On March 8, 1968, Life magazine published “A Harlem Family” by Gordon Parks, a searing portrait of poverty in the United States, told through images and text about a single family residing in Harlem, the Fontenelles. On the twentieth anniversary of The Gordon Parks Foundation, this new, expanded study considers this story as a pivotal moment in Parks’s life, and one that launched his career in film.
Since the publication in 2012 of a book devoted to Parks’s photo essay, additional images belonging to the series have been discovered, and research has been conducted on the accompanying film, Diary of a Harlem Family (1968). The present volume tells the story of Parks’s project through this updated lens. This material is accompanied by previously unpublished texts and ephemera related to the project, including correspondence and other documents Parks amassed over the years while he kept in touch with the Fontenelles, letters written by Life readers showing an outpouring of support for the family, and the transcript of a conversation between Parks and Michael Torosian about the making of the story. Essays by Studio Museum of Harlem director and chief curator Thelma Golden, Oscar-winning author Cord Jefferson, and noted scholars Leigh Raiford and Michael Boyce Gillespie offer enlightening commentary on this seminal body of work.
Link to Steidl
