инструменты
Изменить страну:

Her Name Was Ella Watson

Photographs by Gordon Parks

I

am the granddaughter of domestic workers. My maternal grandmother was Luretha Little, an only child, who left her parents behind in North Carolina, and then her husband and two young sons in Virginia in search of freedom in New Jersey, where her sons eventually joined her and where my mother was born in 1955. In Newark, Luretha and her second husband, Elijah Griffin, had four more children. They ran a janitorial business, cleaning the offices of white doctors in Woodbridge and white scientists in New Brunswick. Sometimes they brought their children and put them to work: the twin boys swept the floors, and my mother dusted desks and polished ashtrays. My paternal grandmother, Hilda Ramdoo, was nicknamed Dolly because she was a pretty baby. One of nine children born in Port-of-Spain, Trinidad, she had seven of her own. By the time my father was an adult, his mother had temporarily left her husband, Antonio Tillet, and remaining six children to work in Caracas, where she cleaned the homes of the Venezuelan elite; she later went to Boston, where her entire family eventually joined her, and where I was born in 1975.

I think a lot about these two women and their countless hours of labor in the homes or offices of others. Though they were separated by race, nationality, and age, because of their gender and class they were relegated to the same job. But they also had full lives. Seven children each. Luretha loved Mahalia and Motown. Dolly was one of the first women to start a Carnival band in Trinidad. They were pious and proper and quick-tongued and outspoken. I think a lot about what existed for them beyond work when I look at Gordon Parks’s most memorable image: the 1942 photograph he initially labeled Washington D.C. Government Charwoman, but renamed American Gothic during the revolutionary 1960s.

More than half a century later, Parks recounted making this first portrait of Ella Watson, the 59-year-old African American cleaning woman who, like him, worked at the Farm Security Administration offices in Washington, D.C. “So it happened that, in one of the government’s most sacred strongholds,” he wrote, “I set up my camera for my first professional photograph.”

“On the wall,” he continued, “was a huge American flag hanging from the ceiling to the floor.” Parks asked Watson “to stand before it, placed the mop in one hand, a broom in the other, then instructed her to look into the lens.”

This capture of Watson at work—wearing a neatly pressed polka-dotted puffed-sleeve dress and wire-rimmed glasses, her hair parted to the side, with a straw broom and rag mop on either side of her and a slightly out-of-focus American flag hanging behind her—is now so familiar to me that I don’t remember when I first saw it. But I didn’t know until recently that it is what Parks considered his “first” professional photograph, setting him on the path to becoming one of the most innovative and influential photographers of all time.

Ella Watson Washington DC. August 1942. Mrs Ella Watson, a government chairwoman, leaves for work at 4:30pm. (The Gordon Parks Foundation)

In July and August 1942, Parks took more than 90 photographs of Watson, her family, and her community, in a project that rejected long-standing caricatures of Black women as mammies or subservient maids. More than a decade before hundreds of Black women domestic workers helped organize the Montgomery bus boycott, Parks’s series with Watson revealed Black domestics as they often were: patriotic, political, and pious.

In his memoir, A Choice of Weapons, Parks recalled entering the FSA offices for the first time, walking “confidently down the corridor, following the arrows to my destination, sensing history all around me, feeling knowledge behind every door I passed.” Roy Stryker, the head of the FSA’s Historical Section, sensing that Parks’s naivete would not serve him or his future subjects well, encouraged him to leave his camera behind and get to know the city by going for a bus ride, taking in a movie, shopping at a drugstore or a department store, or dining at local restaurants. “I wanted to kill everyone,” Parks said about those experiences. “I’ve never been so mad.” Unlike in Saint Paul, where he came of age, or even his more recent home, Chicago, in D.C., he faced the harsh reality of the district’s strict segregation laws and was denied service or entry everywhere he went. Furious, Parks told Stryker that he needed to document this story of American racism and then plotted his plan in bold strokes. “I wanted to photograph every rotten discrimination in the city, and show the world how evil Washington was,” Parks said. “I had the biggest, vaguest ideas in the world.” After making it clear that such a project would require him to hire all of Life magazine’s photographers for the rest of their lives, Stryker encouraged Parks to focus on and follow one person to achieve his goals. Stryker indicated a woman who was mopping the hallway floor nearby. “Go have a talk with her before you go home this evening,” he said. “See what she has to say about life and things. You might find her interesting.”

Ella Watson (The Gordon Parks Foundation)

Born in late March 1883 in Washington, D.C., Ella Watson had been a domestic for most of her life by the time she met Parks. In 1898, at age 15, she left school and later that year found a job ironing at the Frazee Laundry in Washington. She worked intermittently, listing “maid” and “laundress” as her employment on the census until she found a temporary position as a custodian at the State Department in 1919. The following year, she doubled up, working as a caretaker in a white family’s home and cleaning another federal agency building. She managed to secure steady employment at the Post Office Department for most of the 1920s, then moved to the Treasury Department (where the FSA was also located) in 1929; she remained there until 1944. “I came to find out a very significant thing,” Parks later remembered. Watson “had moved into the [office] building at the same time, she said, as the [white] woman who was now a notary public. They came there with the same education, the same mental facilities and equipment, and she was now scrubbing this woman’s room every evening.”

