The New Yorkerのインスタグラム(newyorkermag) - 10月1日 07時25分
“A falling off can indicate decline or diminishment, often gradual—the petering out of a business, for instance, or the decay of a once marvellous building,” @nicole_rudick writes. “Or it can refer to something abrupt, absolute. . . . Both senses haunt Barbara Mensch’s photographic history of lower Manhattan, in particular the Fulton Fish Market, which, for a time, was an island unto itself.” Newly collected into the book “A Falling-Off Place: The Transformation of Lower Manhattan,” Mensch’s images document the southern tip of the island across more than 40 years, beginning in the early 1980s. Tap the link in our bio to read about her immersion in the waterfront-market scene, and see its final years before its demolition and move uptown. Photographs by @menschphoto.
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