Jitterbugging in Negro juke joint, Saturday evening, outside Clarksdale, Mississippi - and - A Negro going in the Entrance for Negroes at a movie theater, Belzoni, Mississippi (pair)

by Marion Post Wolcott

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Artist Statement

Eighty-two miles of dirt roads and no more than a month's time separated two of Marion Post Wolcott's most iconic photographs. She made them in Mississippi in the fall of 1939, during one of her long solo swings through the deep South on assignment for the photographic unit of the Farm Security Administration. In the first, A Negro going in the Entrance for Negroes at a movie theater, Belzoni, Mississippi, she transformed a mundane scene into a complex composition with deeply layered meanings. The second, Jitterbugging in Negro juke joint, Saturday evening, outside Clarksdale, Mississippi, captured a moment of sheer exuberant delight. It's a much simpler image than the first, but just as powerful.

The word "iconic" is overused, but these photos are unquestionably American icons. Their beauty and visual sophistication are givens. What makes them iconic is their ability to show us deep and complementary truths about the experience of race in America. In them we can see reflections of our troubled past and present. Through them we can imagine a more democratic future.

— John Edwin Mason

Read John Edwin Mason's full introduction to this pair of images on our blog

Why We Love It

"Eighty-two miles of dirt roads and no more than a month's time separated two of Marion Post Wolcott's most iconic photographs. She made them in Mississippi in the fall of 1939, during one of her long solo swings through the deep South. In the first—A Negro going in the Entrance for Negroes at a movie theater, Belzoni, Mississippi—she transformed a mundane scene into a complex composition with deeply layered meanings. The second—Jitterbugging in Negro juke joint, Saturday evening, outside Clarksdale, Mississippi—captured a moment of sheer exuberant delight. It's a much simpler image than the first, but just as powerful." ... Read more from John Edwin Mason on the blog!

Details

More About This Edition:
+ Limited-edition, exclusive to 20x200
+ Museum quality: archival inks, 100% cotton rag paper unless noted
+ Handcrafted custom-framing is available

Our quoted dimensions are for the size of paper containing the images, not the printed image itself. We do not alter the aspect ratio, nor do we crop or resize the artists’ originals. All of our prints have a minimum border of .5 inches to allow for framing.

Medium:

Innova Fibaprint Warm Cotton Gloss

Edition Structure:
10"x8" (pair) | edition of 100 
14"x11" (pair) | edition of 500

Marion Post Wolcott

Marion Post Wolcott is best known for the more than 9,000 photographs she produced for the Farm Security Administration (FSA) from 1938 to 1942. She was the first woman offered a full time FSA appointment. Born in Montclair, N.J. her mother, Marion "Nan" Hoyt Post, was an ardent activist for progressive causes working with Margaret Sanger the founder of Planned Parenthood.  Before Wolcott became a government photographer, she was at first a teacher. Moving to New York City in 1936 she then earned her living making photographs for magazines and newspapers. Initially she worked freelance, then as a staff photojournalist in 1937... Read More
and 1938, Wolcott broke gender barriers in the newspaper darkroom. Then she worked for the Farm Security Administration. She covered thousands of miles of the United States with her camera to document and publicize the need for federal assistance to those hardest hit by the Great Depression and agricultural blight. Wolcott also contributed 120 color photographs to the FSA when Kodak provided early samples of Kodachrome film to the staff for experimentation. Drawing on her social concerns and her artistic vision to illustrate issues that needed redress, Wolcott produced an extraordinary number of images and her occupation challenged many social morés about the propriety of young women living away from the family home and traveling on their own. Her artistry and perseverance have inspired many articles, books, and exhibitions. - Library of Congress
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