© Ryan Weideman, courtesy Bruce Silverstein Gallery, New York

© Ryan Weideman, courtesy Bruce Silverstein Gallery, New York

Back in 1978, while living in Oakland, photographer Ryan Weideman saw Midnight Express, a nerve-wracking film that tells the true story of Billy Hayes – a young American who, after being caught smuggling hashish, escapes from a Turkish jail and lives to tell the tale.

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“I thought, ‘If this guy can go through that, I am ready for New York!” Weideman says with a laugh.

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1970s Manhattan was an outlaw town riddled with violence and crime. It became a magnet for fearless spirits who lived life on their own terms. Although Weideman had taken visual cues from film noir throughout his life, it was the work of photographers William Klein, Diane Arbus, Joel Meyerowitz and Robert Frank that made him aware that something spectacular was happening in New York.

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Read the Full Story at Huck

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© Ryan Weideman, courtesy Bruce Silverstein Gallery, New York

© Ryan Weideman, courtesy Bruce Silverstein Gallery, New York

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