By: Andrew Zhang
Late last month, the historically Black college, Howard University,
announced that it would be turning its recently acquired collection of 252 photos
taken by Gordon Parks into 15 sets meant for educational use.
Photographer Gordon Parks had a rough upbringing. Parks was born in
1912 in Kansas. He had no formal training whatsoever and instead gained all of his
skills through self-teaching. He later claimed that he could have turned to using
guns and knives instead of using the camera.
Throughout his career, Parks had a profound impact on the African
American community. “Mr. Parks was a trailblazer whose documentation of the
lived experiences of African Americans, especially during the civil rights period,
inspired empathy, encouraged cultural and political criticism, and sparked activism
among those who viewed his work. Having a collection of his timeless
photographs in the Moorland-Spingarn Research Center will allow Howard
University faculty, students, and visiting scholars to draw on his work and build
upon his legacy of truth telling and representation through the arts.” wrote Dr.
Wayne A. I. Frederick, president of Howard University, in a press release.
He didn’t only focus on social injustice, though. During the late 1940’s and
early 1950’s, Parks took photos of French life and fashion, as well as the effect of
Spanish culture on American fashion.
Along with dipping his toes into the fashion industry, he also broke into the
film industry. Here, he directed two films: the 1971 film Shaft, known to be the
first Black action film, and The Learning Tree, an adaptation of his own
autobiography.
Now, his many photos have been acquired by Howard University and given
a second life as educational material. “You could have a film studies class, a race
class, a fashion class, and a U.S. history class all looking at the same pictures and
understanding different components of why these pictures are so important,” said
Peter Kunhardt Jr., executive director of The Gordon Parks Foundation.
But how did Gordan Parks and Howard University first meet? To answer that
question, we have to go back to 1942. It was during this year where he first started
taking photos of African American life on Howard University’s campus.
Some say that the pen is mightier than the sword. But for Gordan Parks, the
camera would’ve trumped both. “I pointed my camera at people mostly who
needed someone to say something for them. They couldn’t speak for themselves,”
he said in an interview with Charlie Rose in 2000.
Link to Article: https://www.mtpr.org/arts-life/2022-06-10/gordon-parks-photographymasterfully-captured-the-range-of-black-life-in-america