The Rat Approaches 2001
I was at an exhibit in Chelsea during the summer of 2001 when I took this picture. Gunter Grass the famous German writer is also a pretty decent artist. This drawing of a giant rat approaching a city was the one I found most interesting and I decided to back up and include the World Trade Center. Now I find the picture more disturbing for obvious reasons…
© Matt Weber
“Ground Zero” 2011
All Photos © Matt Weber
I am now able to offer 16×20 “Archival Pigment Prints” of my “Street Photography” for only $175.00 “Silver Gelatin” darkroom prints are also available for many images. Thanks!
September 11th 2001
Having just returned home on that dreadful morning, I did what anyone would do, and turned on the TV. George W Bush (or Chimpy as many later called him) was coming into form, after a very feeble start. I was shocked by the SEVEN minutes as much as anybody. I had hoped that “The Seven Minutes” would remain a novel by Irving Wallace and not this new footnote in American history. People were either shocked by how inept Bush was, or if they’d voted for him, they gave him a pass, saying he was under incredible pressure. Either way, this was the beginning of “A Brave New World” and the results of the massacre that morning will be felt for a very long time…
All Photos © Matt Weber
Subway “9/11 Hero” 2005
There are all sorts of heroes in this world. There are the athletes that some of us root for as kids or even worse, still do as adults. Then there are the underpaid nurses who care for us when we get old, barely making ends meet, as they meet our rear ends with a towel…This fellow spent time at ground zero, and whether or not he had to deal with body parts, he surely had to breath those noxious fumes which lingered for several months. The smell of all the metal, plastics and who knows what burning, was so vile that breathing it on a daily basis, could make even the toughest people sick. His eyes seemed to have seen the worst of it, and I think he gave a lot more than most of us did after the terrible massacre on 9/11…making him a true hero.
All Photos © Matt Weber
World Trade Center 1988
I keep finding pictures of these buildings which at the time of exposure, seemed pretty ugly to me. I’m happy I took the few pictures I did. I sometimes wonder if building another 100+ story building at the site is a smart idea. I understand the desire to replace the twin towers with something magnificent, but at the same time, it seems like the new tower will be shouting “I dare you to knock me down!” Maybe a few 50-60 story towers would have been wiser…
All Photos © Matt Weber
“Rest in Peace” 1985
For the past 25 years I didn’t know that I had this negative. If I’d been shooting digital maybe I would have deleted this one because I didn’t like the architecture at the time. Never press delete on your modern gizmo filled camera…
This is the picture I took seconds earlier and preferred for the past quarter century…
All Photos © Matt Weber
September 11th 2001 “Old Timers”
As I rode my bike uptown after the twin towers were no more, I took this shot of two men who probably were old enough to have memories of the attack on Pearl Harbor. I remember thinking that as I passed by them and of course wondered what their take was on what had just taken place downtown…
All Photos © Matt Weber
September 11th 2001
When I was fourteen I took the test for Stuyvesant high school and actually passed. I took the easy way out and went to Music & Art because I knew the academic demands would be much less. These kids were most likely from “Stuy” and I can’t blame them for being happy. At that age it’s possible to be happy under almost any circumstances. As you get older I think every bad bit of bad news, whether it be political or just another senseless bombing in the middle east, has a way of getting under your skin. The advice I often get is “If you can’t change it, don’t worry about it” If everyone felt that way, nothing would get done. I don’t know how I would have reacted to 9/11 when I was fifteen. I might have been like all the “tough guys” who wanted to “Nuke ’em All”. I’m proud that I haven’t become a conservative guy in my old age. It’s so easy to do…
All Photos © Matt Weber















