Hip-Hop Revolution
Photographs by Janette Beckman, Joe Conzo, and Martha Cooper
April 1 - September 27, 2015
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Hip-Hop Revolution presents more than 80 photographs taken between 1977 and 1990 by three preeminent New York-based photographers—Janette Beckman, Joe Conzo, and Martha Cooper—who documented hip hop from its pioneering days through its emergence into mainstream popular culture.
Hip-hop culture, incorporating such elements as DJing, rapping, and breaking (dancing), was born on the streets of New York City in the 1970s and grew to have a global impact on music, dance, and fashion. The exhibition showcases the experiences of each photographer during these seminal years, as DJs, MCs, and b-boys (breakdancers) were continually innovating, developing new forms of self-expression. The work of these photographers—featuring early figures Afrika Bambaata, Kool Herc, and Cold Crush Brothers, breakers (or b-boys) like Rock Steady Crew, and breakout acts such as Run DMC and the Beastie Boys—form a broad survey of a movement that is indelibly linked to New York City and still has a resounding influence today.
PRESS
- "Documenting the Birth and Growth of Hip-Hop" MSNBC’s NewsNation with Tamron Hall
- "Hip Hop Revolution at the Museum of the City of New York" NBC New York
- "Hip-Hop? She Won’t Stop" The New York Times
- "Photographing The Birth of Hip-Hop" American Photo Magazine
- "'Hip-Hop Revolution' Displays the Early Days of the Music Genre" Eyewitness News 7 Online
- "Hip-Hop's Roots Traced in New East Harlem Exhibit" The Warner Cable News 1
- "'Hip-Hop Revolution: Photographs' chronicles the rise of rap music" amNewYork
- "Nostalgia-Inducing Photos Of Hip-Hop's Golden Age" Huffington Post
- "Blast Into Hip-Hop’s Past With This New NYC Photo Exhibit" Vibe
- "Hip hop's 'baby pictures': Unseen photos offer glimpse inside the formative years of New York's subculture" The Daily Mail Online
Read the press release.