“A Man Becomes Invisible” a Photo Exhibition


Emerging Man, Harlem (NY, 1952

A Man Becomes Invisible is an exploration of Gordon Parks’ photographic interpretation of Ralph Ellison’s National Book Award winning novel Invisible Man. Published in 1952, the novel has been hailed as one of the first to treat the black experience in twentieth-century America as a full human experience. Soon after its publication, Gordon Parks set out to evoke passages from the novel for Life magazine. He staged an actor around Harlem, where both he and Ellison had lived, and recreated poignant scenes from the story; his photoessay titled “A Man Becomes Invisible,” published in the August 25, 1952 issue of Life, introduced Ellison’s novel – and the societal issues it raised – to the magazine’s wide readership.

These images testify not only to the book’s deep impression on Parks, but also illustrate the photographer’s expanding vision and technical expertise in his first few years on staff at the magazine. A prime example is the photograph Invisible Man Retreat, which closes the Life article. The protagonist’s subterranean retreat – the “hole in the ground” – serves as his home after he is forced into hiding on the evening that riots break out in Harlem. The scene remains at the center of the novel—it is where the protagonist recounts his story, and the place where that story starts and ends. Parks famously recreated the scene in an elaborately staged photograph, showing the man surrounded by “exactly 1,369 lights” on a Harlem rooftop, drinking sloe gin and listening to Louis Armstrong records, his only means of escape from the dark world above.

This exhibition includes both published and unpublished photographs from this series as well as archival material illustrating the production of the photographic recreations as well as the final Life article. Parks’ and Ellison’s collaboration was also the subject of the major 2016 exhibition titled Invisible Man: Gordon Parks and Ralph Ellison in Harlem at the Art Institute of Chicago as well as a publication of the same name, which will be on sale at the exhibition space.

The exhibition will run from June 12 through August 26 and is free to the public.
Gallery Hours:
Monday- Thursday, 10am-4pm
Friday, 10am-1pm
Closed Saturday and Sunday

Event Location and Ticket Information

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The Gordon Parks Foundation
48 Wheeler Avenue
Pleasantville, NY 10570
Handicap Accessible? Yes

Date: Friday, August 18, 2017
Times: 10:00 am - 1:00 pm

Ticket pricing:
Free event

Presenter: The Gordon Parks Foundation
Presenter Phone: 914.238.2619
Presenter Website: www.gordonparksfoundation.org