Gordon Parks, ‘We Shall Not Be Moved’: assessment

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When Gordon Parks picked up a digital camera in 1937, aged 25, Black Americans round him have been processing the repercussions of the Civil War. In 1865, 4 million enslaved individuals have been emancipated; whereas they tried to construct their lives over the following a long time, they have been subjected to humiliating racial segregation legal guidelines, mob violence and lynching, and denied a vote.

Parks, born into poverty and segregation, was a witness to all of it. After shopping for a Voigtländer Brillant digital camera from a Seattle pawn store for lower than $12, he taught himself to take images. In 1948, Parks was employed by Life journal, the primary Black workers member, writing articles to accompany his picture essays, which emphasised the dignity and resilience of his topics.

Many of Parks’ very important works, together with his Segregation within the South sequence and portrait of Dr Martin Luther King Jr as he delivered his landmark ‘I Have a Dream’ speech, have now been united in London in a curation at Alison Jacques gallery, overseen by social justice activist Bryan Stevenson.

children looking at playground

Gordon Parks, Outside Looking In, Mobile, Alabama, 1956

(Image credit score: Courtesy The Gordon Parks Foundation, New York and Alison Jacques © The Gordon Parks Foundation)

‘Through the lens of Gordon Parks, Black people could be beautiful, complex, joyous, grief-stricken, regal, triumphant, burdened and overwhelmed. He made the Black community fully human’

Bryan Stevenson, social justice activist and curator of the exhibition


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