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The Park

Lauren Henkin

April 30 – June 8, 2014

The Park 33, 2013

The Park 33, 2013
47 x 43 Inches (Additional sizes available)
Pigment print

The Park 2, 2012

The Park 2, 2012
20 x 18 inches (Additional sizes available)
Pigment print

The Park 14, 2013

The Park 14, 2013
20 x 18 inches (Additional sizes available)
Pigment print

The Park 31, 2009

The Park 31, 2009
20 x 18 inches (Additional sizes available)
Pigment print

The Park 30, 2013

The Park 30, 2013
20 x 18 inches (Additional sizes available)
Pigment print

The Park 4, 2013

The Park 4, 2013
20 x 18 inches (Additional sizes available)
Pigment print

The Park 1, 2012

The Park 1, 2012
32 x 29 inches (Additional sizes available)
Pigment print


Foley Gallery is delighted to present The Park, photographer Lauren Henkin’s five-year study of Central Park. This is the first time a selection of these photographs will be seen by the public.  It is also Henkin’s New York City debut.

Henkin began The Park in 2009 on a visit from Oregon.  She returned every summer to photograph, and moved to New York in 2012 to work full-time on the series.  Different from other recent photographic studies of Central Park, she gives us those indefinable moments that prompt you to wake up on a Saturday morning and think, “I want to spend the day in the park.” 

Henkin has spent a decade photographing the American landscape.  Instead of a documentary approach, she focuses on reinterpreting the everyday in unexpected ways. The Park emphasizes the act of seeing as much as the subjects themselves. She describes her intent, “My goal is to represent Central Park as it lives in one’s imagination.  It’s equally about the light on the softball field as it is about the softball.  It’s about the deep grooves in the rocks as much as the rock-climbing.  It’s about the sun on your back as much as the sunbathing.”

The Park spans Central Park’s diverse landscape:  the south end, bordered by Midtown Manhattan skyscrapers where people climb rocks, take pictures and picnic; a sea of sunbathers in Sheep Meadow; and, The Ravine, where the crowds thin as the landscape grows wilder.

These photographs aren’t portraits or landscapes.  They juxtapose all the elements that make Central Park—the architecture, the land and us. She enables us to see what we’re often unconscious of without the help of the camera—folly, irony, and authenticity. 

Born in Washington, D.C., artist Lauren Henkin grew up in Maryland, graduated with a Bachelor of Arts in Architecture from Washington University in St. Louis and now resides in New York City.  She is an educator, writer, frequent speaker, author and active member in the arts community.  Her work is widely collected privately and by public institutions such as the Cleveland Museum of Art, Portland Art Museum, Smith College Museum of Art, Yale University and Dartmouth College. Her work has been published in numerous journals on photography and the book arts including PDN, Black+White Magazine, Urbanautica, Landscape Stories, Parenthesis and The Washington Post.

The Park will remain on view through June 8th.  Foley Gallery is open Wednesday – Sunday, 12 – 6pm.  To request images; please contact the gallery at 212.244.9081 or info@foleygallery.com.