Notes from the Margins: Allen Ginsberg and Vivian Maier brings together two artists born in 1926 whose work was long shaped outside the center of the art world. On view at Howard Greenberg Gallery from June 4 through September 12, 2026, the exhibition marks the centennials of Ginsberg and Maier with about 80 modern and vintage prints, along with Maier’s experimental film footage and a film of Ginsberg reading “Howl.”
Vivian Maier spent most of her life working as a nanny in Chicago while photographing the city and beyond in her free time. Her vast archive, left unseen during her lifetime, surfaced after a 2007 auction purchase and eventually revealed more than 100,000 negatives. Her street photographs capture sidewalks, storefronts, reflections and passing figures with a sharp eye for gesture and urban detail. Much of the work remains anonymous in origin, but the pictures themselves have become a major reference point in modern street photography.
Allen Ginsberg is better known as a poet and central figure of the Beat movement, but between the early 1950s and the mid-1960s he also made a large body of photographs. Using a simple camera, he recorded friends and fellow writers including Jack Kerouac, William Burroughs, Gregory Corso and Neal Cassady. The images are direct and often intimate, with a relaxed, informal quality that matches the candor of his writing. Some prints include his handwritten notes, adding another layer of personal record keeping.
The exhibition places the two bodies of work side by side to show how both artists turned everyday observation into lasting visual testimony. Maier worked privately and anonymously. Ginsberg worked in public, as a poet and voice of a generation. Yet both used the camera to register urban life, self-presentation and fleeting human presence. Self-portraits and city scenes recur throughout the show, giving it a clear focus on how people choose to appear, and how they are seen.
Together, the photographs and related materials present the margin not as absence, but as a place where alternative histories and visual languages take form.
Image:
Allen Ginsberg, Portrait of Allen Ginsberg, 1953.
Gelatin silver print; printed later, 11 x 14 in.
© Allen Ginsberg Trust, Courtesy of Howard Greenberg Gallery, New York