Museum of the City
of New York






Creative Lives
New York Paintings and Photographs by Maurice and Lee Sievan
Leslie Nolan, Francis V. O’Connor


Museum of the City of New York
distributed by University Press of New England

1997 • 96 pp. 79 illus. (38 duotones, 41 color). 8 1/2 x 11"
Art / Photography / New York City / American Studies

$25.95 Paper, 978-0-910961-08-0





A fresh new photographic and artistic interpretation of the daily activities of mid-20th-century New York City.

The cityscape paintings and documentary photographs of Maurice and Lee Sievan rank among the best representations of New York City at mid-century. Although skyscrapers, subway and el infrastructures, and the visible effects of the Great Depression were dramatically altering the face of the city, the Sievans chose not to depict the city as a world-class curiosity. Instead, his paintings and her photographs conveyed a passion for lesser-known neighborhoods and ordinary New Yorkers going about day-to-day activities. Maurice's lyrical scenes of working-class housing, parked cars, and unremarkable shopping areas in the outlying borough of then-suburban Queens are memorable for their painterly brushwork and moody atmosphere. Lee's photographs of horse-drawn vehicles, trolleys, street urchins, and pedestrians stand out as an illuminated portrait of everyday Manhattan life. This catalog, with its generous selection of color and duotone plates, examines their two careers, which spanned the 30s through the 60s. It also offers a new example of the dynamics of husband-wife artist relationships in the fine tradition of Stieglitz-O'Keeffe and Pollock-Krasner.


Leslie Nolan, Curator of Prints and Photographs at the Museum of the City of New York, and art historian Francis V. O'Connor appraise the artists and contribute a whole new understanding of the work of this underappreciated couple.








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