Henry Art Gallery University of Washington 15th Ave NE & NE 41st St Box 351410 WA 98195 Seattle États-Unis
Photographer Milton Rogovin turns 100 years old this winter, and to commemorate his life’s work as a social documentarian the Henry presents a selection of his arresting black-and-white photographs. Rogovin engages with a variety of people – factory workers, miners, citizens of Cuba and Zimbabwe, and Buffalo’s poor – through the filter of political action, a devotion to social justice, and an abiding sympathy for his fellow human beings.
In his spare time Rogovin, by occupation an optometrist working in Buffalo’s Lower West Side, photographed his neighborhood with the assistance of his wife Anne. In 1978 Rogovin fully dedicated himself to photographing the economic plight of the working class, whom he calls the “forgotten ones,” exercising authorial reticence so that the facts of a situation took precedence over his opinions. With the permission of his subjects, Rogovin captured men and women at work, often in the harsh environment of a factory or mine, and at home. These pairings, presented in the exhibition as diptychs, pay close attention to the conditions in which individuals live and work. The photographs are at once stark and intimate representations of these sitters’ lives, offering insight into the blue collar experience of single mothers, minorities, and the elderly.