Memories from a Lower East Side photo booth

Memories from a Lower East Side photo booth
Rainbow shoe repair — A new exhibition brings together a series of community portraits taken at a local store between the late ’80s and early ’00s. 

Back in the 1980s, New York’s Lower East Side was the premiere shopping destination for the fashionable who loved a good bargain. Customers could pick up the latest leather or fur, knowing that haggling over prices with vendors was simply de rigeur.

Long before 9/11 put an end to the local garment manufacturing business, many residents were employed at local factories, which handled 70 per cent of all women’s garments made in the city. The neighbourhood, home to the city’s immigrant communities for more than a century, was densely packed with a distinctive mix of Eastern European, Black, Puerto Rican, and Chinese residents.

The area offered a snapshot of multiculturalism at its height, revealing how diverse populations could peacefully co-exist in the everyday world. At the same time, the neighbourhood suffered at the hands of bureaucrats, who instituted policies like housing inequity and “benign neglect” to create generational cycles of poverty. Despite, or perhaps because of the challenges, the neighbourhood had long been a hotspot for radicalism with reformers, organisers and activists leading the way. 

Known as “the sixth borough”, the LES has had a style and identity all its own, one beautifully captured in the new exhibition, Rainbow Shoe Repair: An Unexpected Theater of Flyness. Curated by Kimberly Jenkins, Brooke Nicholas and Ali Rosa-Salas, the show brings together a series of community portraits taken at a local store between the late ’80s and early ’00s.

Wayne Casimir and Debbie Cox

Elroy Gay

Rosa-Salas, Director of Programming at the Abrons Arts Centre, first got the idea for the show while perusing the family photo albums of friend and LES native Sammi Gay. A series of portraits of Gay, her mother, father, and aunt taken in front of a deep red backdrop at the Rainbow Shoe Repair stopped Rosa-Salas in her tracks. 

“The composition was so tender and intimate and the style of clothing was so similar to contemporary fashion trends,” Rosa-Salas says. “It made me think about how important the LES is to contemporary fashion discourse.”

“The images demonstrated an aesthetic deeply tied to place. They emanate a pride in New York City living, in maintaining roots and building a family in a neighbourhood, and a commitment to developing a personal archive.”

Locals frequented the Rainbow Shoe Repair, still located at 170 Delancey Street, to get portraits taken, as prices were far more affordable than those at a photo studio or department store. Josef Borukhov, who operated the shop in the ’80s and ’90s, had a talent for photography, and his collection of primary colour curtains served as the backdrop for portraits. After he left, Ilya Shaulov continued to run the photo studio through the mid-’00s. 

“In addition to special events, people would often stop by unplanned to take a picture by themselves, while others developed rituals around planning what they were going to wear,” Rosa-Salas says. “These photographs also speak to the importance of neighbourhood pride in communities in New York under the spectre of gentrification.”

Jessica Lebron

Shawntel Dunbar

Jasmine Lopez

Elroy Gay and Lillie Gay

Wayne Casimir and Debbie Cox

Sammi Gay and Elroy Gay

Wayne Casimir and Debbie Cox

Rainbow Shoe Repair: An Unexpected Theater of Flyness is on view at the Abrons Art Center in New York from February 6 – March 29, 2020.

Follow Miss Rosen on Twitter.

Enjoyed this article? Like Huck on Facebook or follow us on Twitter

Latest on Huck

“A party is a microcosm of a nation”: Caleb Femi on the decline of the house party
Culture

“A party is a microcosm of a nation”: Caleb Femi on the decline of the house party

To celebrate the publication of his new collection ‘The Wickedest’, Isaac Muk caught up with Femi to talk more about the work, the future of the shoobs, and discuss why having it large on a Saturday night should be cherished.

Written by: Isaac Muk

Celebrating 20 years of The Mighty Boosh
Photography

Celebrating 20 years of The Mighty Boosh

A new exhibition takes a look behind the scenes of the iconic show two decades after its BBC3 premiere.

Written by: Isaac Muk

We Run Mountains: Black Trail Runners tackle Infinite Trails
Outdoors

We Run Mountains: Black Trail Runners tackle Infinite Trails

Soaking up the altitude and adrenaline at Europe’s flagship trail running event, high in the Austrian Alps, with three rising British runners of colour.

Written by: Phil Young

The organisation levelling the playing field in the music industry
Culture

The organisation levelling the playing field in the music industry

Founded in 2022, The Name Game is committed to helping female, non-binary and trans people navigate the industry.

Written by: Djené Kaba

Vibrant, rebellious portraits of young Cubans
Photography

Vibrant, rebellious portraits of young Cubans

A new photobook captures the young people redefining Cuban identity amidst increased economic and political turbulence on the Caribbean island.

Written by: Isaac Muk

How one photographer documented her own, ever-changing image
Photography

How one photographer documented her own, ever-changing image

In her new photobook ‘A women I once knew’, Rosalind Fox Solomon charts the process of getting older through a series of stark self portraits taken over the course of decades.

Written by: Isaac Muk

Sign up to our newsletter

Issue 81: The more than a game issue

Buy it now