Untitled, Chicago, Illinois, from the series "Metropolitan Baptist Church" (1953)

Untitled, Chicago, Illinois, from the series "Metropolitan Baptist Church" (1953)

Gordon ParksWW-1953-032377
1953·Gelatin silver print·Image/paper: 26.9 × 34.5 cm (10 5/8 × 13 5/8 in.)

<p><a href="http://www.artic.edu/artists/20027/gordon-parks">Gordon Parks</a> relocated from Minnesota to Chicago’s South Side in 1940, immersing himself in the local art community while operating a portrait studio out of the South Side Community Art Center. In 1941 he was awarded a Rosenwald Fellowship for a portfolio of photographs he created on the South Side; the award gave him the means to move east to Washington, DC. By 1948 <em>Life</em> magazine hired him as its first African American staff photographer.</p> <p>In 1953 <em>Life</em> sent Parks to Chicago to do a story on the Metropolitan Missionary Baptist Church, located at 2151 West Washington Boulevard on the city’s Near West Side. A white reporter accompanied Parks, but he made the mistake of keeping his hat on as he entered the church; the deacons viewed this gesture, in Parks’s words, as “another case of the white man’s disrespect” and asked Parks to continue alone. <em>Life</em> ultimately did not run the feature, but Parks was on record as both the photographer and the writer for the story.</p> <p>In the unpublished manuscript written for <em>Life</em>, Parks described the church as “a temple of hope to thousands of Negro people caught in the backyard of this vast city. It is a haven in a world of unending trouble. . . . The church’s value in this situation is hard to measure, but to thousands of black voices that cry out within its porcelain-bricked walls it’s the “great home in the wilderness”. . . . In about 720 emotional minutes the church must repair the damage inflicted on its congregation during the preceding 156 hours. It must stoke-in enough of the goodness and patience to endure the coming week. It must quench the hot thirst for dignity and belonging, kill the urges to sin and make up for the pleasures that are denied.”</p>

Catalogue

Year
1953
Dimensions
Image/paper: 26.9 × 34.5 cm (10 5/8 × 13 5/8 in.)

Artist

Gordon Parks
Gordon Parks

Photography

Gordon Parks (1912-2006) was a pioneering African American photographer, filmmaker, musician, and writer, best known for his profound work documenting the American civil rights movement and the experiences of African Americans. Born into poverty, Parks was self-taught, using his camera as a tool for social change. His photo essays for Life magazine, notably on racial segregation, poverty, and urban life, broke new ground in photojournalism. Parks also made history as the first African American to direct a major Hollywood film, "The Learning Tree," based on his own semiautobiographical book, and the iconic film "Shaft." His legacy endures through his multifaceted contributions to art and culture, showcasing the power of art as a vehicle for justice and understanding.

Fort Scott, KS, USA

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Untitled, Los Angeles, California

Untitled, Los Angeles, California

1963 · Gelatin silver print

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Record

Verified by WattsOS
Year
1953
Dimensions
Image/paper: 26.9 × 34.5 cm (10 5/8 × 13 5/8 in.)
Watts ID
WW-1953-032377

Source

Source
aic
Status
verified

Artist

Gordon Parks

Gordon Parks

Photography

View artist profile →