Harry Lapow


Harry Lapow was an American photographer and graphic designer.

Career

Born in Newark, New Jersey, in 1909, Lapow took art classes while in high school and after graduation moved to New York City to work for package designer Martin Ullman. In 1941 he formed a partnership, Koodin-Lapow, with Ben Koodin, designing packaging for R. H. Macys, Wamsutta Mills, Seagram, Startex and Rokeach, among others. As the business expanded they hired young Cooper Union graduates Milton Glaser, Seymour Chwast and Edward Sorel.

Photographer

Given a camera for his 43rd birthday in 1952, Lapow took courses with Lisette Model and Sid Grossman at The New School for Social Research together with his good friend, Leon Levinstein, and also studied painting with Evsa Model.

Recognition

For over 25 years he took photographs of Coney Island, as both Model and Grossman did, as other significant photographers had, including Weegee. One of Lapow's early photographs of an Italian wedding on the beach at Coney Island was selected by Edward Steichen for The Family of Man exhibition at the Museum of Modern Art, that toured the world and was seen by 9 million visitors.
He traveled widely, photographing in small fishing villages in Nova Scotia, farming and fishing communities in the Gaspé Peninsula of Québec, a Crow Nation reservation in Montana, the Magdalen Islands, Prince Edward Island, and later, in Morocco, Sardinia, and Italy.
Helen Gee gave Lapow his first exhibition at her Limelight Gallery in Greenwich Village in 1959. He also showed in group exhibitions at A Photographer's Gallery, New York, Washington, DC, Photokina in Cologne, Vu Par Cultural Center in Paris, and at Expo 67, Montreal, Canada.
In 1978 Dover Publications published a book of his Coney Island work, Coney Island Beach People

Exhibitions

Fotofolio, the postcard company, distributed several Lapow images.

Legacy

Daughter Marcelle Lapow Toor is the executor for Lapow's estate and maintains his archive.