Visualizing the Black Body in Photography and Popular Culture

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“Visualizing the Black Body in Photography and Popular Culture”
Thursday, January 12, 2017
7:30 p.m.
182 Lillis Hall, UO campus
Free
Sponsored by the Oregon Humanities Center
Information: http://ohc.uoregon.edu or 541-346-3934
Images of the black subject, whether artistic, documentary, or anthropological, are forever fixed in the popular imagination through photography. From the medium’s beginning, race and gender have shaped and controlled the reception of photographic portraits, both politically and aesthetically. Black and white American photographers of the 19th and 20th centuries responded to their own lives and their communities in similar ways. Some evoked an emotional message that went beyond the self-representation but connected in the re-characterization of the African American experience. The photographers coupled the aspirations and dreams of their subjects with their own. Today, many of the black photographers working all over the diaspora are responding to social issues that take them beyond the sometimes-insular photographic community. They comment on politics, culture, family, and history from internal and external points of view.

This lecture will mediate between the objectification of the black body and (re) presenting the black body as it connects to the photographs of 19th century photographers, 20th century photographer Gordon Parks and other photoartists working today who are actively involved in changing the course of art history and fundamentally imaging the black in Western art.

Deborah Willis is University Professor and Chair of the Department of Photography & Imaging at New York University/Tisch and has an affiliated appointment in Africana Studies. Professor Willis has received the NAACP Image Award in 2014 for her co-authored book (with Barbara Krauthamer) Envisioning Emancipation. Other notable projects include The Black Female Body A Photographic History;  Reflections in Black: A History of Black Photographers—1840 to the Present;  Posing Beauty: African American Images from the 1890s to the Present; Michelle Obama: The First Lady in Photographs, a NAACP Image Award Literature Winner, and Black Venus 2010: They Called Her ‘Hottentot.’

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