She Sees Your Every Move

Studio 360 | Feb 25, 2016

Traditional street photography usually catches strangers passing through a public space, but the photographer Michele Iversen catches strangers in private spaces — without their permission. At night she sits in her car and watches the glowing windows of strangers' homes, waiting for the perfect shot.

Since 1995 Iversen has been collecting these images for her “Night Surveillance Series.” "I find my theater, and then the performance begins,” Iversen says. She's captured people binge eating, washing dishes, sleeping.

Iversen admits she feels uncomfortable watching her subjects — and wants her audience to be uncomfortable looking at her photographs as well. And yet she continues to make them: “They are like these beautiful tableaux to me, they tell a story. They show people’s lives.”

What do you think of Iversen’s work? Is it acceptable to invade someone’s privacy for the purposes of making art? Tell us in a comment below.

(Originally aired December 17, 2010)

 

 

 

    

WNYC Homepage - Top Stories

Mayor Mamdani on the Knicks' Victory

Rachel Goldberg-Polin on Losing a Son in Gaza. Plus, How Pablo Torre Is Changing Sports

The UK’s Violent Riots Were Stoked by Elon Musk and a Global Far-Right Network

Knicks jersey, FIFA shirt and a Puerto Rican parade hat: Archbishop embraces NYC's big weekend

YOU ARE ONLINE