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Lower East Side, 1975, Exhibition Opening

Jewish Business, Lower East Side, 1975 (photo by Richard Marc Sakols)Jewish Business, Lower East Side, 1975 (photo by Richard Marc Sakols)As a young student in 1975, Richard Marc Sakols ventured to the Manhattan‘s Lower East Side to explore the neighborhood where his grandmother was born.

His photos of the Eldridge Street Synagogue showcase the precarious state of the building, then in disrepair after years of neglect, and provide a glimpse into the earliest efforts to preserve its legacy.

By the 1970s, much of the Lower East Side’s Jewish population had moved away and more recent arrivals, notably from Latin America and China, along with a bevy of young artists drawn by low rents, ushered in a new chapter of the neighborhood’s story.

The photographs of Lower East Side, 1975 shed light on this heady cultural moment.

The Museum at Eldridge Street,  which is housed in the historic 1887 Eldridge Street Synagogue, is presenting “Lower East Side, 1975: Portrait of a Changing Jewish Neighborhood,” an exhibition featuring never-before-seen photographs of the Lower East Side by Richard Marc Sakols.

On Tuesday, December 3, 2024, from 6 until 8 pm, the Museum will host an exhibition opening featuring an informal talk by the photographer.

The ticket price which includes Museum admission, is “Pay-What-You-Wish.” You can get tickets here.

Learn more about the exhibition at eldridgestreet.org/les-1975.

Photo: A Jewish business, Lower East Side, 1975 (photo by Richard Marc Sakols, courtesy Museum at Eldridge Street).

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