ATLANTA, GA.- Taking its title from Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.s final speech before his assassination in 1968, the
High Museum of Arts photography exhibition A Fire That No Water Could Put Out: Civil Rights Photography (Nov. 4, 2017, through May 27, 2018) will reflect on the 50th anniversary of that tumultuous year in American history. The more than 40 prints to be featured are drawn in large part from the Museums collection of photography documenting the civil rights movement, which is among the most significant in the world. Iconic historical images will be presented alongside works by contemporary photographers that illuminate the legacy of the movement.
While Dr. Kings assassination is often cited as the closing bookend of the civil rights movement, activism over the past 50 years has continued efforts to advance racial equality and justice in the United States, said Erin Nelson, the Highs curatorial assistant for photography and curator of the exhibition. Through some of the most powerful images from our civil rights collection, including recent acquisitions, this exhibition underscores photographys pivotal role in chronicling the important moments that shaped our past and the current events and perspectives that will influence our future.
Presented in the Highs Lucinda Weil Bunnen Gallery for Photography, the exhibition will be arranged into three sections that explore the era of Dr. Kings leadership, the year of his death and contemporary reflections on the civil rights movements enduring legacy. Artists featured include renowned 20th-century photographers Gordon Parks, Danny Lyon, Charles Moore, Roy DeCarava, James Hinton, Steve Schapiro, Diane Arbus, Ernest Withers, Doris Derby and Burk Uzzle as well as notable contemporary photographers David Alekhuogie, Dawoud Bey, Jason Lazarus and Sheila Pree Bright. The works on view demonstrate these artists wide-ranging approaches to documenting and responding to the civil rights movement, from the photojournalistic to the poetic, from tender portraiture to conceptual landscapes.
Highlights of the exhibition will include:
Gordon Parks (American, 19122006), Outside Looking In, Mobile Alabama, 1956. In this photograph, a group of black children look through a fence at a whites-only playground. The image took up almost a full page in Parks Life magazine photo essay The Restraints: Open and Hidden, which documented how segregation affected the lives of a black family in the Jim Crow South.
Charles Moore (American, 19312010), Martin Luther King Jr. Arrested, Montgomery, Alabama, 1958. On Sept. 3, 1958, Dr. King was arrested for loitering at the Montgomery courthouse after being harassed and denied entrance to a hearing for fellow civil rights activist Ralph Abernathy. Moore, a local photographer, followed the commotion from the street into the police station, where he captured this image of Dr. King being manhandled by the arresting officers. The Associated Press published Moores photograph, which propelled his involvement in the civil rights movement.
Steve Schapiro (American, born 1936), Dr. Martin Luther Kings Motel Room after He Was Shot, Memphis, Tennessee, 1968. A staff photographer for Life magazine, Schapiro was sent to Memphis immediately following the assassination of Dr. King on the balcony of the Lorraine Motel on April 4, 1968. Upon arrival, he was granted access to Dr. Kings motel room by one of Kings aides. Schapiro captured this photograph of some of the last things that Dr. King touched, including a copy of Soul Force magazine and a Styrofoam coffee cup.
Eight recently acquired prints by American photojournalist Burk Uzzle (American, born 1938), a distinguished member of the Magnum Photos cooperative. The works include poignant scenes from the March in Memphis, led by Coretta Scott King just four days after her husbands death, as well as some of the most iconic images of Dr. Kings funeral procession in Atlanta.
Four photographs by Atlanta-based Dr. Doris Derby (American, born 1939) that document her experience working for the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee in late 1960s Mississippi. Her portraits of women lawyers, politicians, grass-roots organizers and volunteers illustrate the civil rights movements reliance on collaboration between hundreds of unsung heroes working for change in their communities.
Two works by Los Angelesbased photographer David Alekhuogie (American, born 1986) from Baptism, a 2013 body of work he shot in and around Atlanta during a self-described pilgrimage to the primary site of the civil rights movement and other important events in black history.
A powerful diptych from a recent acquisition of work by Chicago-based artist Dawoud Bey (American, born 1953). The 2014 photograph, from his portfolio Birmingham: Four Girls, Two Boys, meditates on the lives lost during the 1963 16th Street Baptist Church bombing in Birmingham, Alabama.
Four photographs by Atlanta-based Sheila Pree Bright (American, born 1967) that document the 50th anniversary of the Selma, Alabama, voting rights march as well as Black Lives Matter protests in Atlanta, Baltimore and Ferguson, Missouri.