GRADUATION '99 The Michigan Daily Gradu AMERICA WITH AN OPEN SHUTTER ation Edition - Thursday, April 15, 1999 - 5B Gordon Parks uses visual photography to translate emotions By Aaron Rich Weekend, etc. Editor DETROIT - Our modern percep- tion of the world is - for better or worse - made up of visual images, including television programs, films and photographs. Many times it is dif- ficult for us to separate the "actual" world from that presented to us in these various media. It is not easy to think of Bill Clinton without seeing a video-taped, resigned and frustrated man testifying in front of a grand jury. In evaluating our history as Americans there are some equally visual signs that stick out in our minds to represent and, many times, entirely sum up an entire epoch. A group of "fore-fathers" standing around the signing of the Declaration of Independence is the totality of the sen- timent behind the American Revolution; a beaten Kent State University Student lying on the bloody ground is the epitome of the anti-Vietnam movement through the '60s and '70s; a triumphant Mark McGwire circling the bases, with tree- trunk arms raised in celebration sym- bolizes the climactic, and heroic levels that athletes can attain in their careers. Likewise, a photograph of a work- ing class black woman standing with a mop in one hand and a broom in the other in front of an American flag is the quintessence of the pre-civil rights era treatment of minorities. Gordon Parks, the genius eye behind that image, has always main- tained a respect and unrelenting understanding for the fact that a well- constructed image has the power to sway people. He has never missed a moment to use his talent as a photog- rapher to transmit such visuals. Opening this Sunday at the Detroit Institute of Arts - and on display through April 25 - "Half Past Autumn: The Art of Gordon Parks," shows the life work of the American photographer whose work has - whether we recognize it or not - affected the way we see the world in which we live and in many ways, changed the environment itself. Parks, the youngest of 15 children, was born in Fort Scott, Kan. in 1912. As a young man, he picked up a cam- era and taught himself the basics of photography - simply as a hobby. When all other career opportunities seemed to be dead ends, the artist took his camera and began shooting fash- ion photographs for small boutiques and individuals. After a few years, he moved to Chicago, where the south side's poor black population proved to be an end- less source of inspiration and subject matter for his work. His first job as a professional pho- tographer came in 1942 when Parks submitted his portfolio to Roy Stryker, the director of the Farm Security Administration. The New Deal office paid photographers, such as Dorothea Lange, Walker Evans and Arthur Rothstein, to photograph poor farmers hit hard by the Depression. Parks was hired by Stryker as the first black pho- tographer on staff in the agency. Parks' boss tried to prepare him for the racism he would face while on the road for the bureau, but, in the end, he was forced to learn on his own the hate that some people have for his race. This awareness of race, racism and hatred is a constant thread that runs through much of his work. From shots of iconoclast boxer Muhammad Ali, to pictures of gang warfare from 1948 Harlem even to color photographs of Spanish matadors, Parks refers to a unique sense of pride, dignity, honor and violence rarely seen by one sole artist. Another unique aspect of Parks' oeuvre is the diversity of images and situations captured on film. Most artists are known for one genre of work or another - Chardin painted domestic scenes, Calder made mobiles and stabiles, Lebowitz shoots portraits. But Parks cannot be labeled with such ease. His work ranges in subject matter from Berkeley, Calif. Black Panther meetings led by Eldridge Cleaver, to varied slices of European life to recent colorful land- scapes and still-lifes shot purely for the beauty of the interplay between color, light and shape. Beyond this, Parks seems to have been nearly omnipresent from the '40s through the '70s, taking pictures of now-immortal people such ' as Malcolm X, Duke Ellington and Langston Hughes in many major American cities. Important gatherings and movements from the dynamic '60s seem to have been caught by his unblinking lens. His interests lay in South America and Europe as well, where he spent extensive time with the people of urban and remote locations. It's no surprise that Parks' single best-known work is probably his 1971 motion picture "Shaft," starring Richard Roundtree as the tough, and now cliche, "black private dick." No surprise that even in the contro- versial "blaxploitation" genre, the director was able to set forth his own view of the world - one filled with style and fashion, racism and the black The nearly-300 images that will be on display in the exhibition at the DIA. represent only a fraction of the life-work of the artist. Some of the 'works are well-known, some are more rare. Each one shows a piece of histo- ry - whether personal and minor or national, international and grand. Parks' work cannot be qualified and dismissed simply as "African American art," simply because his scope is so much larger, and to cate- gorize it as such would miss his point entirely. What Parks gently teaches us is that his life and history - as seen, through his camera - is our lives and histories. Forget the fact that he is a black photographer. Black, white or of whatever race, or background; the stories that Parks' pictures transmit represent the entirely of the images in our collective psyche. We cannot dismiss a 1963 black Muslim rally, just as we cannot throw out images of black pilots or '50s New York City police detectives. To reject these icons would be to ignore valu- able aspects that are delicate and deeply woven into our culture. At age 