Off On My Own, Harlem, New York, 1948

Harlem Newsboy, Harlem, New York, 1943

Untitled, Harlem, New York, 1952

Untitled, Harlem, New York, 1952

Untitled, Harlem, New York, 1952

Press Release

Featuring over 50 never-before-seen objects, including photographs, contact sheets, and manuscripts, Invisible Man: Gordon Parks and Ralph Ellison In Harlem will be on view at the Art Institute of Chicago from May 21 to August 28, 2016. The exhibition provides an in-depth look at two understudied collaborations, executed in 1948 and 1952, that aimed to bring to national consciousness the black experience in postwar America, with Harlem as its nerve center. Gordon Parks (1912–2006), a renowned photographer and filmmaker best known for his photo-essays for Life magazine, and Ralph Ellison (1913–1994), author of one of the most acclaimed novels of the 20th century, Invisible Man (1952), are both major figures in American Art and literature. The two friends, united by a shared vision of racial injustices and a belief in the communicative power of photography, sought to counter stereotypical representations of African American life that filled mainstream publications in their day.

 

Parks and Ellison first joined forces on the 1948 illustrated essay “Harlem Is Nowhere” for ’48: The Magazine of the Year, which focused on Harlem’s Lafargue Mental Hygiene Clinic as a means of highlighting the social and economic effects of racism and segregation. In 1952, shortly after the publication of Ellison’s Invisible Man, they worked on a story for Life, “A Man Becomes Invisible,” to introduce Ellison’s novel. Through these projects, Parks and Ellison hoped to offer an alternative, meaningful representation of African American life in the hopes of reshaping attitudes about the root causes of racial inequality.

 

“The significance of images—their creators, content, and circulation—in shaping African American history cannot be underestimated,” says Michal Raz-Russo, Assistant Curator of Photography and curator of the exhibition. “As artists who understood the capacity of carefully chosen words and photographs to effect meaningful social change, in these two projects Gordon Parks and Ralph Ellison leveraged a compelling insider perspective to appeal to the widest possible audience. They offered a view of African American life that transcended color lines without forgetting them— an approach that informed their lives’ work, and remains powerfully relevant in the complexity of today’s political, social, and cultural contexts.”

 

Neither essay was published as originally conceived. The first was lost, while only a fragment of the second appeared in print. This exhibition reunites, for the first time, the surviving photographs and texts intended for these groundbreaking projects, including unpublished manuscripts by Ellison and never-before-seen photographs by Parks from the collections of the Art Institute and the Gordon Parks Foundation.

 

An accompanying catalogue published by Steidl and the Gordon Parks Foundation features a lead essay by the exhibition curator, Michal Raz-Russo, and other scholarly contributions that offer an in depth understanding of Parks and Ellison’s collaborative work.

Invisible Man: Gordon Parks and Ralph Ellison in Harlem
Invisible Man: Gordon Parks and Ralph Ellison in Harlem
STEIDL 2016
Ralph Ellison: Photographer
Ralph Ellison: Photographer
The Gordon Parks Foundation Gallery December 11, 2024–February 7, 2025
Invisible Man & Segregation Story
Invisible Man & Segregation Story
Weinstein Gallery Minneapolis, MN March 25 – May 14, 2016
The Best Photography Books of the Year: 2016
The Best Photography Books of the Year: 2016
American Photo Magazine 12/14/2016
Mid-Century Harlem, in Text and Images
Mid-Century Harlem, in Text and Images
City Lab 08/26/2016
Before #BlackLivesMatter, there was Gordon Parks and Ralph Ellison
Before #BlackLivesMatter, there was Gordon Parks and Ralph Ellison
Chicago Reader 07/21/2016
When Ralph Ellison and Gordon Parks Took on Harlem
When Ralph Ellison and Gordon Parks Took on Harlem
Daily Beast 06/19/2016
"An 'Invisible Man' Becomes Invisible"
"An 'Invisible Man' Becomes Invisible"
Art Institute of Chicago blog 07/14/2016
Searching for the Invisible Man
Searching for the Invisible Man
America Magazine 07/13/2016
‘Invisible Man: Gordon Parks and Ralph Ellison in Harlem’ Review: Fruits of a Creative Friendship
‘Invisible Man: Gordon Parks and Ralph Ellison in Harlem’ Review: Fruits of a Creative Friendship
Wall Street Journal 07/05/2016
Postwar Harlem, Captured by Two Legends
Postwar Harlem, Captured by Two Legends
NY Magazine 06/19/2016
Visible Men
Visible Men
BOMB Magazine 06/08/2016
Gordon Parks and Ralph Ellison in Harlem
Gordon Parks and Ralph Ellison in Harlem
W Magazine 06/08/2016
"At Once Document and Symbol, and Other News"
"At Once Document and Symbol, and Other News"
The Paris Review 06/07/2016
"Ralph Ellison and Gordon Parks's Joint Harlem Vision"
"Ralph Ellison and Gordon Parks's Joint Harlem Vision"
The New Yorker 06/05/2016
"Gordon Parks and Ralph Ellison, Artistic Giants of Postwar Harlem"
"Gordon Parks and Ralph Ellison, Artistic Giants of Postwar Harlem"
The New York Times 06/1/2016
"Harlem’s Famed ‘Invisible Man’ Duo On View In Chicago"
"Harlem’s Famed ‘Invisible Man’ Duo On View In Chicago"
Antiques and the Arts Weekly 05/27/2016
"Genius Level Event: Gordon Parks and Ralph Ellison in Harlem"
"Genius Level Event: Gordon Parks and Ralph Ellison in Harlem"
Crave / Miss Rosen 05/23/2016
Art Institute of Chicago Opens INVISIBLE MAN: GORDON PARKS AND RALPH ELLISON IN HARLEM Today
Art Institute of Chicago Opens INVISIBLE MAN: GORDON PARKS AND RALPH ELLISON IN HARLEM Today
Broadway World 05/21/2016
"Gordon Parks and Ralph Ellison: How a Man ‘Becomes Invisible’"
"Gordon Parks and Ralph Ellison: How a Man ‘Becomes Invisible’"
Time / John Edwin Mason 05/20/2016
“Invisible Man—Gordon Parks and Ralph Ellison in Harlem”
“Invisible Man—Gordon Parks and Ralph Ellison in Harlem”
Chicago Defender / Kai EL’ Zabar 05/02/2016