Contact: Gordon Parks, Ralph Ellison and "Invisible Man" exhibition curated by artist
Glenn Ligon at the Howard Greenberg Gallery
TONIGHT, the Howard Greenberg Gallery, in Collaboration with the Gordon Parks Foundation, will present two simultaneous exhibitions of his work to honor the 100th anniversary of the birth of Gordon Parks.
September 14-October 27, 2012
OPENING: THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 13TH, 6-8 PM
Howard Greenberg Gallery
The Fuller Building
41 East 57 Street
Suite 1406
New York, NY 10022
The Fuller Building
41 East 57 Street
Suite 1406
New York, NY 10022
Below, the press release:
NEW
YORK, NY - In honor of the 100th anniversary of the birth of Gordon
Parks, widely recognized
as the most influential African American photographer of the 20th
century, Howard Greenberg Gallery in collaboration with the Gordon Parks
Foundation will present two simultaneous exhibitions of his work.
Contact: Gordon Parks, Ralph Ellison, and “Invisible
Man,” curated by Glenn Ligon, and Gordon Parks: Centennial will be on
view from September 14 – October 27, 2012. Parks, a remarkable
Renaissance man who was also a writer, filmmaker, and composer, brought
poetic style to street photography and portraiture,
while exploring the social and economic impact of racism. Most
noteworthy in the exhibitions will be a number of color prints from
Segregation Story, 1956, a limited edition portfolio with an essay by
Maurice Berger. On exhibition for the first time, they were
produced in 2012 from a group of transparencies only recently discovered
in a storage box at the Gordon Parks Foundation. Contact: Gordon Parks,
Ralph Ellison, and “Invisible Man,” curated by the artist Glenn Ligon,
examines a series of works by Gordon Parks
entitled Invisible Man. Many were first published in Life magazine upon
the release of Ralph Ellison's award winning novel, which explored
racial and social issues facing African Americans in the 20th century. A
milestone in American literature, the novel is
narrated by a black man who feels socially invisible. The exhibition
includes the gelatin silver print The Invisible Man, Harlem, New York,
1952, a striking image of a man peering out from underneath a manhole
cover in the middle of a deserted street. As Ligon
notes, “The photos for Invisible Man veered back and forth between an
attempt to illustrate some of the feverish scenes in the novel and the
“reality” of Harlem, which Parks had tried to document in his previous
work. Indeed, many of the photos in the exhibition
were seemingly created in relationship to Parks’ photo assignments in
Harlem, not as illustrations for the novel, although it is hard to
distinguish between the two. It is the tension between these motives—to
illustrate a fiction and to document a reality—that
is the basis of this exhibition.”

Comments