Bill Bernstein Limited-Edition Print Set

by Bill Bernstein

$1,250.00

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Description
Aperture is pleased to release four limited-edition prints by legendary photographer Bill Bernstein. These iconic images not only document the people and places of the golden age of disco but also capture the spirit and intensity of a cultural movement.

“The Disco, in New York City from 1977–1979, was a haven for acceptance and inclusion. It was much more than celebrities, drugs, and music—The Disco was a state of mind. These were the post-Stonewall, post–Saturday Night Fever, and pre-AIDS years. For a brief period of time, The Disco offered a place where everyone—White, Black, Hispanic, Straight, LGBT, Young, Old, Famous or Not-So-Famous—could meet up and dance their ‘Victory Dance’ without judgment or prejudice. It was a safe space where you could be whoever you wanted to be. It was this sense of freedom of expression that drew me to document these clubs, for this short two-year period, with my camera.

I didn’t understand it then, but I now believe that this era was a short-lived preview of a world of inclusion that we are just now beginning to bear witness to. With this in mind, the time feels right for a look back at this unique moment in time.”

—Bill Bernstein
Details

Four Archival Pigment Prints
Image Size: 8 x 10 inches
Edition of 50
Signed and numbed by the artist

Prints included in this portfolio:
Studio 54 Couple, 1977
Studio 54 Neon, 1979
GG’s Barnum Room, Ava #2, 1979
2001 Odyssey Dance Floor, 1979

About the Artist

Bill Bernstein is a successful photojournalist and portrait photographer. Bernstein became synonymous with New York City’s disco scene, starting in the late 70s at the Village Voice. He has shot for major magazines, celebrities, and businesses worldwide. His book Disco: The Bill Bernstein Photographs is published by Reel Art Press. A solo exhibition of Bernstein’s black-and-white photography from that era, Night Fever: New York Disco 1977–1979, The Bill Bernstein Photographs, traveled internationally between 2016–19, stopping at New York’s Museum of Sex, Berlin’s Galerie für Moderne Fotografie, and Madrid’s PhotoEspaña. He lives and works in New York City, his hometown.

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