If the name Joel Meyerowitz rings a bell, it's probably because of his famously dedicated work documenting the landscape, workers, and mood at ground zero in the months immediately following the attack on the World Trade Center. Or perhaps you remember melting before the vibrantly colored Cape Cod seascapes he made in the '70s. But the photographs that secured Meyerowitz a solid place in the medium's contemporary history are quirkier, riskier, and, for the most part, earlier than these. A few of those vintage pictures are included here along with a number of others unseen since his first Museum of Modern Art show in 1968 and a group of terrific early-'60s prints never... More >>>