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Watch a short documentary of The Richard Hambleton Retrospective featuring the photography of Hank O'Neal at Phillips de Pury , New York City from September 9 through the 13th, 2011 presented by Vladimir Restoin Roitfeld and Andy Valmorbida in collaboration with Phillips De Pury & Giorgio Armani.  Click here

 

Hank's photographs of Richard Hambleton as featured in the June issue of Bliss Magazine.  Download the PDF here: Bliss article

 

Hank's latest show: Portraits 1970-2010 at The Lancaster Museum of Fine Art. This one man photographic exhibition features noted portraits Hank has taken over the last four decades.  The show will run through February 27th.  For more information please visit the museums web site here: http://www.lmapa.org/exh.html

Hank's Portrait of Robert Indiana during his reception at the Four Season's Restaurant in New York City, featured in Art in America: http://www.artinamericamagazine.com/news-opinion/news/2011-01-26/robert-indiana-hope-four-seasons/

Hank's Photographs of Richard Hambleton's Shadow Men on display @ The Dairy, London:  http://arrestedmotion.com/2010/12/viewpoints-openings-richard-hambleton-pop-up-show-the-dairy-london/img_3876_p-nguyen/

 

Hank's photography graced the facade of the AMFAR pavillion, Cap D'Atibes France, May 20, 2010

C-Span July 2010 —The American Association of University Professors, features The Ghosts Of Harlem American Edition as one of it's choices for The "Best of The Best" University Editions. "The Best of The Bests" Program program, offers librarians the opportunity to share advice and recommendations with their colleagues, and recognizes the valuable contribution that university press books can make to both public and secondary school libraries. (note:The Ghosts of Harlem feature begins at 11:40 and ends at 14:40) :Please Have a look at the video here: http://www.c-spanvideo.org/program/294474-1

Jazz Times Interview June 2010 — Hank O’Neal: Chasing Ghosts

ArtNews Article, March 2010, Friendships In Focus - Berenice Abbott, PDF

Hank O'Neal's Lower East Side Project Featured On Swiss T.V.

Seventh Man Magazine - "Richard Hambleton — New York" in Milan

Featured Artist on Valmorbida.com

Artists We Love, Featured Photographs of Richard Hambleton Street Art

Swide, Hank O'Neal's Portraits of Richard Hambleton, showing in Milan

oneartworld.com - Featuring Hank O'Neal's Richard Hambleton Related Prints for Sale

Abitare - Richard Hambleton in Milan featuring a portrait by Hank O'Neal

 

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The Lower East Side 1986 - 2010

Hank O'neal's Lower East Side Project featured on Swiss T.V. 11.12.2009

This book will consist of 400 color photographs that will provide an overview of the project, written commentary by myself and dozens of others who live or work in the most exciting neighborhood in the world, an interactive DVD that will group approximately 1500 images by location and a second DVD that will include all 7500 images.

The following is a brief explanation of how the project developed.

In December 1980, I moved from the West Village to 830 Broadway and became more aware that the East Village was very different from its older cousin to the west, which was becoming more and more of a bedroom community. The Lower East Side still had an ethnic flavor that was largely missing in the somewhat more prosperous West Village. I became fascinated with this unique part of New York City, and despite some terribly run down, possibly dangerous streets, I enjoyed taking advantage of all it had to offer. Unfortunately, I rarely had my camera with me, unless it was for a very specific assignment or short-term project.

Time passed and as it did, the more often I found myself on the streets of the Lower East Side, and I began to notice the many changes that were slowly taking place. Some changes were for the good, some questionable, some downright awful. Taking a cue from my friend, Berenice Abbott, who so eloquently documented her adopted city in Changing New York, in March 1986 I decided to undertake a long-term photographic survey of this neighborhood, to document the changing Lower East Side and the East Village. I wasn’t really part of it; I lived on the fringe, but I was close enough to recognize that this corner of New York City offered beauty, excitement, mystery and the possibility of a remarkable photograph around each and every corner. This is still true in 2010.

Please view the project overview as a PDF >>