Museum Hosts New York City-Based Photographer Michael L. Horowitz’s Cathedrals of Industry
Buffalo, N.Y. – Jan. 15, 2008 – Imagine a time when Buffalo was the second largest transportation hub and one of the largest industrial centers in the United States. Such was the case in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. The Colonel Ward Pumping Station’s massive four-storey steam engines pumped billions of gallons of water from Lake Erie each year, while dozens of towering grain elevators bustled with activity along the Buffalo River and Ship Canal. Today, the steam engines loom mute alongside newer, smaller electric motors and most of the remaining elevators stand dormant in ghostly testament to Buffalo’s glorious past.
The Buffalo and Erie County Historical Society will present an exhibit of large-scale photographs of the present-day interiors of these structures in its museum, located at 25 Nottingham Court at Elmwood Avenue in Buffalo. Cathedrals of Industry: Photographs by Michael L. Horowitz will run in two parts, featuring images from the pumping station from Feb. 2, 2008 to July 25, 2008 and photos from the grain elevators from Aug. 8, 2008 to Jan. 25, 2009.
Horowitz, based in New York City, gained rare access into the pumping station through assistance from New York State Assemblymember Sam Hoyt and the Lake and Rail Grain Elevator from RiverWright Energy co-founder Rick Smith III – and the results are breathtaking. His 40 by 60 inch photographs will be set low to the floor, creating the illusion of walking into these structures and enabling visitors to discover and explore the hidden cores of buildings that were once at the heart of Buffalo’s rise to industrial power.
Throughout his life, Horowitz has been drawn to buildings on the brink of extinction. In his teens, he photographed the decomposition and demolition of New York City’s South Street Seaport and West Side Piers. He later captured the Italian city of Assisi on film shortly before an earthquake devastated the town and its ornate cathedral in 1997.
Struck by the impermanence of architecture, destroyed or discarded by the hand of man or nature, Horowitz turned to photography, as he put it, to “document and preserve cultural history even as – and precisely because – it vanishes right before our eyes.” His photos from Cathedrals of Industry will help the Historical Society maintain the stories of the Colonel Ward Pumping Station and the grain elevators for generations to come.
Cathedrals of Industry: Photographs by Michael L. Horowitz is included in general admission and will be on view during regular museum hours. For more information, the public may contact the Buffalo and Erie County Historical Society at (716) 873-9644 ext. 301.
Museum Hours:
Tuesday through Saturday 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Sunday Noon to 5 p.m.
Monday Closed
Admission:
Members Free
Children 6 and younger Free
Children 7 to 12 $2.50
Students 13 to 21 $4.00
Seniors 60 and older $4.00
Adults $6.00
The Historical Society’s Museum Shop will carry 24 by 36 inch fine art giclée prints of several of the Cathedrals of Industry images, as well as the book Reconsidering Concrete Atlantis: Buffalo’s Grain Elevators, edited by Lynda Schneekloth, which discusses the historical significance of the elevators and their potential adaptive reuses. Museum admission is not required to visit the Museum Shop.