Resurrection City, 1968

Jill Freedman

Book - 2017

"Steven Kasher Gallery is proud to announce a major exhibition, Jill Freedman: Resurrection City, 1968. The exhibition features over 70 black and white vintage prints of photographs made by Jill Freedman in the protest camp built on the Washington Mall as the culmination of the Poor People's Campaign. Freedman's sustained pictorial effort is one of the lasting achievements of photography as social protest in America. This work was published in book form in 1971, but has never been exhibited previously. This exhibition coincides with the release of a new book, Jill Freedman: Resurrection City, 1968, published by Damiani, and marks the 50th anniversary of the death of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr."--Steven Kasher Gallery web...site.

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Subjects
Genres
Exhibition catalogs
Illustrated works
Published
[Bologna] : Damiani [2017]
Language
English
Main Author
Jill Freedman (photographer)
Other Authors
John Edwin Mason (writer of added commentary), Aaron Bryant
Item Description
First published in 1970 under title "Old news. Resurrection City" by Grossman Publishers.
Catalog of an exhibition held at the Steven Kasher Gallery, New York, October 26-December 22, 2017.
Physical Description
175 pages : illustrations ; 31 cm
ISBN
9788862085830
  • Foreword / Jill Freedman
  • Seeing resurrection city, seeing the poor / John Edwin Mason
  • Jill Freedman: visual discourse on gender and civil rights leadership / Aaron Bryant
  • Plates
  • About the artist
  • About the contributors
  • Acknowledgements.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

In May of 1968, photographer Freedman documented the Poor People's Campaign, a six-week protest in Washington, D.C., organized by the Southern Leadership Conference. This photographic essay, originally published in 1971 and reissued to mark the 50th anniversary of the protest, captures the significance of the event and lends it a contemporary context. The updated edition includes short essays by history professor John Edwin Mason and Aaron Bryant, curator of photography at the Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture, both of which provide insight into the photographs and the protest itself, in which 3,000 people camped out on the National Mall from May 13 to June 24 in shacks made of plywood and canvas. In black-and-white photos, Freedman captures the mud and grime of the encampment. While there are signs of poverty throughout her photographs-an elderly woman wearing paper bags on her feet, a toothless man smiling at the camera-more striking is the sense of camaraderie among the residents, as seen in the photos of drum circles, kids wrestling with tire swings, groups of women sitting cross-legged on the lawn while singing and clapping their hands. This powerful work of documentary photography captures the momentum of the civil rights movement through one of its lesser known demonstrations. (Mar.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

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