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WASHINGTON, D.C. AND ELLA WATSON, 1942 - Photography Archive - The Gordon Parks Foundation

American Gothic, Washington, D.C., 1942

In January 1942, Parks arrived in Washington, D.C., to work for the Farm Security Administration (FSA). He was eager to document the African American community as he had done in Chicago. However, he did not yet realize the challenges he would face as a Black man in the city—which lay on the racial fault line between the nation’s North and South.

Knowing the situation all too well, FSA director Roy Stryker suggested that Parks begin by exploring Washington without his camera. Parks found bigotry everywhere. He was turned away by restaurants, kicked out of theaters, and denied service at a respected department store where he attempted to buy a winter coat. After just a few days, Parks was utterly demoralized. “In this radiant, historic place,” he lamented, “racism was rampant” (Half Past Autumn, 1997).

When a humiliated Parks returned to FSA headquarters, Stryker recommended that he begin his project closer to home. Parks approached a Black woman who was cleaning the FSA offices. Her name was Ella Watson. She told Parks she had become pregnant out of high school, and that her husband had been shot to death two days before their second daughter was born. She was now working to support herself and her two grandchildren. 

At the end of their conversation, Parks asked if he could take Watson’s picture. She agreed, and for four months gave him access to her home and her community. The resulting photographs were a breakthrough in Parks’ career. Through Watson, he gained an intimate perspective on the reality of life for Blacks beyond the historical gleam of white Washington, D.C.: crumbling homes, trash-filled neighborhoods, and childhood lessons on the street. He photographed families gathered around meager tables, pensive in their sparsely furnished homes, and attentively negotiating their surroundings in the city. He also took joyous photos of life within the walls of Watson’s church. The church was an invaluable gathering place for Black communities, and Parks captured the “joie de vivre” that rang within it.

Culminating this series is the photograph titled American Gothic, in which Watson poses coolly with a mop and broom in front of the U.S. flag. Among the most famous pictures Parks ever took, it points to the complexity of his mature style. Not only does the photograph connect the intimacy of one person’s life with a national state of affairs, it also engages with a larger history of American images by referring to and reinterpreting Grant Wood’s celebrated 1930 painting of the same name.

American Gothic: Gordon Parks and Ella Watson
American Gothic: Gordon Parks and Ella Watson
Minneapolis Institute of Art Minneapolis, Minnesota January 6, 2024 — June 23, 2024
Gordon Parks: The New Tide, Early Work 1940–1950
Gordon Parks: The New Tide, Early Work 1940–1950
The Cleveland Museum of Art Cleveland, Ohio March 23 - June 9, 2019
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National Gallery of Art Washington, DC November 4, 2018 - February 18, 2019
A Choice of Weapons
A Choice of Weapons
Side Gallery Newcastle upon Tyne, UK October 21 - December 17, 2017
I Am You; Selected Works 1942-1978
I Am You; Selected Works 1942-1978
Deutsche Börse Photography Foundation Frankfurt, Germany September 21, 2017 - January 7, 2018
I Am You; Selected Works 1942-1978
I Am You; Selected Works 1942-1978
Foam Amsterdam, The Netherlands June 16 - September 6, 2017
I Use My Camera as a Weapon
I Use My Camera as a Weapon
Wroclaw Contemporary Museum, hosted by U.S. Embassy Wroclaw, Poland June 2 - August 22, 2017
I Use My Camera as a Weapon
I Use My Camera as a Weapon
Zacheta National Gallery of Art, hosted by U.S. Embassy Warsaw, Poland March 18 - May 21, 2017
New York 1942
New York 1942
Gracie Mansion New York, NY March 5 - December 31, 2017
Cross Country: The Power of Place in American Art, 1915–1950
Cross Country: The Power of Place in American Art, 1915–1950
High Museum of Art Atlanta, GA February 12 - May 7, 2017
I Am You; Selected Works 1942-1978
I Am You; Selected Works 1942-1978
Versicherungskammer Kulturstiftung (Foundation) Munich, Germany February 7 - May 7, 2017
The Photography of Gordon Parks
The Photography of Gordon Parks
Veterans Museum of Balboa Park San Diego, CA November 12 - December 16, 2016
I Am You; Selected Works 1942-1978
I Am You; Selected Works 1942-1978
C/O Berlin Berlin, Germany September 9 - December 4, 2016
Vision and Justice: The Art of Citizenship
Vision and Justice: The Art of Citizenship
Harvard Art Museums Cambridge, MA August 27, 2016 - January 8, 2017