Gordon Parks

(American, 1912–2006)

Gordon Parks was a self-taught photographer, writer, composer, and filmmaker. Parks is remembered as the first African-American photographer who worked for Vogue and Life magazines, known for his documentary photojournalism of the 1940s through the 1970s. He captured iconic images of the civil rights movement, investigating important turning points in inner cities around the United States. Along with these charged moments, he also captured candid portraits of artists and musicians including Helen Frankenthaler. “I picked up a camera because it was my choice of weapons against what I hated most about the universe: racism, intolerance, poverty,” he once said. Born on November 30, 1912 in Fort Scott, KS, Parks grew up amidst the injustices of segregation and racist violence. He bought his first camera at the age of 25 at a Seattle pawnshop, and in 1940 moved to Chicago where he developed a portrait business. In 1948, his photographic essay on a Harlem gang leader earned Parks a job as a photographer for Life, where he continued to work until 1972. In addition to his photography, Parks also became a successful filmmaker, directing Shaft, one of the most successful movies of 1971. He also wrote the acclaimed book A Choice of Weapons (1966), a chronicle of his life journey as a photographer. Parks was awarded the American Society of Magazine Photographers’ Photographer of the Year in 1960, the Congress of Racial Equality Lifetime Achievement Award in 2000, as well as over 20 honorary doctorates. The Library of Congress in Washington, D.C. acquired his archive in 1995. He died on March 7, 2006 in New York, NY. Today, the artist’s works are held in the collections of the Art Institute of Chicago, the Cleveland Museum of Art, and the Minneapolis Institute of Art.

Gordon Parks Artworks

Gordon Parks (306 results)
Seascape, 1980–1989

Gordon Parks

Seascape, 1980–1989

Sale Date: October 19, 2004

Auction Closed

Studio Harcourt, 1950–1950

Gordon Parks

Studio Harcourt, 1950–1950

Sale Date: May 21, 2004

Auction Closed

Rockefeller Center, NYC, the RCA Building

Gordon Parks

Rockefeller Center, NYC, the RCA Building

Sale Date: May 18, 2004

Auction Closed

Dock Stevedore at Fulton Fish Market, 1943–1943

Gordon Parks

Dock Stevedore at Fulton Fish Market, 1943–1943

Sale Date: February 17, 2004

Auction Closed

122 C St., 1940–1949

Gordon Parks

122 C St., 1940–1949

Sale Date: February 17, 2004

Auction Closed

Ingrid Bergman, 1950–1950

Gordon Parks

Ingrid Bergman, 1950–1950

Sale Date: November 19, 2003

Auction Closed

Paris fashions: Bettina, Sophia,..., 1949–1949

Gordon Parks

Paris fashions: Bettina, Sophia,..., 1949–1949

Sale Date: October 18, 2003

Auction Closed

Worker, Standard Oil, 1945–1945

Gordon Parks

Worker, Standard Oil, 1945–1945

Sale Date: May 15, 2003

Auction Closed

The bridge, New York, 1958–1958

Gordon Parks

The bridge, New York, 1958–1958

Sale Date: April 25, 2003

Auction Closed

Couple, with man playing cello, 1980–1989

Gordon Parks

Couple, with man playing cello, 1980–1989

Sale Date: April 15, 2002

Auction Closed

Paris fashion, Countess Maxine de la..., 1950–1950

Gordon Parks

Paris fashion, Countess Maxine de la..., 1950–1950

Sale Date: April 5, 2000

Auction Closed

Boy with June bug, 1963–1963

Gordon Parks

Boy with June bug, 1963–1963

Sale Date: April 29, 1999

Auction Closed

Untitled, 1960–1960

Gordon Parks

Untitled, 1960–1960

Sale Date: April 29, 1999

Auction Closed

African-American child, 1943–1945

Gordon Parks

African-American child, 1943–1945

Sale Date: April 27, 1999

Auction Closed

Child care center for mothers engaged..., 1943–1943

Gordon Parks

Child care center for mothers engaged..., 1943–1943

Sale Date: October 5, 1998

Auction Closed

PORTRAIT OF ROY STRYKER, 1947

Gordon Parks

PORTRAIT OF ROY STRYKER, 1947

Sale Date: April 22, 1994

Auction Closed

HARLEM, NYC, 1950

Gordon Parks

HARLEM, NYC, 1950

Sale Date: October 9, 1993

Auction Closed

HOSIERY STUDIES, 1950

Gordon Parks

HOSIERY STUDIES, 1950

Sale Date: October 13, 1992

Auction Closed