Working Together: The Photographers of the Kamoinge Workshop

2020

“There’s certain little entities in an image that say something beyond the image. And usually that comes from the photographer and their sense and their doing certain things through the years, their growth.” —Anthony Barboza

Hear from the artists in the exhibition.

A portrait of a man crying.

Beuford Smith: This was part of my “Assassination of Martin Luther King, Jr." essay. This was taken on 125th Street and I think Lenox Avenue. The man was crying because a white delivery man and he had made some kind of delivery. And people were attacking him, you know punching him, etcetera. And he was crying “please don’t attack him, leave him alone,” Martin Luther King wouldn’t like that. That’s why he was crying. That’s one of my favorite photographs.

Narrator: Smith has described the difficulty of getting mainstream magazines to publish works like this one. 

Beuford Smith: I tried to get Look Magazine, the other magazines interested in it but they didn’t want to touch it. They said, oh no if that had been in color we would get it, we would buy it. But if it had been color they would have said, oh if it was black and white we would buy it.  But if a white photographer had taken it, it would have been there. See, racism was not—someone was talking about racism, and stuff like that. In my lifetime, no one has ever called me the N-word, except growing up when I was fifteen or sixteen years old. But as an adult, a young adult, the racism that I have faced is racism that’s subtle, you can’t really prove. 


Beuford Smith, Man Crying (MLK Essay), 1968. Gelatin silver print: frame, 20 × 16 in. (50.8 × 40.6 cm), image: 13 1/2 × 10 1/2 in. (34.3 × 26.7 cm). Virginia Museum of Fine Arts, Richmond; National Endowment for the Arts Fund for American Art. © Beuford Smith

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On the Hour

A 30-second online art project:
Frank WANG Yefeng, The Levitating Perils #2

Learn more about this project

Learn more at whitney.org/artport

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