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Clear vision: Milton Rogovin show "The Forgotten Ones".


Rochester Contemporary Gallery, November 21-January 11, 2004

Milton Rogovin's show, The Forgotten Ones, recently closed at the Rochester Contemporary Gallery. At age 94. Rogovin continues to make social documentary work which reflects a clear vision and demonstrates active humanist concern. His approach remains unwavering in his singular intent to portray the working poor with dignity, using as little manipulation of the image as he conceives to be possible.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

A quote from American documentary photographer Lewis Hine Lewis Wickes Hine (September 26, 1874 – November 3, 1940), was an American photographer. For Hine, the camera was both a research tool and an instrument of social reform. Early life
Born in Oshkosh, Wisconsin, in 1874.
 (1874-1940) opened the show: "I want to show the things that should be changed. I want to show the things that should be admired." Hine and Rogovin both came to photography from other disciplines, using the camera as a tool to advocate for social reform. After finishing an optometry optometry (ŏptŏm`ətrē), eye-care specialty concerned with eye examination, determination of visual abilities, diagnosis of eye diseases and conditions, and the prescription of lenses and other corrective measures.  degree from Colombia University, Rogovin moved to Buffalo in 1938. His concerns for workers' rights led him to become active with the local chapter of the Optical Workers' Union The Workers' Union was a trade union in the United Kingdom. It merged with the Transport and General Workers' Union in 1929. See also
  • List of trade unions
  • Transport and General Workers' Union
  • TGWU amalgamations
 and to serve as librarian for the Buffalo branch of the Communist Party Communist party, in China
Communist party, in China, ruling party of the world's most populous nation since 1949 and most important Communist party in the world since the disintegration of the USSR in 1991.
. Summoned to appear before the House Un-American Activities Committee House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC), a committee (1938–75) of the U.S. House of Representatives, created to investigate disloyalty and subversive organizations. Its first chairman, Martin Dies, set the pattern for its anti-Communist investigations.  in 1957, Rogovin remained silent in response to questions about his involvement. Local papers covering the story declared Rogovin, "Buffalo's Top Red," and his optometry practice dwindled to a trickle.

With his business decimated and his political voice silenced by the McCarthy era, Milton Rogovin Milton Rogovin (⅛born December 30, 1909) is a documentary photographer and has been likened to the great social documentary photographers of the 19th and 20th centuries, Lewis Hine and Jacob Riis. His photographs are in the Library of Congress, the J.  turned to visual expression to address the inequalities of opportunity in American society. He devoted his time to photographing Buffalo's Lower West Side neighborhoods, documented the working class individuals within a changing social structure. Rogovin's work stands as one of the best examples of collaboration between the subject and the photographer, one based on mutual respect. His is a non-exploitative social history documenting the under-privileged of a post-industrial society "Post-industrial" redirects here. For the grouping of music genres, see post-industrial (music).

A post-industrial society is a society in which an economic transition has occurred from a manufacturing based economy to a service based economy, a diffusion of national and
 that had seen better days.

Like his idol Hine, Rogovin's work focuses on the individual as a way to examine the effects of an unjust society on particular humans. People, consistently centered within the frame and looking directly at the camera, are the essential elements of the photographs. Although Rogovin has made photographs of the lives of working people and immigrants all over the world, The Forgotten Ones contains his best known work from closer to home: the neighborhood near his optometry practice, Along with single small black and white scenes on the streets of Buffalo made with his Rolleiflex camera, several walls of the gallery also display a sequence of multiple images. On closer examination, these photographs are portraits of the same person or family taken in four separate sessions over a thirty-year period. This grouping of portraits over time changes the context of the original images: the initial suspicious gaze of two young people on the stoop of a trash-strewn street seems different when viewed next to the same couple, aging, seated smiling beside their children and grandchildren on their living room sofa. Also present is the reality of those who did not survive long enough to be rephotographed. As Rogovin moves from street photography and images taken in public spaces to more intimate views photographed inside his sitters' homes, the comfort-level changes and a trust projected toward the photographer becomes apparent in these series.

Originally compiled by the New York New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
 Historical Society, the exhibit contains multimedia elements such as Harvey Wang's award-winning documentary Milton Rogovin: The Forgotten Ones, and a sound installation featuring the voices of the interviews with participants.

Rogovin's work makes a clear statement: the working people in Buffalo's West Side neighborhoods deserve respect and better access to their country's resources. Although indisputably anchored in a long humanist documentary tradition, this body of modest-sized, black and white silver gelatin gelatin or animal jelly, foodstuff obtained from connective tissue (found in hoofs, bones, tendons, ligaments, and cartilage) of vertebrate animals by the action of boiling water or dilute acid.  prints should not be dismissed as an irrelevant holdover hold·o·ver  
n.
One that is held over from an earlier time: a political advisor who was a holdover from the Reagan era; a family tradition that is a holdover from my grandparents' childhood.

Noun 1.
 from photography's past. At the recent Strangers: the First ICP (1) (Internet Cache Protocol) A protocol used by one proxy server to query another for a cached Web page without having to go to the Internet to retrieve it. See CARP and proxy server.  Triennial of Photography The Triennial of Photography Hamburg originated as an initiative of the photographer and collector F.C. Gundlach, with the support of the directors of Hamburg’s major museums.  and Video show at International Center for Photography in New York, new and established photographers demonstrated the latest developments of social documentary photography Documentary photography usually refers to a type of professional photojournalism, but it may also be an amateur or student pursuit. The photographer attempts to produce truthful, objective, and usually candid photography of a particular subject, most often pictures of people. ; digital photography, video, and new media technology were abundant. Despite the differences in technological approach between those works and Rogovin's photographs, many parallels could be observed: images of people in their living rooms, the experience of immigrants, as in Zineb zineb

an antifungal preparation used extensively agriculturally but without any apparent toxicity hazard.
 Sedira's featured video work and Rineke Dijkstra's multiple portraits of an immigrant to the Netherlands over some years. Though the subjects may be of activists in the case of Joel Sternfeld, or Madison Avenue shoppers as in Richard Renaldi's street portraits, we are still taken with the beauty and expression contained in the human face. Rogovin's work stands at the frontier of history and contemporary photography, a place where the human subject remains enduringly powerful.

Books of Photographs by Milton Rogovin

The Forgotten Ones, 2003 W.W. Norton and Co.

Bonds Between Us: Family Portraits from Around the World. 2001 White Pine Press

Portraits in Steel: 1993 Cornell University Press

Triptychs: Buffalo's lower West Side revisited, 1994 W.W. Norton

Windows that open inward: images of Chile, 1985 White Pine Press
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Author:Heatwole, Joanna
Publication:Afterimage
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Mar 1, 2004
Words:822
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