TIME Magazineのインスタグラム(time) - 3月1日 05時53分


"There are many ways to photograph a black person, and it’s easy for things to go horribly wrong. #America’s long history of racist imagery makes that quite clear," writes John Edwin Mason, who teaches African #history and the history of #photography at the University of Virginia. "Wayne Miller, a white man, was notable for doing it right. In the mid-20th century, a time when American visual culture was suffused with photographs that reinforced demeaning notions about black people, Miller created deeply empathetic images with a understated, yet unmistakable anti-racist intent." As a U.S. Navy photographer in 1944 and 1945, Miller made a series about a segregated all-black unit—which they called "Pot Luck"—that had been assigned to the Naval Supply Depot on Guam. "Pot Luck" was the name that Miller gave to his planned book, the mock-up of which was lost until 2018. What one of Miller's daughters found, adds @johnedwinmason, "reveals a gifted young photographer grappling with the complexities of race in American culture." Read more, and see more images that are published for the first time, at the link in bio. Photographs by Wayne Miller—@Magnum Photos


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