Saturday
morning started out like most mornings:
I read my email. Among the
messages was one from my husband, who every Friday forwards the Guardian Art Weekly. It always includes an Image of the Week, and
this week’s image is a photograph (above) by Gordon Parks entitled, At Segregation Drinking Fountain, Mobile,
Alabama, 1956.
I am a big fan of Parks’ photography. In fact, my Facebook profile picture, last
seen before I deleted my Facebook account last week, is a Parks photo-poem
entitled, I Am You, below. But, apart from Parks’ work behind his camera
lens, I knew little about him. That
changed yesterday.
Accompanying
the image At Segregation Drinking
Fountain, was a review of
Gordon Parks: Part One, an exhibition
of the photojournalist’s work from 1956 to 1963, which opened at the Alison
Jacques Gallery in London on July 1 and runs until August 1. Given that the pandemic is raging in the UK,
I’m not likely to see it, which is a pity, because Part One focuses on segregation in the South and Black Muslims, two
series that appeared in Life magazine
and which have a heightened currency today.
Part Two will open on
September 1 and showcase Muhammad Ali (below with Parks to the right).
As the
gallery’s Press Release notes, the photographs in the
current Part One exhibition were
taken during the burgeoning civil rights movement:
The
visionary images that constitute both these series offered visibility to often
marginalised, anonymous families and misrepresented figures in American society
at large. Parks’ interest in taking photographs stemmed from a desire to create
meaningful change. As he commented, “I saw that the camera could be a weapon
against poverty, against racism, against all sorts of social wrongs”.
Standing apart from the civil rights photography of
this period, which often focused on violence and brutality,
Parks chose to illustrate this bleak time [1950s Alabama] through affirmative images of
community life. ... Focusing on mundane activities, and serene in tone, the
artist wanted his work to inspire empathy. As he reflected, “I felt it is the
heart, not the eye, that should determine the content of the photograph”.
And it is
impossible for anyone with a beating heart to look at these photographs and not
feel intense sorrow and shame. I wanted
to see more from this series done for Life
entitled Segregation in the South, 1956,
beyond those featured at the London gallery, so I googled Parks, and found More
Segregation Photos 1956 at the Gordon Parks Foundation website. Above are a few I found especially poignant.
Parks (pictured in the self-portrait above at age 41) is a silent
but eloquent and truthful witness. He gives
us unmistakable visual signs, sometimes literally, of the unseen violence of
segregation in these serene images of quotidian black life. This persistence of dignity in the face of
indignity is something I have been thinking a lot about since the George Floyd
protests. Where does this dogged equanimity
come from? Fear? Faith?
Superhuman survival instincts? And where does Parks' perspective come from? We know from his own words that Parks was
more than a chronicler; he was also a protagonist. What were his personal experiences as a black
man and how did they inform his creative work?
I wanted to know more about the artist.
My interest
piqued, I read the Artist's Biography prepared by the gallery. Wanting to know more, I turned to Parks’ Wiki Bio
and that’s where it hit me. I’ve been
reading about the American history we didn’t learn in school and am currently
immersed in Colson Whitehead’s The
Underground Railroad. Although this
is a work of fiction and takes liberties with certain historical facts and
timelines, it is not a false narrative and its depiction of slavery and its
aftermath will curl your toes and make you cry.
So will what happened to Parks as a young boy. Per Wiki:
Parks
was born in Fort Scott, Kansas, the son of Andrew Jackson Parks and Sarah Ross,
on November 30, 1912. He was the youngest of fifteen children. His father was a
farmer….
He
attended a segregated elementary school. The town was too small to afford a
separate high school that would facilitate segregation of the secondary school,
but black people were not allowed to play sports or attend school social
activities, and they were discouraged from
developing any aspirations for higher education. Parks related in a documentary
on his life that his teacher told him that his desire to go to college would be
a waste of money.
When
Parks was eleven years old, three white boys threw him into the Marmaton River (above),
knowing he couldn’t swim. He had the presence of mind to duck underwater so
they wouldn't see him make it to land. His mother died when he was fourteen. He
spent his last night at the family home sleeping beside his mother's coffin,
seeking not only solace, but a way to face his own fear of death.
