‘GORDON PARKS : CAMERA PORTRAITS’ AT THE NATIONAL GALLERY, WASH., D.C.
The National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C., has recently opened an exhibition celebrating the art of Gordon Parks (1912-2006), one of the most distinguished photographers of the 20th century. In the heyday of large-format magazines, Parks created photo essays that regularly appeared in LIFE, EBONY, VOGUE, and GLAMOUR. In 1949, LIFE hired him as the first African American on its staff, a position he held until 1972.
Left: Gordon Parks, Self-Portrait, 1941, gelatin silver print, Purchased as the Gift of Alan and Marsha Paller, Laura Arrillaga-Andreessen and Marc Andreessen via the Silicon Valley Community Foundation, Raj and Indra Nooyi, Mitchell P. Rales, David M. Rubenstein, and Darren Walker in honor of Sharon Percy Rockefeller , 2021.61.1
The National Gallery’s exhibition “Gordon Parks: Camera Portraits” was inspired by Parks’ 1948 book, CAMERA PORTRAITS; THE TECHNIQUES AND PRINCIPLES OF DOCUMENTARY PORTRAITURE. Here, he urged photographers to move portrait photography out of the controlled environment of a studioand instead to use a documentary approach that situated subjects where they lived and worked. For himself, Parks strongly believed that documentary photographers had a “moral obligation” to absorb their subjects’ lives-and-times in order to convey a semblance of “truthful” imagery. (NGA Press Release)More