty images made over more than fifty years and offers a fresh look at one of the early American photographers working in color on the street.
Paulin began shooting color in the mid-1950s, years before color photography gained broad acceptance in the fine art world. These pictures were not printed until late in his career, which is part of what makes the exhibition notable. The images show Times Square, Fifth Avenue, Central Park and other urban settings, where shop windows, neon signs, passing pedestrians and reflections turn the city into a layered visual field. The results feel less like straightforward documents than carefully composed scenes shaped by motion, glass and light.
Born in Pittsburgh in 1926 and raised in New York and Chicago, Paulin trained first as a fashion illustrator and photographer before serving in the Army Signal Corps in Europe during World War II. After the war, he studied at the Institute of Design in Chicago and later at the New School under
Alexey Brodovitch. That training is visible in the work: strong attention to structure, striking use of reflections and an instinct for urban choreography. His 1957 image
Ferry Boat was singled out by Brodovitch as “Monumental,” and the description still fits the graphic clarity of the picture.
The exhibition also reaches beyond midcentury Manhattan. Later color photographs from East Hampton and rural New York show that Paulin kept pushing the medium into new settings, using color to hold together landscape, atmosphere and everyday detail. Works such as
5th Ave Window Reflection,
Banker Trust and Yellow Cab and
Window Reflection show how thoroughly he used color as a structural element, not just an effect.
With this exhibition, Bruce Silverstein Gallery restores Paulin to the history of color street photography, where he belongs alongside
Saul Leiter,
Ernst Haas and
Ruth Orkin.
Image:
Times Square, 1956 © Frank Paulin, courtesy of the Bruce Silverstein Gallery.