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About Bruce Gilden Acclaimed street photographer with a unique style, Bruce Gilden was born in Brooklyn, New York in 1946. He first went to Penn State University but he found his sociology courses too boring for his temperament and he quit college. Gilden briefly toyed with the idea of being an actor but in 1967, he decided to buy a camera and to become a photographer. Besides taking a few evening classes at the School of Visual Arts, Gilden is predominantly self-taught. Even as a child, he has always been fascinated by life on the streets and its complicated and fascinating rhythms, and this was the spark

that inspired his first long-term personal projects, photographing in Coney Island and then during the Mardi Gras in New Orleans. Since then, Bruce Gilden has continued to focus on strong characters and to apply Robert Capa’s mantra to his own work: “if the picture isn’t good enough, you aren’t close enough.” Over the years he has produced long and detailed photographic projects in New York, Haiti, France, Ireland, India, Russia, Japan, England, and now in America. Gilden has published 20 monographs of his work. Bruce Gilden’s work has been exhibited widely around the world and is part of many permanent collections such as MoMA,

New York; Victoria & Albert Museum, London; the Tokyo Metropolitan Museum of Photography and the Getty Museum. In 2016, his most recent work in color was exhibited in a group show, Strange and Familiar, Britain as revealed by international photographers at the Barbican Art Museum in London, and most recently in 2019 in the exhibition This Land at Pier 24 Photography in San Francisco. Already the recipient of numerous grants and awards, Bruce Gilden became a Guggenheim Fellow in 2013. He joined Magnum Photos in 1998.

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