This is a virtual program — online only.
Throughout 1905, an amateur photographer dedicated himself to capturing Broadway, from the bottom of Manhattan to the top. In sun, rain, and snow, at dawn and late at night, C. G. Hine photographed buildings that were threatened by rapid development: outmoded stores, hotels, theaters, workshops, and shanties. His survey also foregrounded the precarity of the street’s denizens, such as sex workers and pushcart vendors, as well as its animal, arboreal, and botanical populations. In an unpublished three-volume album that he titled “From the Sky Scraper to the Wild Flower,” Hine assembled more than three hundred photographs, numerous newspaper clippings, and a typed essay. In 1917, he donated the album to the New-York Historical Society, which is where the historian Nick Yablon rediscovered it.
Yablon's new book, From the Skyscraper to the Wildflower, is a history and commentary on C. G. Hine's work that explores his connections to—and divergences from—movements and trends of the time. Presenting a selection of Hine’s photographs, Yablon probes how they reveal deeper conflicts and tensions about contemporary urban development and how they shed light on New York’s changing landscape, where signs of the modern clashed with vestiges of earlier eras.
To register for this FREE program, click on the link above to RSVP. You will be redirected to Ticketstripe to reserve your seat. The Zoom room is limited to 100 people. If you can't enter the Zoom, you can watch the program live on our YouTube channel when it begins at 6pm.
Nick Yablon
Nick Yablon is professor of history and American studies at the University of Iowa. He is the author of Untimely Ruins: An Archaeology of American Urban Modernity, 1819–1919 (2009) and Remembrance of Things Present: The Invention of the Time Capsule (2019).