Michel Rein
42 rue de Turenne
75003 Paris
France
T +33 1 42 72 68 13
galerie [at] michelrein.com
michelrein.com
Michel Rein congratulates LaToya Ruby Frazier on her acceptance of the 10th Anniversary Gordon Parks Foundation Award for her contribution to photography and the visual arts.
LaToya Ruby Frazier is a photographer and video artist who uses visual autobiographies to capture social inequality and historical change in the postindustrial age. Informed by documentary practices from the turn of the last century, Frazier explores identities of place, race, and family in work that is a hybrid of self-portraiture and social narrative. The crumbling landscape of Braddock, Pennsylvania, a once-thriving steel town, forms the backdrop of her images, which make manifest both the environmental and infrastructural decay caused by postindustrial decline and the lives of those who continue—largely by necessity—to live amongst it.
“The Notion of Family,” a series of unflinching black-and-white photographs, shows her mother, grandmother, and the artist herself in a Braddock unmoored by disinvestment and demographic decline. Frazier’s stark portraits underscore the connection between self and physical space and make visible the consequences of neglect and abandonment—unemployment, environmental health crises, and lack of access to services—for Braddock’s historically marginalized working-class African American community. In a photolithograph and silkscreen print series from 2011, entitled “Campaign for Braddock Hospital (“Save Our Community Hospital”),” Frazier sets up an ironic juxtaposition between upbeat consumer capitalism and the challenges of working people. Images of Braddock from a 2010 Levi Strauss campaign bearing the slogan “Ready to Work” are set in counterpoint to quotes from Braddock residents about the closure of the town’s only hospital—and its principal employer—that same year.
In more recent photographic work, Frazier documents Braddock from the skies in full-color aerial shots that record the extensive transformations of a community after years of economic collapse. Frazier’s uncompromising and moving work illustrates how contemporary photography can open conversations about American history, class structures, and social responsibility.
LaToya Ruby Frazier received a BFA (2004) from Edinboro University of Pennsylvania and an MFA (2007) from Syracuse University. She held artist residencies at the Lower Manhattan Culture Council (2009–10) and the Whitney Museum of American Art Independent Study Program (2010–11) and was the Guna S. Mundheim Fellow at the American Academy in Berlin (2013–14) before assuming her current position as assistant professor in the Department of Photography at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago. She was among 2015 MacArthur Fellows. Frazier’s work has appeared in numerous exhibitions, including solo shows at the Brooklyn Museum, New York; the Institute of Contemporary Art, Boston; Michel Rein, Paris; the Seattle Art Museum, Washington; the Contemporary Arts Museum, Houston; and The Carré d’art, Nîmes, France. The Notion of Family, Frazier’s first book, was published in 2014.
Current exhibition
LaToya Ruby Frazier : Performing Social Landscapes, cur. Jean-Marc Prevost, CAPC musée d’art contemporain de Bordeaux, France, until november 2016.
Gordon Parks was one of the seminal figures of 20th century photography. He was born into poverty and segregation in Fort Scott, Kansas, in 1912. An itinerant laborer, he worked as a brothel pianist and railcar porter, among other jobs, before buying a camera at a pawnshop, training himself, and becoming a photographer. During his storied tenures photographing for the Farm Security Administration (1941–45) and Life magazine (1948–c.1971), Parks evolved into a modern-day Renaissance man; he found success as a film director, writer, and composer. The first African American director to helm a major motion picture, he introduced the Blaxploitation genre through his film Shaft (1971). He wrote numerous memoirs, novels, and books of poetry, and received countless awards, including the National Medal of Arts, and more than 50 honorary degrees. A humanitarian with a deep commitment to social justice, he left behind a body of work that documents many of the most important aspects of American culture from the early 1940s up until his death in 2006, with a focus on race relations, poverty, civil rights, and urban life.