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A dance group: Frederick Douglass housing project

  • $40.00

SHIPPING FOR FRAMES ONLY AVAILABLE WITHIN U.S.

Add Custom Frame

SHIPPING FOR FRAMES ONLY AVAILABLE WITHIN U.S.

Add Custom Frame

SHIPPING FOR FRAMES ONLY AVAILABLE WITHIN U.S.

Add Custom Frame

SHIPPING FOR FRAMES ONLY AVAILABLE WITHIN U.S.

Add Custom Frame

SHIPPING FOR FRAMES ONLY AVAILABLE WITHIN U.S.

Add Custom Frame

SHIPPING FOR FRAMES ONLY AVAILABLE WITHIN U.S.

SHIPPING FOR FRAMES ONLY AVAILABLE WITHIN U.S.

A dance group: Frederick Douglass housing project, our newest edition by iconic photographer Gordon Parks, celebrates a moment of joy, movement, and community in 1940s public housing. A group of young Black girls performing in matching white dresses, shoes and hair bows are captured mid-step by Parks in a choreographed dance, buoyant as little clouds. Their expressions range from concentration to delight, and there’s no doubt that proud families out of frame looked on the scene gleefully. This photograph is part of Parks’s larger body of work for the Farm Security Administration (FSA), which sought to document life in underserved communities during and after the Great Depression, especially in African American neighborhoods that were often ignored or stereotyped by mainstream media.

Parks was a master at using his camera not just to witness, but to uplift. In this image, the contrast between the children's bright costumes and the stark setting of the housing project speaks volumes. Parks’s work always highlights vitality, resilience, and cultural pride. Here, the dance group becomes a symbol of free creativity and aspiration, countering visual narratives of the era that often synonymized low-income Black communities with hardship alone. There’s fun in the girls’ poses and strength in their synchronicity—each kiddo embodies a kind of hopeful defiance; joy as resistance.

Both documentary and celebratory, A dance group: Frederick Douglass housing project balances social realism with aesthetic elegance. Through his work, Parks not only recorded history—he helped shape a more nuanced, empathetic, inclusive view of American life, one frame at a time.

+ 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.

Moab Lasal Exhibition Lustre

8"x10" | Edition of 5
11"x14" | Edition of 200
16"x20" | Edition of 50
20"x24" | Edition of 10
30"x40" | Edition of 5
40"x50" | Edition of 2