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Kwame Brathwaite: Schwarz ist schön

Kwame Brathwaite: Schwarz ist schön

Aperture

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„Von Beyoncé bis Barack Obama fällt es schwer, sich eine schwarze Figur vorzustellen, die ihre Bekanntheit nicht in gewissem Maße dem Ethos ‚Schwarz ist schön‘ verdankt“ – Ekow Eshun, Financial Times

In den späten 1950er und 1960er Jahren nutzte Kwame Brathwaite seine Fotografien, um den politischen Slogan „Black Is Beautiful“ bekannt zu machen. Diese Monographie – die erste, die Brathwaites bemerkenswerter Karriere jemals gewidmet ist – erzählt die Geschichte einer wichtigen, aber wenig anerkannten Figur der zweiten Harlem Renaissance.

Inspiriert von den Schriften des Aktivisten und schwarzen Nationalisten Marcus Garvey gründete Brathwaite zusammen mit seinem älteren Bruder Elombe Brath die African Jazz Arts Society and Studios (AJASS) und die Grandassa Models (1962). AJASS war ein Kollektiv aus Künstlern, Dramatikern, Designern und Tänzern; Grandassa Models war eine Modelgruppe für schwarze Frauen, die gegründet wurde, um die Schönheitsstandards der Weißen in Frage zu stellen. Von atemberaubenden Studioporträts der Grandassa-Modelle bis hin zu Bildern hinter den Kulissen der Künstlergemeinschaft von Harlem, darunter Max Roach, Abbey Lincoln und Miles Davis, bietet dieses Buch eine längst überfällige Erkundung von Brathwaites Leben und Werk

  • Product Type: Monograph, Hardcover, with dust jacket
  • 144 pages, with 16 illustrations
  • Published in 2019
  • Shipping Dimensions: 10.6 × 8.5 × 0.8 inches  (26.9 × 21.6 × 2.0 cm)
  • Shipping Weight: 2.2 lb (35.2 oz; 998 g)
  • SKU010009260 | 9781597114431

In these collections:

Alle Produkte | Black History Month | Bücher & Medien | Gifts Under $50 | Monographien | Photography |
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Kwame Braithwaite

About the Author

Kwame Brathwaite

Kwame Brathwaite is represented by Philip Martin in Los Angeles. Beginning in the early 1960s, Brathwaite photographed stories for black publications such as the New York Amsterdam News, City Sun, and Daily Challenge, helping set the stage for the Black Arts and Black Power movements. By the 1970s, Brathwaite was one of the era's top concert photographers, shaping the images of such public figures as Stevie Wonder, Bob Marley, James Brown, and Muhammad Ali. Brathwaite wrote about and photographed such landmark events as the the Motortown Revue at the Apollo (1963); Wattstax '72 (1972); the Jackson 5's first trip to Africa (1974); and the festival "Zaire '74," which accompanied the famous Foreman-Ali fight, the "Rumble in the Jungle." Recent acquirers of Brathwaite's work include the Museum of Modern Art and Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and Frances Young Tang Teaching Museum and Art Gallery at Skidmore College.

About the Author

Tanisha C. Ford

Tanisha C. Ford is an award-winning writer, cultural critic, and associate professor of Africana studies and history at the University of Delaware. She is the author of Liberated Threads: Black Women, Style, and the Global Politics of Soul (2015), which won the 2016 Organization of American Historians' Liberty Legacy Foundation Award for best book on civil rights history. She was featured in Aperture's Fall 2017 issue, "Elements of Style," among other publications, including Elle, the Atlantic, the Root, the Feminist Wire, Cognoscenti, the New York Times, the New Yorker, Ebony, NPR's Code Switch, and New York Magazine: The Cut. Ford is a cofounder of TEXTURES, a pop-up material culture lab, creating and curating content on fashion and the built environment.

About the Author

Deborah Willis

Deborah Willis is an artist, writer, and curator, as well as professor and chair of the Department of Photography and Imaging at Tisch School of the Arts, New York University. She has been a Richard D. Cohen Fellow of African and African American Art History at the Hutchins Center, Harvard University (2014), a Guggenheim Fellow (2005), a Fletcher Fellow (2005), and a MacArthur Fellow (2000). Willis received the NAACP Image Award in 2014 for her coauthored book Envisioning Emancipation: Black Americans and the End of Slavery (2013). Her other notable publications include Black Venus 2010: They Called Her "Hottentot" (2010), Posing Beauty: African American Images from the 1890s to the Present (2009), the award-winning Michelle Obama: The First Lady in Photographs (2009), The Black Female Body: A Photographic History (2002), and Reflections in Black: A History of Black Photographers, 1840 to the Present (2002).

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