5 Frames of New York City, 1987

By thorsten

Photography can be a time machine. 38 years ago I travelled the first time to New York, classic style with a Pan Am jumbo. With me came two F3s, a 24/2.8 and a 105/2.5, plus 10 rolls of T-Max 400. The immigration officers at JFK looked up your name in huge red books, luckily Kurt Waldheim was listed, no Wulff. Amazingly the city felt like the set of all the movies shot there: Klute, Dog Day Afternoon, or Woody Allens wonderful black and white Manhattan. Years later I had the pleasure to meet Steve Schapiro, who shot the stills for »Taxi Driver« and »The Godfather«, or the cover of David Bowies »Station to Station« and »Low«. Steve was one of the warmest and caring people I ever met, he gave me a lot in very short time. Look up his body of work, it is incredible. We had a shootout with our Nikons, Godfatherstyle.

Back in 1987, the first thing I did after falling out of the yellow cab was walking down Broadway from Union Square, to get a real slice of Pizza. The next day, I started roaming the street to shoot. A camera over each shoulder I enjoyed the combination of the two lenses. With the 24 you had to get close, with the 105 it was a bit more relaxed. So imagine me, walking down Manhattan snapping away. I tried not to hide what I was doing, it was all a great adventure. The New Yorkers were pretty oblivious, listening to their Walkmen, or reading Paperbacks in the subway. Female office workers walked around town in sneakers, with their pumps in plastic bags.

I smiled a lot. Back then you were a curiosity, not a jerk posting stuff on instagram. And then, it was New York.

This couple walked in their own world, she injured, him tenderly caring for her, navigating through the city. They never saw the strange kid jumping at them with a Japanese camera in his face.

Central Park – This dreamy kid, fishing carp with sausages at the Conservatory Water pond, saw me coming. But it was okay.

These two gentlemen, sitting in front of Mare Chiaro at 176 1/2 Mulberry Street, saw me too. For a change I used the 105. It was 12 years before ‘The Sopranos’ went on the air in 1999, but dosen’t he look a bit like Uncle Junior?

One hot afternoon, a summer storm caught New Yorkers on their way home. Heavy rain made this corner only negotiable with a leap of faith, which most of them took. This sequence is shot with the 105. While I ignored it back in the 80s I grew quite fond of it over time. Back then I only printed my favorites, but some surprises are still hidden after all the time. Okay, I cheated. It is 8 Frames)

Walking the backstreets of Chinatown around sunset I met these three ladies. Chatting at the back entrance of a restaurant, fresh prepared Peking Ducks gleaming in the kitchens open window, they were the perfect image. I had to have it. Kneeling down in front of them, F3 with 24 at my eye, finger on the shutter… There was a loud CRACK… with the mirror slap her stick hit the camera. The hurlyburly’s was done and the image won, smiling I walked away towards the the set of sun.

This journey defined who I became as a photographer to this day. Back home I developed the T-MAX in my trusty Jobo UniTank, searching for half-remembered favorites on the wet and dripping films. I went back to printing these images on a box of Ilfobrom Galerie FB, amazed by the quality of the film. These pictures are photographed prints, not scanned negatives. They are a special gift, allowing me to look back in time, to the young man I was. To the excitement of capturing exactly the image you want, and the utter happiness to print it in the darkroom.
Thank you for your time!

(Hi Dave, see you in Maine!)
/thorsten

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About The Author

By thorsten
Major influence just now: Severance on Apple. Incredible work by cinematographer Jessica Lee Gagné (and everybody else working on it). Imho the best show since Sopranos and Twin Peaks. Further running: Akira Kurosawa, Wes Anderson, Billy Wilder, and as always, Kubrick. The night before Salgado died I ran into Donata Wenders and her husband Wim. We talked about shooting film, and printing in the bathroom.
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Comments

Marcello Stoppini on 5 Frames of New York City, 1987

Comment posted: 29/07/2025

Such a beautiful series
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thorsten replied:

Comment posted: 29/07/2025

Thank you Marcello… just now I walk the streets of Berlin with a Nikon Z5 II to catch the sunset ;))

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Ibraar Hussain on 5 Frames of New York City, 1987

Comment posted: 29/07/2025

fantastic timeless brilliance!
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thorsten replied:

Comment posted: 29/07/2025

Hah thanks Ibraar. That means a lot.

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David Pauley on 5 Frames of New York City, 1987

Comment posted: 29/07/2025

Wow, Thorsten. These are incredible, every frame. They conjure up that era in NYC for sure -- the boxy huge cars, the guileless nature of your subjects -- but are also timeless. I especially love the triptych. Takes me back to the time when I also moved here. Bravo!
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thorsten replied:

Comment posted: 29/07/2025

Thank you David. Especially about the puddle jumpers. Back then I thought »This is to easy, just snapping them jump«. Plus the prints needed some work, and I was lazy in 1987 ;))

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John Bennett on 5 Frames of New York City, 1987

Comment posted: 29/07/2025

Great photos. Reminders of A) a bygone era and B) the timeless quality of real photography.
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thorsten replied:

Comment posted: 29/07/2025

Dear John, that is exactly what surprised me. Touching old work comes with the risk of discovering your own mediocrity… now I wonder if I should go back and shoot with the same setup. Or a shiny new Z9 ;))

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Curtis Heikkinen on 5 Frames of New York City, 1987

Comment posted: 29/07/2025

Very nice work, indeed! Thanks for posting this!
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thorsten replied:

Comment posted: 29/07/2025

My pleasure Curtis. I will post a follow-up with 5 more Frames…

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Gary Smith on 5 Frames of New York City, 1987

Comment posted: 29/07/2025

Maybe I'll put a roll of Tri-X in the Nikon and take a wander through downtown Portland. I know it's not Manhattan, but then nothing really is.

