In the 1980s an unknown photographer from New York travelled through the US capturing life in black communities. Now these mostly unseen pictures have made him a star

At 72, and almost 30 years after he gave up photography, Baldwin Lee is having a long overdue moment. Following the publication of an eponymously titled monograph last year, which led the New Yorker to call him “one of the great overlooked luminaries of American picture-making”, a selection of his evocative images of black life in the American south is currently on show for the first time in Britain, at the David Hill Gallery, London. Comprising a mere fraction of the estimated 10,000 photographs that Lee, the New York-born son of a Hong Kong emigrant, made on various extended road trips around Alabama, Georgia, Mississippi, Tennessee and Louisiana between 1982 and 1989, they are nevertheless a revelatory record of a time and a place and a people.

His subjects are the black Americans he encountered in the mainly rural, often desperately deprived, southern communities where segregation still cast a long shadow. Many of them had never spoken to an Asian person before.

Continue reading…

You May Also Like

One in five Britons going into workplace unnecessarily amid Covid pandemic

Exclusive: Employers are putting workers at risk and increasing infections rates in…

Ukrainian oligarch Ihor Kolomoisky detained on suspicion of fraud and money laundering

Arrest of one-time ally of President Volodymyr Zelenskiy comes as Kyiv attempts…

Trump admits concern that icy weather could harm his support in Iowa caucuses

Republican contest to take place on what is expected to be coldest…