Tall Socks
By (Author) Mark Cohen
GOST Books
GOST Books
10th March 2025
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Individual photographers
779.092
Hardback
128
Width 185mm, Height 254mm
In July 1973 Cohen spent a month living in a dorm room at NYU while taking part
in a film production workshop. His daily classes were short so he used his free time to walk around
the city with his camera. Only a few of the images were printed at the time and the vast majority
remained unseen, except as negatives, until now.
New York in the 1970s was notorious for high crime rates, social disorder, an unsafe subway and
a declining quality of life. Economic stagnation had hit the city hard and many of the middle-class
residents had left for the suburbs. This is often evidenced in Cohens photographs in the graffiti,
litter and ruin present on the streets but his images also depict a New York which is full of life and
on the move.
Mark Cohen was born in 1943 in Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania and with the exception of a short
time in Europe, lived and worked there for most of his life. Cohen worked for many years as a
portrait photographer at his studio in Wilkes-Barr and his personal work on the streets was made
in his spare time. His work was first exhibited in 1969 at the George Eastman House but came to
prominence with his first solo exhibition at MoMA in 1973.
Cohen is the recipient of two Guggenheim Grants and his work is held by numerous public
collections including Centre Pompidou, Paris, The Metropolitan Museum of Art and the Whitney,
New York; Tokyo Metropolitan Museum of Art; and V&A Museum, London. His work has been the
subject of international exhibitions and the most recent retrospective was in 2013 at Le Bal in Paris
and accompanied by the publication Dark Knees. In 2015 Frame. A Retrospective was published
by the University of Texas press. In 2014 he moved to Philadelphia.