Topic: [The Guardian] The big picture: ​stepping towards the shadows in 1940s Harlem  (Read 306 times)

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

The big picture: ​stepping towards the shadows in 1940s Harlem

Roy DeCarava’s picture of a woman all dressed up on a derelict street is rich in symbols and evocative of a troubled era

Roy DeCarava had been taking pictures in Harlem, where he grew up, for a decade when he came upon this scene of a young woman in the street in her graduation dress. DeCarava had mostly thought of photography as a means to an end – he had used a camera to produce aides-memoire for his painting. But around this time, 1949, his vocation changed and he became primarily a photographer.

Looking at this picture, and its uncanny symbolism, it is easy to see why. Harlem, during the civil rights years, was full of visual gifts from real life. The young black woman, briefly bathed in sunlight in her white silk, is stepping forward into a place of complicated shadows. Alone, she is flanked by an incomplete “Princ–” scrawled on a wall. Her eyes are drawn to the sleek lines of the Chevrolet advert, a promise of escape from the derelict streetscape, but an alternative means of transport, an antique trash cart, is also at hand. If you were staging Cinderella in racially divided New York in 1949, it would be hard to conjure a more evocative set.

Continue reading...
Source: The big picture: ​stepping towards the shadows in 1940s Harlem

Feeds culled from https://www.theguardian.com/uk/rss

 

Related Topics

  Subject / Started by Replies Last post
0 Replies
748 Views
Last post February 23, 2018, 07:03:59 PM
by betpredict
0 Replies
793 Views
Last post April 05, 2020, 07:05:30 PM
by The Guardian
0 Replies
2353 Views
Last post June 23, 2020, 01:04:41 PM
by The Guardian
0 Replies
1817 Views
Last post August 11, 2020, 07:04:53 AM
by The Guardian
0 Replies
1561 Views
Last post September 15, 2020, 01:17:54 AM
by The Guardian
0 Replies
546 Views
Last post September 26, 2020, 07:04:18 AM
by The Guardian
0 Replies
466 Views
Last post June 03, 2021, 01:01:49 AM
by The Guardian
0 Replies
226 Views
Last post January 12, 2023, 01:04:47 PM
by The Guardian
0 Replies
328 Views
Last post April 12, 2023, 01:01:56 AM
by The Guardian
0 Replies
269 Views
Last post February 13, 2024, 01:01:31 PM
by The Guardian