Portfolio
Antonio Bolfo
South Bronx

2008: Officer Lane lights a cigarette after inspecting alleged .22 caliber bullet holes. Gun violence is a major problem in the South Bronx and claims many young lives. A large number of kids under the age of 17 are responsible for recent shootings due to the gang leaders' knowledge that youth offenders will do less time in jail. 2009: Officers on the roof of a housing project bask in the sun after a thunderstorm. © Antonio Bolfo

2008: Officers Alba and Weadock (left to right) respond to a 911 call on Halloween in the Milbrook Housing Projects, where they are trying to distinguish between fake blood on the door and real screams coming from inside. © Antonio Bolfo

2009: Officer Lane takes a break from spying on drug dealers to contemplate the long night ahead. Although John was supposed to spend only 6 months in Impact, he has been in the unit for 2 years. Budget cuts in the city have prevented the NYPD from hiring new officers to replace him. © Antonio Bolfo

2009: Officers Bianco and Lane (left to right) use a "10-62 Personal" break to catch their breath on the roof. Because civilians are not allowed on the roof of housing projects, cops can lower their guard and relax. © Antonio Bolfo

2009: Housing projects tower over the torn streets of Mott Haven. © Antonio Bolfo

2009: Officer Alba, a veteran rookie cop, leads two brand new officers through their first snowstorm in the projects. Although Alba was supposed to spend only six months in Impact, after a year and a half he has just received orders for another six-month tour. © Antonio Bolfo

2009: Officers Weadock, Olivero and Suarino (left to right) helplessly listen to a colleague cry for help over the radio. Because Impact cops patrol on foot and have no access to police vehicles, they are unable to respond to the officer in need of assistance. © Antonio Bolfo

2009: Officer Bianco apprehends a 14 year old after chasing him through the stairwells for displaying a black imitation firearm. The red and black colors of his clothing suggest his affiliation with the Bloods, one of the major gangs in the Mott Haven Housing Projects. Young Bloods recruits are known to use imitation pistols to rob people at gunpoint before graduating to real firearms. © Antonio Bolfo

2008: Partygoers, who only moments before called the police, shout at responding officers who attempt to restrain the man they accused of stealing handbags from their house party. © Antonio Bolfo

2009: Officers on the roof of a housing project bask in the sun after a thunderstorm. © Antonio Bolfo

2009: An Impact cop descends into the bowels of the Mitchell Housing Projects. The stairwells of the projects are a haven for criminal activity, including robberies, assaults, and drug deals. The passages are narrow and dark, providing victims with no warning before they are attacked. © Antonio Bolfo

2010: Officer Lane sits in the PSA 7 locker and reflects on his night on patrol. The locker room is one of the only places where they can let their guard down. © Antonio Bolfo
2008: Officer Lane lights a cigarette after inspecting alleged .22 caliber bullet holes. Gun violence is a major problem in the South Bronx and claims many young lives. A large number of kids under the age of 17 are responsible for recent shootings due to the gang leaders' knowledge that youth offenders will do less time in jail. 2009: Officers on the roof of a housing project bask in the sun after a thunderstorm. © Antonio Bolfo
It’s a cop drama for lovers of photojournalism, or vice-versa. The American photographer Antonio Bolfo, represented by Reportage Getty Images, trailed a NYPD squad for two years to create a powerful series without traces of sensationalism. Bolfo accompanied officers on their patrols in the South Bronx housing projects, with the intention of giving a more nuanced view of law enforcement. “I wanted to show that they have a human face,” he said. “It’s a way to combat the stigma surrounding the police.”
Tagging along a group of young recruits assigned to a tough area, Bolfo knew that there was no telling what he might witness. “Projects aren’t an urban myth,” Bolfo explains. “They’re dangerous and are home to gangsters, dealers, murderers, rapists,” even if the majority of calls are for less dangerous but more common incidents like domestic disputes and missing children.
There are impact’s heated scenes of handcuffed young men and more laid-back visions of police : chatting on cell phones, lounging on rooftops and patrolling snowy streets, cigarette dangling from the lips. The wide-angle photographs capture emotions, expressions and the beauty of a gaze lost in thought.
Before undertaking this project, Bolfo served as an NYPD officer himself. He had just left his job as graphic designer at a video game company and wanted to try, “an experience with more social character.” becoming a press photographer, Bolfo acknowledges that he can’t, “save the world,” but will be given special access to the world’s major social events.
We wish him luck.
Jonas Cuénin
Links
http://www.picturagallery.com
http://www.antoniobolfo.com
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