Skip to content

 

Hello, my name is Mark Mersman and I am a Gallery Attendant at the museum. I will be reading the Akin to Jazz section text for Working Together: The Photographers of the Kamoinge Workshop.

Love of music was at the heart of the Kamoinge Workshop. Music—especially jazz—touched on photographers’ memories and family relationships, and served as a bond between members. Jazz was a near constant soundtrack for the group’s meetings, and musicians and live performances were the subject of many of their photographs. Black musicians were a source of inspiration for Kamoinge members to develop their own voices in photography. Jazz also served as a sensibility through which the photographers saw the world, and even as a metaphor for photography itself.

Many members saw a connection between their photographic practice and the basic elements of jazz: both artforms demand technical expertise, knowledge, timing and intuition that enable the artist to enter a flow of virtuosic, improvisational response. Louis Draper directly likened jazz to a Black aesthetic in photography, explaining: “The whole idea of making synonymous your feelings for the camera with your life experience is something that takes a while to develop. It would be, I imagine, akin to jazz and akin to certain very distinctly black outlets.” As Ming Smith put it, “making something out of nothing—I think that’s like jazz.”


Back to the Audio Exhibition

 

OSZAR »