NY Photog's Gallery Shows Neighbors–Captured Without Their Knowledge

NY Photog's Gallery Shows Neighbors–Captured Without Their Knowledge

Residents of a New York City apartment building are up in arms over an exhibition of candid photographs one of their neighbors took of them, without their knowledge or permission.

A gallery show — “The Neighbors” — of the pictures taken surreptitiously by American photographer Arne Svenson opened last week at the Julie Saul Gallery in lower Manhattan.

The images were taken by Svenson through the windows of his apartment building in lower Manhattan’s Tribeca neighborhood, as he trained his lens on his on his unsuspecting neighbors.

They show Svenson’s neighbors, unawares, in various candid poses — bending, kneeling, carrying children.

A press release on the gallery’s website said Svenson was intrigued by the idea of capturing “the daily activities of his downtown Manhattan neighbors as seen through his windows into theirs.”

It called the photo series “social documentation in a very rarefied environment.”

But Svenson’s subjects strongly disagreed, saying that his picture-taking violated their privacy.

Some said they also resented that he snapped pictures of them with their young children, making the intrusion into their lives even worse.

A gallery spokeswoman said that the pictures go for between $6,200 and $8,400, and that some of the images have already been sold.

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