Name Keith and | ||
2015 Community Arts Awards Honoree Keith Calhoun and Chandra McCormick
Life
Keith Calhoun (born January 1, 1955) and Chandra McCormick (born August 27, 1957) are American photographers from New Orleans, Louisiana. Calhoun moved to Los Angeles during his teenage years, where he attended Los Angeles Community College, working at KCET public radio station before returning to New Orleans to open a portrait studio.
Contents
- 2015 Community Arts Awards Honoree Keith Calhoun and Chandra McCormick
- Life
- Hurricane Katrina
- Style and Work
- Angola State Penitentiary
- Exhibitions
- References
McComick and Calhoun met in 1978 when McCormick had her portrait made. Soon after, she became his apprentice, then collaborator and wife.
Hurricane Katrina
McCormick and Calhoun relocated temporarily to Houston during Hurricane Katrina, documenting the state of the refugee shelters while there. When they returned, their home was destroyed and almost two-thirds of their photographic archive had been damaged. The water shifted the color or cracked the film, creating an unintended artistic effect. The damaged images have been in the shows “Gone” and “Pitch White”.
In 2007 the couple opened a community arts center, called L9 Center for the Arts in the Lower 9th ward of New Orleans. The center serves as a gallery space, a performing arts center.
Style and Work
McCormick and Calhoun the way of life in the African American communities in the Lower Ninth Ward in New Orleans and rural Louisiana. The photographers document every aspect of life in disappearing communities, capturing daily life, celebrations, rituals, and labor to preserve cultural histories. They have referred to themselves as "keepers of the culture".
Photographing mostly in black and white, they take both individual and group portraits. Their photographs cross into social commentary.
Angola State Penitentiary
From the 1980s onward, they documented the African-American men imprisoned at Angola State Penitentiary, collaborating with songwriter Aaron Neville, for a body of work called "Slavery: The Prison Industrial Complex", which has been displayed it in their 2014 show at Prospect New Orleans
Exhibitions
2016: "Social Activism in Photography," Whitney Museum of Art
June 9- Nov 22, 2015: All the World's Futures, 56th la Biennale di Venezia in Venice Italy an exhibition curated by Okwui Enwezor.
Oct. 25, 2014- Jan. 25, 2015: “Angola: The Prison a series at Prospect 3 Art Biennial in New Orleans, on display at the Ogden Museum of Southern Art titled Slavery: The Prison Industrial Complex.