Description

A diaristic photographic portrait of the memory-laden Mississippi Delta of Arkansas

Fifty years ago, New Yorkbased photographer Eugene Richards (born 1944) worked as a VISTA Volunteer and then as a reporter in the Arkansas Delta. Even after the newspaper he helped found closed its doors, Richards kept revisiting the region. In early 2019 he returned to the small town of Earle, Arkansas, where, on a September night in 1970, peaceful protesters were attacked by a crowd of white men and women brandishing sticks and firing guns. Crossing the tracks from what had been the Black side of the town into the white side of the town, Richards happened upon an old appliance store. On the shadowy and cracked walls of the building were painted the faces of Jesus, Malcolm X, H. Rap Brown, Angela Davis, Dr. Martin Luther King and John Brownthe faces of revolution, reconciliation, change. In the months that followed, the old store became for Richards a kind of portal, a doorway

Eugene Richards The Day I Was Born

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A diaristic photographic portrait of the memory-laden Mississippi Delta of ArkansasFifty years ago, New Yorkbased photographer Eugene Richards (born 1944)... Read more

    Publisher: Many Voices Press
    Publication Date: 1/23/2023
    ISBN13: 9780991218912, 978-0991218912
    ISBN10: 0991218914

    Non Fiction , Art & Photography

    Description

    A diaristic photographic portrait of the memory-laden Mississippi Delta of Arkansas

    Fifty years ago, New Yorkbased photographer Eugene Richards (born 1944) worked as a VISTA Volunteer and then as a reporter in the Arkansas Delta. Even after the newspaper he helped found closed its doors, Richards kept revisiting the region. In early 2019 he returned to the small town of Earle, Arkansas, where, on a September night in 1970, peaceful protesters were attacked by a crowd of white men and women brandishing sticks and firing guns. Crossing the tracks from what had been the Black side of the town into the white side of the town, Richards happened upon an old appliance store. On the shadowy and cracked walls of the building were painted the faces of Jesus, Malcolm X, H. Rap Brown, Angela Davis, Dr. Martin Luther King and John Brownthe faces of revolution, reconciliation, change. In the months that followed, the old store became for Richards a kind of portal, a doorway

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