Today I'm taking the Toyo up the mountain with some Fomapan 100.

Thanks for your article Thorsten.
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thorsten replied:

Comment posted: 29/07/2025

That sounds fantastic, Gary. And as always, your state of mind is what really counts ;))

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Gary Smith replied:

Comment posted: 29/07/2025

I have 4 sheets drying in the garage. I still forgot to stop down after focusing on one shot...

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Richard Alton on 5 Frames of New York City, 1987

Comment posted: 29/07/2025

Breathtaking - thank you for sharing.
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thorsten replied:

Comment posted: 29/07/2025

No higher praise can there be for 38 years old material, dear Richard. Thank you. That motivates me to close the circle.

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Art Meripol on 5 Frames of New York City, 1987

Comment posted: 29/07/2025

Wonderful shots! Reminds me of my first trip to NY in 1985. I was there to shoot the NIT basketball tourney and within the first 30 minutes after checked into my hotel an hit the streets I saw two muggings around Times Square. I smiled and thought 'Man, I'm in NY'! Your photos here far outdistanced my work at the tourney.
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thorsten replied:

Comment posted: 29/07/2025

Hah, thanks Art! Basically everybody warned me of muggings… strangers on the subway told me to put larger bills into my sock and hand over just a prepared roll of single Dollars. While I innocently carried the Nikons around on my shoulders ;))

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Jeffery Luhn on 5 Frames of New York City, 1987

Comment posted: 30/07/2025

T,
Very nice NYC street shots. Would you venture out now with the same fearless abandon? I used to shoot all over the SF bay area for local newspapers in 1969 when I was 17. Pimps, hookers, drug dealers, anti-war demonstrations, fires, floods, etc. Never a thought. I wouldn't do that now. How about you? What has changed? Us or the world?
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Art Meripol replied:

Comment posted: 30/07/2025

I have read a lot of stories stating the touristy spots in SF these days are targets for 'pro' looking gear. But NY is probably much safer than it was back then.

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thorsten on 5 Frames of New York City, 1987

Comment posted: 30/07/2025

Excellent question, Jeffery. Does the world try to change us? I just walked into a pro palestine protest camp, surrounded by german police, and took pictures with a 17-28mm. Maybe people can still tell the difference between us and somebody casually swinging out the phone. The clutched camera signals the seriousness in your intent. Or it is your projected body language, calm but swift, feeling if you are a disturbance and not lingering too long. But no hesitation either. I interact with people, look them in their eyes, get kind of permission and not steel images… except with the chinese ladies. But my eagerness to grab a piece or reality that tells a story, in the right moment and the perfect light is still the same. I just compete with my younger self these days.
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Michael Jardine on 5 Frames of New York City, 1987

Comment posted: 30/07/2025

These are so cool. I wish, I'm sure we all wish, that we could have had a lifetime's experience in photography when we were wierd kids with cameras in the '80s. Your composure at this point is admirable.
Yes, that dude totally looks like Uncle Jun, who is one of the very best characters ever on TV, in my humble opinion!
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thorsten replied:

Comment posted: 30/07/2025

Right you are, Michael. I am still that weird kid, chasing the same windmills. All the years the next photo job was the really important one. Especially after going digital in 2001. Always haunted by lingering fear of failure… I surprised myself to pull it off. I am not really good with resilience, right now I am heartbroken by a crashed hard drive. My first ever, since 1990. So I count myself lucky that the weird kid from 1987 made me the gift of these images which remind me why I leave the house with a camera on my back. In 2012 I went to the Holsten Diner in Jersey, where the Sopranos cut to black. Timeless ending.

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Graham Orbell on 5 Frames of New York City, 1987

Comment posted: 30/07/2025

Great pics Thorsten. Love the stick lady especially. The puddle jumpers are reminiscent of that famous Henri Cartier Bresson image. I can see you were having fun there.
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thorsten replied:

Comment posted: 30/07/2025

Oh thank you, Graham… HCB was actually in town, opening his »Early Work« show at the MoMa. Please have a look here: https://www.35mmc.com/06/10/2021/5-frames-including-a-homage-to-henri-from-a-trip-to-france-by-thorsten-wulff/

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Richard Angeloni on 5 Frames of New York City, 1987

Comment posted: 30/07/2025

Wonderful stories and outstanding photos. As someone who grew up in New York City in the 1960s, '70s, and '80s. these photos take me back and are representative of what the city was like back then. I had an interest in photography back then and took plenty of photos, but most of what I shot back then have been lost to the passage of time.
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thorsten replied:

Comment posted: 30/07/2025

Thank you dear Richard. It makes me totally happy to hear that from a real New Yorker. To quote E.B. White: »There are roughly three New Yorks. There is, first, the New York of the man or woman who was born here, who takes the city for granted and accepts its size and its turbulence as natural and inevitable. Second, there is the New York of the commuter — the city that is devoured by locusts each day and spat out each night. Third, there is the New York of the person who was born somewhere else and came to New York in quest of something. Commuters give the city its tidal restlessness; natives give it solidity and continuity; but the settlers give it passion.«

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Scott Ferguson on 5 Frames of New York City, 1987

Comment posted: 30/07/2025

Great post, Thorsten!
Very cool photos from almost 40 years ago -- crazy! I also love that you connected with Steve Shapiro, what a legend and what a body of work! The puddle series is incredible.
Best,
s
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