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Win a Solo Exhibition in July 2026 + An Exclusive Interview!
Win a Solo Exhibition in July 2026 + An Exclusive Interview!

Photo Book

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Photographer: Susan Anthony
Publisher: MW Editions
Publication date: December 2025
Print length: 144 pages
Language: English
Price Range:
Susan B. Anthony: Collar City is a quietly powerful photographic book that traces a decade-long relationship between an artist and a city shaped by industry, loss, and renewal. What began as a spontaneous winter visit in 2013 grew into a sustained act of looking, as Anthony returned again and again to Troy, New York, guided by curiosity and a deepening sense of attachment. Working with her Hasselblad, she approached the city with patience, allowing its rhythms and contradictions to unfold naturally over time.

Once a major center of steel production and brickmaking, Troy earned the nickname “Collar City” as the birthplace of the detachable shirt collar, an invention that transformed men’s fashion and fueled local prosperity. Like many post-industrial American cities, Troy later experienced economic decline, leaving behind abandoned factories, fading storefronts, and weathered infrastructure. Anthony’s photographs linger in these spaces, attentive to texture and light, revealing the dignity embedded in brick walls, cracked sidewalks, and aging façades marked by use rather than neglect.

Set against this industrial legacy are signs of renewal and continuity. Grand homes built from Troy brick still stand, their interiors adorned with marble fireplaces and luminous Tiffany windows. Anthony documents neighborhoods in transition, where restoration exists alongside decay, and where longtime residents and new arrivals share the same streets. Her portraits range from young children to elders who have witnessed decades of change, forming a multigenerational record of community life rooted in place and memory.

Rather than offering a nostalgic or purely documentary account, Collar City presents Troy as a living organism, shaped by labor, resilience, and human connection. Anthony’s background as a painter and printmaker is evident in her compositional sensitivity, while her editorial experience informs the clarity and restraint of her visual storytelling. The photographs neither romanticize hardship nor celebrate renewal uncritically; instead, they hold space for complexity.

As her first monograph, Collar City stands as a thoughtful meditation on American towns in flux and the quiet power of sustained attention. Through Anthony’s lens, Troy emerges not as a relic of the past, but as a vibrant, evolving community whose layered history continues to shape its present.

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Latest Interviews

Exclusive Interview with Susan Anthony
American photographer Susan Anthony brings a painter’s eye to documentary photography, creating nuanced portraits of people and places shaped by time, community, and tradition. Her work is rooted in observation, empathy, and a deep curiosity about the lives of others. Through long-term projects, she explores the relationship between individuals and the environments they inhabit, revealing the stories that connect people to a place and to one another.
Exclusive Interview with Carole Mills Noronha
Carole Mills Noronha is an Australian photographer whose deeply personal work explores memory, family, loss, and the fragile nature of identity. Living with epilepsy and a lifelong sensitivity to light, she has developed a distinctive photographic language rooted in observation, empathy, and emotional connection. Her images are shaped by lived experience, revealing intimate stories with remarkable honesty and tenderness.
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Exclusive Interview with Matthew Finley
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Exclusive Interview with Jan Janssen
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Exclusive Interview with Henk Kosche
German photographer Henk Kosche turns his lens toward the streets of Halle an der Saale, capturing everyday life in the late years of the former German Democratic Republic. At the time, Kosche was studying design and exploring the city with his camera, drawn to the atmosphere of its industrial landscape and the quiet rhythms of daily life. His series Street Photography at the End of the 80s, selected as the Solo Exhibition for July 2025, revisits a body of work created just before a period of profound change. Rediscovered decades later in a small box of 35mm negatives, these photographs offer glimpses of a city and its people at a moment suspended between the familiar and the unknown.
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