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Gordon Parks: a lion in winter: on living life as one "superb feast".


I have always considered myself a spiritual daughter of Gordon Parks; and I have viewed him as a mentor all of my professional life. So I was delighted and thrilled to have the opportunity to sit with him and reminisce rem·i·nisce  
intr.v. rem·i·nisced, rem·i·nisc·ing, rem·i·nisc·es
To recollect and tell of past experiences or events.



[Back-formation from reminiscence.
 about his illustrious career and to discuss the upcoming publication of his books A Hungry Heart: A Memoir and Eyes With Winged Thoughts: Poetry and Images, both published by Atria Atria
The heart has four chambers. The right and left atria are at the top of the heart and receive returning blood from the veins. The right and left ventricles are at the bottom of the heart and act as the body's main pumps.
 Books in November. This fall, Harlem Moon/Broadway Classic is reissuing his 1990 autobiography Voices in the Mirror, with a new Introduction.

Parks's Manhattan apartment is a wonderful space: the windows face the East River and the piano is covered with sheet music, family photographs and books. I marveled at his collection of photographs and books. The bookcases are filled with volumes, ranging from history books to novels. Art books are arranged around the room on the carpeted floor, on shelves of bookcases and on tables. The walls are covered with original artworks and family snapshots, and I admired the combination of placing value on one's family photographs alongside the masterful artworks made by well-known artists, including his own works.

Parks entered the living room wearing a royal blue and burgundy-colored silk smoking jacket; a baseball cap covering his distinguished white hair. I smiled. He had a bounce to his step and I loved it. He greeted me with a hug and kiss and informed me that he was not feeling well. But within a few minutes in our conversation, he perked up Adj. 1. perked up - made or become more cheerful or lively; "his attention made her feel all perked up"
enlivened - made sprightly or cheerful
. He even said that he was surprised at his newfound new·found  
adj.
Recently discovered: a newfound pastime.

Adj. 1. newfound - newly discovered; "his newfound aggressiveness"; "Hudson pointed his ship down the coast of the newfound sea"
 energy.

Born on November 30, 1912, in Fort Scott, Kansas Fort Scott is a city located in Bourbon County, Kansas, United States, 88 miles (158 km) south of Kansas City, on the Marmaton River. The population was 8,297 at the 2000 census. , Gordon Parks has spent some seven decades observing, writing, documenting, photographing and interpreting his life experiences. He is a man who is committed to his work. In his memoir, he recalls the lessons his father taught him, mere months before his fifteenth birthday and the death of his mother.

"Your heart will tell your feet which roads to take," his father said. "There'll be signposts along the way giving out directions. You'll have the right to question them, but don't ignore them. Each one is meant for something."

In my view, his father was encouraging him to dream. "Beneath the light of many moons I've still heeded Poppa's advice," Parks notes in A Hungry Heart. "I'm still smiling, still recalling his words from a long way off. Their meaning has never stopped growing.... Despite the waves of anguish that threaten me at times, it never gives up on me. It is imbedded like a jewel in my hungry heart."

Best known as a photographer, Parks has also written a number of books and articles, scored concertos, directed films and played piano on the concert stage. Guided by his father's advice, he has transformed his own life and continues to affect the lives of his countless admirers.

A Life of Firsts

In A Hungry Heart and Eyes With Winged Thoughts, Parks reveals a life story that is both intensely personal and deeply influenced by the outside world. Though several "firsts" are listed on his biography--first black photographer hired by the Farm Security Administration (1941), first black photographer for Life (1948), first black director to make a movie for a major studio (The Learning Tree, 1969) etc.--he does not see himself as a pioneer.

As he writes in a poem titled "Momma" in Eyes With Winged Thoughts, he's never supported "blaming your skin's blackness for tumbling you downward." By refusing to be defined by the racism of the day, Parks was free to explore his genius.

His art and writings were informed by the political climate of America in the 1960s. He remembers those years affectionately as he describes culling culling

removal of inferior animals from a group of breeding stock. The removal is premature, i.e. before completion of its life span, disposal of an animal from a herd or other group.
 photographs for his 1997 retrospective at the Corcoran Gallery in Half Past Autumn. (I remember looking through piles of photographs with the cocurator Philip Brookman as we talked about the stories that we really were too young to know about.)

"The photographs we chose to represent my years of journalistic endeavors were crammed with things that had been far beyond my reach," Parks writes. "I had been given assignments I had never expected to earn. Some proved to be as different as silk and iron. Once, crime and fashion was served to me on the same day. The color of a Dior gown I photographed one afternoon turned out to be the same color as the blood of a murdered gang member I had photographed earlier that morning up in Harlem."

In the early 1960s, I sat in my mom's beauty shop reading Life magazine and discovered the photographs of Gordon Parks. I was 12, but I still remember vividly the affect those visual stories had on my life (which also would be shaped by the visual image). Recently, I thought about why his work had inspired my decision to become a photographer. It is because, to Parks, life is a banquet: "What a superb feast it is! The sweetness of recognition and success, the bitterness of poverty, hunger, and bigotry overlying overlying

suffocation of piglets by the sow. The piglets may be weak from illness or malnutrition, the sow may be clumsy or ill, the pen may be inadequate in size or poorly designed so that piglets cannot escape.
 the rituals of existence: marriage, birth, work, season with pain and joy, and most of all--love."