86, Parks has reached the autumn of his career and life. But this threshold is only crossed with help from years of working and fighting. "Half Past Autumn: The Art of Gordon Parks," a show of the best photographs from more than 50 years of effort, demonstrates how the human spirit can accomplish limitless heights. And that this trek can be exceptionally beautiful and powerful. - This story originally ran in the < Feb. 4, 1999 edition of Weekend, etc. Magazine. The Gordon Parks exhibit continues through next Sunday, April- 25. Yugovich presents her Bachelor -26 at the Media Union Video ption, with special guest Action pril 23 from 610 p.m. Courtesy of Gordon tParks "American Gothic," taken in 1942, is one of the thousands of photographs Parks shot while working for the Farm Security Administration. experience. Above all, "Shaft" shows the story of an artist discontent with the injustice and built-in maladies of modern American society. (Parks' son, Gordon Parks, Jr., later directed "Superfly," perhaps the second-most respected blaxploitation film.) Parks' career did not stop at simply film stock trades; he also wrote and published poetry and prose. The basis of these works, just like any of his cre- ations is his worldly life. Daily Photo Arts Editor AdrianaI of Fine Arts exhibition April 20 Studio on North Campus. A recei Tiger, will be held on A * Elroy quick to comment on politics By Ed Sholinsky Daily Film Editor Candid describes James Ellroy very well. He wrote his memoir "My Dark Places" so he could be candid not only with himself, but also with his readers. And this carries over to much of Ellroy's other work. The author of many grisly crime novels and the new collection of "reportage and fiction from the underside of L.A.," "Crime Wave," Ellroy takes a no holds barred approach to his writ- ing. Scribing ;stories that he peppers with sharp, concise sentences and real people, Ellroy has managed to create a social history of LA in his novels, short stories and non-fic- tion. And this comes from his rela- tionship to the city itself. "Well, I'm from there," Ellroy told the Daily in a recent interview. "And my mother's murder (took place) in L.A. when I was 10 years old, and it sparked my full obses- sion with L.A. crime and L.A. mys- tery." This resulted in Ellroy's "L.A. Quartet," the novels "The Black Dahlia," "The Big Nowhere," "L.A. Confidential" and "White Jazz." But don't expect Ellroy to write anymore novels about Los Angeles. "I took burnt out, psychosexually driven guys as far as they could go in the 'L.A. Quartet."' Ellroy says. "And I made a consciou.s decision that L.A. and I are quits as a fic- tional town ... What I want to write about is the totality of America." And though the short fiction in "Crime Wave," which will be in stores March first, is set in Los Angeles, Ellroy took a large step towards exploring America more with his last novel "American Tabloid," (Time Magazine's novel of the year in 1995). In that same vein, the untitled novel that Ellroy is working on now is the sequel to "American Tabloid." The sequel "picks up again five minutes later," from where "American Tabloid" ended, moments before the Kennedy assas- sination. After Ellroy finishes this novel, he will write the third part of the story, in what will make up "The Underworld U.S.A. Trilogy." Though Ellroy found inspiration for "American Tabloid" in Don DeLillo's novel "Libra," his past has much to do with the fiction he "What I want to do over the next 10 years or so is through Danny Getchell's eyes time travel back and forth between L.A.'s early 1970s and 1980, and tell the story of Danny Getchell, wildman." And where will this time period find Getchell? "Danny Getchell running a porno bookstore in the early '70s. Getting into all kinds of shit." Specifically? "How old is Ronald Reagan, 89? What are the odds he'll be around 10 years fromnow? Not'too good ... Well first cause you've got Danny Getchell working on Ronald Reagan's gubernatorial campaign." Speaking of presidents and con- troversy, being a crime writer Ellroy almost wrote a story for GQ about the recently acquitted President Clinton. "I'm thrilled that he's impeached," Ellroy answered when asked about the approach he would have taken to the story. "I think he should be removed," says Ellroy. "And I think that it's very obvious that he obstructed jus- tice and lied. I also think that he's an absolute, fucked up (guy). And absolute cocksucking, bug eating cockroach." - This story originally appeared in The Michigan Daily on Feb. 19, 1999, the day before Ellroy s read- ing and signing at Shaman Drum bookshop. eontuyt aftte ticn6aft 1999 GRADUATES!, Stephanie Powell Congratulations Steph. I'm proud of you. You will be that partner in a prestigious law firm in Chicago very soon. Luv ya. Your sister Alaina. Good Luck 808 apt 104 Rahul Shah Congratulations Rahul! I am so proud of you. I will miss you next year. Good luck in D.C. I love you. Divya Courtesy of Vintage Books James Ellroy writes today. And the most impor- tant factor in Ellroy's work is his mother's murder. "What my mother's death did was give [rise to] a great many dark curiosities. Understand that the most important even of my life (is my mother's murder), but I didn't get my talent there, I got my obses- sion there." In addition to this, Ellroy has also had to deal with prison, drug addic- tion and alcoholism. Though behind him, Ellroy states "I couldn't have written the books if my life hadn't played out in the manner that it hap- pened." And. this all works into the work collected in "Crime Wave." Of the three pieces of fiction included, two feature the drugged out, psychotic "Hush-Hush" reporter Danny Getchell on his mad romps through Los Angeles' dark side. And while Ellroy only plans to use Getchell in short fiction, not novels, he has a lot planned for the character. 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