On June 8, 1963, the Illustrated London News ran the following story about an exhibition at the gorilla house at The Bronx Zoo in New York City. The exhibit told visitors:

“You are looking at the most dangerous animal in the world. It alone of all the animals that ever lived can exterminate (and has) entire species of animals. Now it has the power to wipe out all life on earth.”

The Illustrated London News reported:

In the Great Apes House at the New York Zoo is to be seen an exhibit of great interest and one which speaks for itself. The exhibit in question is that of “The Most Dangerous Animal in the World” and it is handled by the Zoo authorities with not unsubtle deftness. Between the Orang-Utan and Mountain Gorilla cages is a compartment with bars and the legend which can be read in the photograph above: visitors, attracted by the proclamation at the top of the cage, stop and peer into the cage. What they see is, without a doubt, the most dangerous animal in the world, and the frequent comment by visitors is “It’s true!” for they are looking into a barred mirror. And there is considerable truth in this simple, but effective statement that is made.

The message was clear.

That same year, Garry Winogrand (14 January 1928 – 19 March 1984) visited New York’s zoos. Born and raised in The Bronx to Jewish emigres from Budapest and Warsaw, Garry like so many creatures in the zoo was not native to the US. His photographs of the Bronx Zoo and the Coney Island Aquarium made up his first book The Animals (1969). He took many of these photos, which observe the connections between humans and animals, when he was a divorced father, accompanying his young children to the zoo for amusement.

You can’t observe without participating. We’re all in the zoo.

Via: Fraenkel Gallery,