It is inspiring to see that at the age of 93 Parks continues to share his dreams and assess his life. The poetic title Eyes With Winged Thoughts conjures up imagery of a visionary with wings, flying through life experiences, documenting everything he passed by. The two recent titles are clearly extensions of his previously published works, but he interprets in a fresh way his relationship with Malcolm X Malcolm X, 1925–65, militant black leader in the United States, also known as El-Hajj Malik El-Shabazz, b. Malcolm Little in Omaha, Neb. He was introduced to the Black Muslims while serving a prison term and became a Muslim minister upon his release in 1952.  and meeting Eldridge and Kathleen Cleaver. In both books, he uses his memories to show us his creative abilities. He recalls the details of his early years with exhilarating candor, talking about his wives, children and grandchildren GRANDCHILDREN, domestic relations. The children of one's children. Sometimes these may claim bequests given in a will to children, though in general they can make no such claim. 6 Co. 16. ; and his friendships with artists at the Southside Community Art Center in Chicago, where he met Charles White Charles or Charlie White may refer to:
  • Charlie White (artist) (born 1972), U.S. artist
  • Charles White (author) (born 1976), U.S. author of "The Loyalist's Son, Standards Left Ragged"
  • Charlie White (figure skater) (born 1987), U.S. ice dancer.
, Gwendolyn Brooks Gwendolyn Elizabeth Brooks (June 7, 1917 – December 3, 2000) was an African American poet. Biography
Gwendolyn Elizabeth Brooks was born in Topeka, Kansas to Keziah Wims Brooks and David Anderson Brooks.
 and Elizabeth Catlett Elizabeth Catlett Mora (born April 15,1915) is an African American sculptress and printmaker. Catlett is best known for the black, expressionistic sculptures and prints she produced during the 1960s and 1970s, which are seen as politically charged. . He also discusses his autobiographical novel An autobiographical novel is a novel based on the life of the author. The literary technique is distinguished from an autobiography or memoir by the stipulation of being fiction.  The Learning Tree (1963), which was inspired by his own struggles. Parks considers the book his most significant accomplishment because before then "I didn't know that I could write."

Still, after the book was published, he was astonished a·ston·ish  
tr.v. as·ton·ished, as·ton·ish·ing, as·ton·ish·es
To fill with sudden wonder or amazement. See Synonyms at surprise.
 to receive a call from filmmaker John Cassavetes, who said, "I just read The Learning Tree last night. How would you like to come to Hollywood and direct it?" Parks responded that no black director had worked in a major studio, but before the conversation ended Cassavetes had asked him to work for Warner Brothers Warner Brothers (b. Eichelbaums) movie executives; Harry (Morris) (1881–1958), born in Krasnashiltz, Poland; Albert (1884–1967), born in Baltimore, Md.; Samuel (1887–1927), born in Baltimore, Md. . Parks soon confirmed how race works in Hollywood. When he arrived a few days later, he was asked to write the screenplay, direct and produce the film and write the music. He pointedly said to the studio executives, "you will fix [it] so that black people would never come back to Hollywood."

The Best of Life

When asked, Parks initially finds it difficult to decide which of his Life assignments made the greatest social impact and which one he holds closest to his heart. But then he recalls two memorable assignments that created a stir among the readers of the magazine, where he worked from 1948 to the late '60s. In 1961, he published an essay about the Brazilian slum (or favela favela

In Brazil, a slum or shantytown. A favela comes into being when squatters occupy vacant land at the edge of a city and construct shanties of salvaged or stolen materials.
) of Catacumba, located on a desolate mountainside outside of Rio de Janeiro Rio de Janeiro, city, Brazil
Rio de Janeiro (rē`ō də zhänā`rō, Port. rē` thĭ zhənĕē`r
. He met and photographed the da Silva family and was particularly moved by the condition of their 12-year-old son, Flavio, who was dying from tuberculosis. Flavio lived with his parents, brothers and sisters in a one-room shack.

"What Flavio cared most about," says Parks, "was that his younger brothers and sisters were taken care of. It was very noble of him.... I definitely learned more from Flavio about character than Flavio learned from me."

Life readers sent hundreds of letters of support, as well as approximately $30,000 to bring Flavio to America and pay for his medical care. "I went back to Brazil and the doctors told me that Flavio would die on my hands if I took him to America," he says. "I took him anyway and after living here for two years, he was cured."

When the boy returned to Brazil, Parks used some of the donations to buy Flavio's father a new truck, and Life donated $25,000 to help the family buy a new home. In 2000, Parks visited Flavio, who has two young sons, a daughter and a grandchild.

Vestiges of a Shipwreck shipwreck, complete or partial destruction of a vessel as a result of collision, fire, grounding, storm, explosion, or other mishap. In the ancient world sea travel was hazardous, but in modern times the number of shipwrecks due to nonhostile causes has steadily  

Parks also photographed an American family “Loud Family” redirects here. For the rock band, see The Loud Family (band).

