In 1986 when Anders Goldfarb (b. 1954 in Brooklyn, lived and worked in
Brooklyn, NY) moved to Greenpoint, he was a young photographer with a
master of fine arts degree from State University of New York at New
Paltz. In moving to Williamsburg, he joined a growing number of young
artists seeking the low rents of what was then a declining neighborhood
of light industrial buildings and working-class residences. Working with
black and white film, and a medium format Rolleiflex camera, Goldfarb
began photographing in 1987 in Williamsburg and Greenpoint, riding his
bike around the area and looking for the peculiar beauty of sidings,
peeling paint, and razor wire. Goldfarb's photographs provide a valuable
historical record of these neighborhoods prior to their demolition and
gentrification. His subjects are metaphors for loss and vulnerability
and distill moments in time that are destined for demise.