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

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By Andre D. Wagner

Publisher: Steidl
Publication date: July 2026
Print length: 88 pages
Language: English
Price Range:
Andre D. Wagner: New City, Old Blues presents a decade-long portrait of New York shaped through observation, proximity, and lived experience. Since settling in Bushwick, Brooklyn, in 2011, Andre D. Wagner turns his attention toward the everyday rhythms of the city, photographing moments that often pass unnoticed within its constant motion. His work emerges from sustained engagement with the streets and communities around him, forming a visual record grounded in empathy and attentiveness rather than spectacle.

Born in Omaha, Nebraska, Wagner originally arrives in New York to study social work, a background that continues to inform the sensitivity of his photographic practice. His images reveal a deep concern for people and the social realities that shape urban life. Working exclusively in black and white, Wagner photographs children playing on sidewalks, commuters lost in thought, couples embracing, solitary figures framed by storefronts, and fleeting encounters illuminated by changing light. These scenes carry both immediacy and quiet reflection, capturing the emotional texture of life in a rapidly transforming city.

Bushwick itself occupies an important place within the series. Over the years, the neighborhood undergoes visible changes tied to development, displacement, and shifting demographics. Wagner documents these transformations without reducing them to simple narratives of decline or progress. Instead, his photographs focus on the resilience and complexity of community, particularly within Black urban life. Humor, tenderness, fatigue, isolation, and connection coexist within the frame, revealing the layered realities of contemporary city existence.

Equally important to Wagner’s practice is his commitment to traditional photographic methods. By developing his own negatives and producing gelatin silver prints in the darkroom, he maintains a direct relationship with the material process of image-making. This dedication aligns his work with a broader lineage of American street photography while giving his images a tactile depth and tonal richness.

Featuring photographs made between 2014 and 2024, many published here for the first time, New City, Old Blues stands as both a personal chronicle and a wider reflection on race, memory, and belonging in contemporary New York. Accompanied by an essay from writer Hanif Abdurraqib, the book expands into a meditation on the enduring poetry of urban life.

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