Considered television's first reality show, An American Family was shot documentary style in 1971 and first aired in the United States on PBS in early 1973.
 named the Fontenelles. Looking back on that assignment was particularly difficult for him. The troubles of the impoverished Norman and Bessie and their children never ceased, even after the essay was published. With sadness, he talks about how the Long Island house Life purchased for the family was destroyed by an accidental fire started by Norman Fontenelle. "Disaster kept visiting what was left of the Fontenelles" he writes in A Hungry Heart.

"Sometimes I question my reasons for having ever touched the Fontenelles. I've been told that their story helped other black families escape a similar existence. Perhaps that's so, but it doesn't alter my feelings about that family's misfortunes or those untimely deaths they met. The painful memories are still there, still rumbling through me like the vestiges of a shipwreck."

Yet there was hope in Parks's voice and a smile on his face as he described Bessie and Norman's youngest son, Richard, who survived and named his son Gordon.

What I've learned from Gordon Parks is that we cannot merely accept, but must try to understand the reasons for the conditions of his subjects.

It is not surprising that Gordon Parks's new memoir is titled A Hungry Heart. His self-conscious text informs us of his quest. "Driven by an insatiable hunger," he writes, "I still search for those things that inspire me--beautiful imagery, music, and literature."

Books by Gordon Parks

A Choice of Weapons Minnesota Historical Society The Minnesota Historical Society is a private, non-profit educational and cultural instutution dedicated to preserving the history of the state of Minnesota. It was founded by the territorial legislature in 1849 and is named in the Minnesota Constitution.  Press October 1986, $14.95, ISBN ISBN
abbr.
International Standard Book Number


ISBN International Standard Book Number

ISBN n abbr (= International Standard Book Number) → ISBN m 
 0-873-51202-2

An inspiring autobiography of the award-winning photographer and artist.

Eyes With Winged Thoughts: Poetry and Images Atria Books, November 2005 $27.95, ISBN 0-743-27962-X

A new collection of works.

Glimpses Toward Infinity Little, Brown & Company, September 1996, ISBN 0-790-97966-7

A volume of abstract images that appear almost surreal.

Half Past Autumn: A Retrospective Bulfinch Press, October 1997 $65, ISBN 0-821-22298-8

Awe-inspiring photographs that captures the lives of the urban poor, in Harlem, Brazil and the South.

A Hungry Heart: A Memoir Atria Books, November 2005 $26, ISBN 0-743-26902-0

The Learning Tree Fawcett (reprint), June 1987 $6.99, ISBN 0-449-21504-0 A classic novel based on the author's growing up in Kansas.

A Star for Noon: An Homage to Women in Images, Poetry and Music Bulfinch Press, October 2000 $50, ISBN 0-821-22685-1

Images, poems and a CD created on the theme of love.

The Sun Stalker: A Novel Based on the Life of Joseph Mallord William Turner
For other people called William Turner, see William Turner (disambiguation).


William Turner (c. 1508 – 7 July, 1568) was a British ornithologist and botanist.
 Rudd Finn Press, Inc., February 2003 $29.95, ISBN 0-964-09528-9

Inspired by the genius of the British artist.

Books by Deborah Willis

Black: A Celebration of a Culture Hylas Hylas (hī`ləs), in Greek mythology, beautiful youth. He was a favorite companion of Hercules. While on the expedition of the Argonauts, Hylas was dragged into a spring by water nymphs enchanted by his beauty and was never found.  Publishing, December 2003, $35, ISBN 1-592-58051-3

The Black Female Body: A Photographic History Temple University Press, January 2002 $60, ISBN 1-566-39928-9

Family, History and Memory: Recording African-American Life Hylas Publishing, January 2005, $24.95, ISBN 1-592-58086-6

Picturing Us: African American African American Multiculture A person having origins in any of the black racial groups of Africa. See Race.  Identity in Photography New Press, May 1996, $14, ISBN 1-565-84106-9

Reflections in Black: A History of Black Photographers, 1840 to the Present W.W. Norton & Co., June 2000, $50, ISBN 0-393-04880-2

A Small Nation of People: W.E.B. Du Bois Du Bois (d`bois, dəbois`), city (1990 pop. 8,286), Clearfield co., W central Pa., in the region of the Allegheny plateau; inc. 1881.  and African American Portraits Amistad/HarperCollins, October 2003, $24.95, ISBN 0-060-52342-5

Deborah Willis, Ph.D. is professor of photography and imaging, Tisch School of the Arts School of the Arts is the name of several schools (usually high schools) that are devoted to the fine arts, including:
  • Brooklyn High School of the Arts, Brooklyn, New York
  • Charleston County School of the Arts, Charleston, South Carolina
, New York University New York University, mainly in New York City; coeducational; chartered 1831, opened 1832 as the Univ. of the City of New York, renamed 1896. It comprises 13 schools and colleges, maintaining 4 main centers (including the Medical Center) in the city, as well as the .
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No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
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Author:Willis, Deborah
Publication:Black Issues Book Review
Article Type:Cover Story
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Nov 1, 2005
Words:1958
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