Gordon Parks at Jack Shainman Gallery

Joy arises from moments of hope in photos of Harlem rallies shot by Gordon Parks in 1963, now on view at Jack Shainman Gallery.  Elsewhere, a protester’s sign reading ‘Policy brutality must go’ connects powerfully to today’s protests while iconic images from Parks’ series Segregation Story document the lives of Alabama families impacted by discrimination.  (On view at Jack Shainman Gallery’s two Chelsea locations through Feb 20th).

Gordon Parks, Untitled, Harlem, New York, archival pigment print, 20 x 24 inches, 1963.

Gordon Parks at Jack Shainman Gallery

Granted access to Nation of Islam leadership and communities in 1963, Life photographer Gordon Parks shot remarkable images including this portrait of women’s leader Ethel Sharrieff. Now on view at Jack Shainman Gallery’s 24th Street location, the arresting show overviews selections from Parks’ lesser-known yet powerful series. (On view through Feb 10th).

Gordon Parks, Ethel Sharrieff, Chicago, Illinois, gelatin silver print, 20 x 16 inches, 1963.

Gordon Parks at Howard Greenberg Gallery

Gordon Parks, Ingrid Bergman on location for the filming of Roberto Rossellini’s ‘Stromboli’, 1949 & Mr & Mrs Albert Thornton in their living room in Mobile Alabama, 1956.
Gordon Parks, Ingrid Bergman on location for the filming of Roberto Rossellini’s ‘Stromboli’, 1949 & Mr & Mrs Albert Thornton in their living room in Mobile Alabama, 1956.

Gordon Parks’ iconic photographs spanned the worlds of fashion, celebrity and social documentary from this 1949 photo of Ingrid Bergman on location for the filming of Roberto Rossellini’s ‘Stromboli’ to a photo from the ’56 Segregation Series that demonstrates the respectable normality of Mr & Mrs Albert Thornton in their living room in Mobile Alabama. Both are on view at Howard Greenberg Gallery on 57th Street through Oct 27th.