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New York in Postcards 1880–1980

The Andreas Adam Collection

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The nearly nine hundred fifty postcards document New York City’s changing identity and culture over the last century


English edition
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Title Details
Edited by Thomas Kramer
2010
Hardback
560 pages, 948 color illustrations
22 x 27 cm
ISBN 978-3-85881-713-6

New York is a global icon—the quintessential metropolis. Over three centuries it has morphed from the colonial fur trading hub of New Amsterdam into one of the most vibrant and exciting cities on earth. The history of the Big Apple has been documented many times over in many diverse ways, including books, photographs, and songs. But this lavish, beautiful volume offers a new perspective, telling the story of New York through Andreas Adam’s (*1945) vast collection of rare picture postcards that recount the city’s changing identity and culture over the last century.

The nearly nine hundred fifty well-preserved, vintage cards in New York in Postcards 1880–1980 bring to life the look and feel of their eras in concise visual statements. The cards’ striking prints, organized by subject and geographic area, vividly depict every aspect of New York City over the centuries: the Native American village that became Manhattan; nineteenth-century street scenes; famous architectural landmarks; lush gardens; cars and trains; and historical events. The images themselves are a fascinating mélange of artistic mediums. There are archival photographs, as well as paintings and drawings that represent a range of styles from art nouveau to neo-objectivism, naturalism, and pop art. The book is rounded out with essays by Andreas Adam; Paul Goldberger, the New Yorker’s renowned architecture critic; and art historian Kent Lydecker that address the visual narrative and the architectural history of New York and the cultural history of the picture postcard.

 

New York in Postcards 1880–1980 is not conventional scholarship, or even a conventional kind of illustrated history, it offers something that these types of books cannot. It is at once an architectural history of New York, and a history of ways of seeing New York.” Paul Goldberger in his essay

Echo

New York in Postcards, 1880–1980 provides a dual prism for viewing the city. The book serves as both an architectural history and a history of ways of seeing the city.” New York Times

“In the age of e-mail the postcard, it seems, continues to flourish, I’m glad to say: and if you leaf through a beautiful book such as New York in Postcards, 1880–1980, you’re bound to feel inspired.” The Times

“This lavish, beautiful volume offers a new perspective through Andreas Adam’s vast collection of rare picture postcards that recount the city’s changing identity and culture over a century. ” COLLECTORS Companion

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