Soon
after, he was sent to … live with a sister and her husband. He and his
brother-in-law argued frequently and Parks was finally turned out onto the
street to fend for himself at 15. Struggling to survive, he worked in
brothels, and as a singer, piano player, bus boy, traveling waiter, and
semi-pro basketball player.
This is one
enterprising, indomitable man, a survivor.
At age 25 he bought his first camera, taught himself how to take a
decent photograph, and despite having no professional experience, talked his
way into a job at the Farm Security Administration, documenting the nation’s
social conditions during the Depression.
One of his most famous photographs, American
Gothic, Washington, D.C., (below) was
taken during his time at the FSA. When
the FSA dissolved, Parks went on to become a free-lance fashion photographer
for Vogue. From 1948 to 1972, he was a staff writer and photographer
for Life and in 1950 was assigned to Paris
for two years.
In the 1950s Parks
consulted on various Hollywood productions and in 1969, wrote the screenplay
(adapted from his semi-autobiographical novel) and the score for The Learning Tree. In
1971, he directed Shaft, the first Blaxploitation
film (below), and its sequel Shaft’s Big Score.
He also wrote books on photography, as well
as fiction and poetry, and he composed a ballet dedicated to Martin Luther King. He was an autodidactic Renaissance man: a photographer and a painter, a jazz pianist
and a classical composer, a writer and a poet, the co-founder of one of the
first black magazines, Essence, and a
screen writer. He was a civil rights
activist and godfather to Malcolm X’s daughter.
He was married and divorced three times and was romantically involved
with Gloria Vanderbilt. Over the course
of his lifetime, he received over 20 honorary doctorates. “College”was hardly a waste of money on him. Quite the reverse: he didn’t even have to pay for his
degrees!
But out of
all the biographical details of his life, it was Parks’ Fort Scott, Kansas
roots that intrigued. One Google search led
to another, which brought me to the Exodusters and full circle back to The Underground Railroad and the northward
migration of freed slaves:
Thousands
of African-Americans made their way to Kansas and other Western states after
Reconstruction [1865-1877]. The Homestead Act [1862] and other liberal land
laws offered blacks (in theory) the opportunity to escape the racism and
oppression of the post-war South and become owners of their own tracts of
private farmland. For people who had spent their lives working the lands of
white masters with no freedom or pay, the opportunities offered by these land
laws must have seemed the answer to prayer. Many individuals and families were
indeed willing to leave the only place they had known to move to a place few of
them had ever seen. The large-scale black migration from the South to Kansas
came to be known as the "Great Exodus," and those participating in it
were called "exodusters."
The
exodus began to subside by the early summer of 1879. Though some
African-Americans did continue to head for Kansas, the massive movement known
as the exodus basically ended with the decade of the 1870s. That ten-year
period had witnessed great changes for blacks both in the South and in Kansas.
In 1870, Kansas had hosted a black population of approximately 16,250. Ten
years later, in 1880, some 43,110 African-Americans called Kansas home. Between
the earlier gradual migrations and the 1879 exodus, Kansas had gained nearly
27,000 black residents in ten years. Though a far greater number of blacks
remained in the South, this number still represents 27,000 individual dreams of
a better life and 27,000 people that acted on their desires and their rights to
enjoy the freedoms to which they supposedly had been entitled since the
Emancipation Proclamation. Though few found Kansas to be the Promised Land for
which they hoped, they did find it a place that enabled them to live freely and
with much less racial interference than in the South.
The Great
Exodus ended around 1879, and Parks was born in 1912. Could Parks’ grandfather or father have been
an exoduster? That seems very likely to
me, and even if not the case, Parks would certainly have heard about the migration
from the stories told by blacks then living in Fort Scott. Perhaps it was these tales of privation and
promise that focused his sympathetic eye on the everyday lives of black
Americans chasing the American dream from one end of the country to the other. Sometimes, like a Google search on a Saturday morning, one thing just leads to
another, as it did for Gordon Parks.
Keep it
real! Wear your mask!
Marilyn














Among many powerful images taken by Parks the Mother and daughter in church (?) clothes on the sidewalk Under the colored sign is among my favorite.
ReplyDeleteI can’t begin to imagine the pain caused by the daily accumulation of slights big and small. Who the f$ck do we think we are?!
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