Invisible City: Photographs by Ken Schles
Invisible City: Photographs by Ken Schles Steidl, 2014, second edition. Göttingen, Germany. First edition Twelvetrees Press, 1988, Pasadena, California. 80 pages, 62 photographs. "The real image of New York is rarely clear to anyone living in it, except as tenacious sensation... a picture book that comprehends both the shambles and the thrall of the city." — Guy Trebay, The Village Voice. "Perhaps one of the greatest portrayals of nocturnal urban life of the 20th Century -- certainly keeping equal company with Brassai's classic Paris de Nuit." — Eric Miles, Photo-Eye. "hellishly brilliant." — Vince Aletti, The New Yorker. (more reviews). A New York Times notable book of the Year and awarded by AIGA for book design, Invisible City also appears in 802 Photo Books from the M + M Auer Collection, a compendium of the most important books in the history of photography. In 1992 Invisible City was exhibited in More Than One Photography at the Museum of Modern Art, an exhibit that surveyed the range photographic practice in various media. Invisible City was the sole representative of the published photographic book. Recently listed in 10x10 American Photobooks, a survey of significant American photography books by noted photo book experts. It is also cited in Parr/Badger's The Photobook: A History Volume III, the final volume of a project widely acknowledged as the seminal authority on the history of the photo book. For a decade Ken Schles watched the passing of time from his Lower East Side neighborhood. His camera fixed the instances of his observations, and these moments became the foundation of his invisible city. Friends and architecture come under the scrutiny of his lens and, when sorted and viewed in the pages of this book, a remarkable achievement of personal vision emerges.







