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Photo Book

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By Mario Schneider

Publisher: Kehrer Verlag
Publication date: October 2025
Print length: 208 pages
Language: English
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New York Short Stories offers a fresh, contemplative view of a city often portrayed through noise, speed, and spectacle. In this new photobook, Mario Schneider—long known for his award-winning work as a filmmaker and composer—turns his attentive eye to the streets of New York between 2023 and 2025. The result is a visual narrative shaped by his instinct for rhythm, pacing, and emotional nuance.

Rather than chasing icons or landmarks, Schneider focuses on the fleeting exchanges that animate daily life. His images linger on small gestures, subtle glances, and the quiet choreography of strangers crossing paths. In both color and black-and-white, he reveals a New York where silence coexists with chaos, and where stories unfold in the gaps between movement and stillness. Influenced by decades of directing and scoring films, he composes each frame with a sense of musicality, allowing light, shadow, and human presence to echo like themes in a soundtrack.

What emerges is a portrait of the city that defies stereotypes. Schneider’s New York feels intimate and reflective, a place where emotions are not drowned out by the rush but illuminated in rare moments of pause. His work recalls the timeless humanism of classic street photography, yet stands firmly in the present, attentive to the vulnerabilities and unspoken connections that define urban life today. Some photographs capture people lost in thought at bus stops or café windows, while others freeze the tensions and tenderness of crowded sidewalks—tiny encounters that would vanish without the photographer’s patient gaze.

Through this collection, Schneider proves that storytelling transcends mediums. Whether through film or photography, his vision remains anchored in the desire to understand people, their inner worlds, and the fragile instants that reveal them. New York Short Stories becomes not just a tribute to the city but an invitation to look more closely, to slow down, and to rediscover the poetry of the everyday.

Image: © Mario Schneider
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