From Versailles coat fashion to modern Tokyo street style, Google's new virtual exhibition collection brings the fashion world to your fingertips. Google Arts & Culture's "We Wear Culture" project is managed in collaboration with The Gordon Parks Foundation and more than 180 major cultural facilities in New York, London, Paris, Tokyo, Sao Paulo, and around the world. Gordon Park: The Gordon Park Foundation fashion photographer is now available online as part of today's worldwide exhibition. The exhibition will work for magazines like Life and Vogue and celebrate Parkes' long career as a fashion photographer. The most famous is the social documentary, but Parks began his career in 1940 and continued it in the 1990 's. Peter W. Kunhardt, Executive Director of the Gordon Park Foundation, stated that: "We can partner with Google Arts & Culture to provide services to world cultural facilities and their collections utilizing innovative technology Gordon Park's work."
The Gordon Park Foundation permanently preserves the works of Gordon Park, which is open to the public through exhibitions, books and electronic media, and art and education to promote Gordon's "participation in better living and a better world" We support activities. ""
The 26 photos of Parks were originally published in the article of life titled "The Restraints: Open and Hidden" in September 1956. 200 negatives were found at the bottom. Storage Box Now, the whole series was first released at Gordon Parks. Sixty years after the photographs were taken, these pictures remained relevant as ever and provided an essential background for a new ethnic war in America. They comprehensively portrayed the historical precedent of "New Jim Crow" and the controversy over Michael Brown and Eric Ghana's shootout. Even though the young generation thinks of loneliness, these pictures tell about a unique story about how it affects the real life of real people.
In the spring of 2012, six years after Parks died, a box labeled "Isolation Series" was displayed in the storage room of the Gordon Parks Foundation along with over 200 color transparencies. Well, at the exhibition at the Atlanta art museum, we choose from 30 rediscovery images and combine it with 10 original. In the past few years, several museums have held Parkes' work exhibitions highlighting unpublished works on the whole picture and all aspects of the editing process. At the New Orleans Art Museum, we held an exhibition called "Gordon Park: Production of Discussion" to explore the editing process behind his first LIFE photography work "Harlem Gang Leader". And frustration. . The exhibition shows some truncated and dark images, and everything decided to emphasize certain emotions or information.