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By Lisa Cutler
Publisher: Kehrer Verlag
Publication date: May 2026
Print length: 176 pages
Language: English
Price Range:
A Photographic Journey Through Red Hook, Brooklyn.

Lisa Cutler: The Hook offers an intimate and atmospheric journey into Red Hook, a Brooklyn neighborhood defined by layers of history, shifting identities, and a persistent sense of resilience. Cutler first encountered the area by accident, yet this chance discovery evolved into a profound engagement with a landscape where industrial remnants, muted beauty, and quiet tension coexist. Her photographs, made between 2017 and 2019, explore a place suspended between memory and transformation, where the past lingers in every brick and peeling surface.

Once known as Roode Hoek, the peninsula developed from farmland into a thriving maritime hub. Warehouses, shipping terminals, and cobblestone streets shaped its character, reflecting the district’s crucial role in global trade. When industrial activity collapsed in the mid-20th century, Red Hook became emblematic of urban decline—isolated, economically stressed, and marked by disinvestment. Yet even in its most difficult periods, the neighborhood retained a strong sense of community and a distinctive visual identity that continues to define it today.

Cutler’s work captures this duality: the stillness of abandoned structures alongside signs of renewal that signal the area’s ongoing evolution. Redevelopment has revived the waterfront and drawn new residents and businesses, creating a dialogue—sometimes harmonious, sometimes uneasy—between preservation and change. Her images reflect these tensions through a refined visual language of geometry, color, and light, echoing the influence of photographers such as Lewis Baltz, Robert Adams, and Walker Evans.

Though people rarely appear, their presence is deeply felt. A chair left in an alley, a coat hanging on a fence, or the glow of a window becomes evidence of everyday life continuing beyond the frame. Cutler’s photographs honor Red Hook’s complexity, portraying it neither as a relic nor a polished reinvention, but as a living environment shaped by time, struggle, and hope.

Lisa Cutler: The Hook stands as a thoughtful meditation on place—an homage to a neighborhood at a crossroads and a testament to photography’s ability to illuminate beauty in overlooked corners of the urban world.

Image: © Lisa Cutler
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