I have always wondered whether Parks saw parts of his biography in Watson’s story. Long before he worked for the railroad, much less became a professional photographer, a teenage Gordon Parks was homeless in his new city of Saint Paul. He worked weekends at his boardinghouse to make ends meet, washing dishes and mopping floors. A few years later, like millions of Americans during the Depression, he was destitute again. Having lost all his belongings on an earlier trip to Chicago, a desperate Parks got a gig at the Hotel Southland. Because of his race, this run-down establishment barred him from renting one of the rooms he was responsible for cleaning.

Having to clean for the hotel’s white, working-class, and almost always drunk guests brought out the worst in him. The Southland was filled with a “bad breath of smoke, alcohol, sour bodies and human excrement” and “pickpockets, alcoholics, bums, addicts, perverts, panhandlers,” and the only way Parks could survive was to “hold my own here, where profanity meant prestige and politeness invited abuse.” Hating every day of his short-lived experience there, Parks concluded, “It was a harsh and ugly time,” marked mainly by his “longing for the time when I could get into a tub of hot water and soak out the smell of the place.”

I do not know if Parks divulged his past to Watson, but she shared much with him. “Would you allow me to photograph you?” he awkwardly asked her one early-summer evening in 1942. “In an old dress like this?” she humbly replied. Soon Parks had his most enduring photograph, but he realized he knew little of his subject beyond the image. When he approached her later to ask if he could continue to document her and learn more about her life, Watson joked that it might take some time because she was a grandmother. She then told a life story that sounded to Parks like “a bad dream.” By the time he met her, her husband had died (in 1927), and she was raising her adopted teenage daughter and her adopted daughter’s nieces and nephews. Watson, a single mother and the sole provider for the family, was left to survive on an annual wage of $1,080. And she knew she was locked permanently into this status.

Whether Parks consciously identified with Watson as a domestic remains unclear. But in the actual photographs, we can see his identification with and respect for her as a laborer in unexpected ways. Rather than remove all evidence of himself in the portraits of Watson cleaning the offices, he subtly included traces of his photography equipment. Parks established a reciprocity between their lives and their labor. He knew it was not a one-to-one correlation. “By comparison,” he reflected after learning of Watson’s hardships, “my experiences were akin to a peaceful afternoon.” The images were trenchant critiques of the limited economic opportunities available to Black people, particularly Black women in Jim Crow America, while they also told Watson’s story with visual nuance and depth.

Picture of Ella Watson Washington, DC. August 1942. Ella Watson cleaning after regular working hours. (The Gordon Parks Foundation) Ella Watson Washington DC. August 1942. Mrs. Ella Watson, a government chairwoman, reading the Bible to her house-hold. (The Gordon Parks Foundation)

Stryker immediately understood the disruptive power of Government Charwoman. Balking after Parks showed it to him, he said, “Well, you’re catching on, but that picture could get us all fired.” Aware that southern members of Congress had already complained about the FSA’s publishing images of Black people impoverished in the segregated South, Stryker encouraged Parks to continue documenting Watson.

The most dominant image of Black domestic workers in mainstream America at the time was that of a mammy, a Black woman who happily served at the whims of white employers. By 1941, the image had peaked: Hattie McDaniel won the Best Supporting Actress Oscar for her role as Ruth “Mammy,” a formerly enslaved woman on the Tara plantation and house servant to Scarlett O’Hara in the pro-Confederate movie Gone With the Wind. Years later, when a friend criticized her for “playing so many servant parts, or ‘handkerchief heads’ as they came to be called,” McDaniel responded, “Hell, I’d rather play a maid than be one.”

Although Parks was not alone in creating a counternarrative to racist stereotypes, his image remains one of the most enduring. Two years before Parks arrived in the capital, his literary hero Richard Wright sent his agent a manuscript titled Slave Market (later renamed Black Hope), about the plight of Black housemaids. Wright hoped the novel might “reveal in a symbolic manner the potentially strategic position, socially and politically, which women occupy in the world today.” But he never published the book, and another eight years would pass before Lutie Johnson, a domestic worker turned blues singer, would appear in print in Ann Petry’s social-realist novel The Street.

Parks never saw Watson as just a symbol. Through sustained documentation of her life, the civil-rights aesthetic he pursued and perfected for the rest of his career took form. In that brief encounter with Watson, her friends, and her family, Parks realized his capacity to depict Black people in his art the way he knew them in the world: as multidimensional, multitudinous, and agents of social change.

He achieved this, in part, through a swap. Parks later admitted to having Grant Wood’s American Gothic in mind when he placed Watson in a pose similar to that of both figures in Wood’s 1930 painting. Parks likely saw the painting—now one of the most recognizable of 20th-century American art—during a train layover in Chicago in 1937. Unlike the sharp social commentary of the FSA photographs, Wood’s painting was both bucolic and nostalgic. The obvious middle-classness harkened back to an age of prosperity and stability before the Great Depression. “What does matter is whether or not these faces are true to American life,” Wood wrote about his models in a 1941 letter, “and reveal something about it.”

Recently, I went to see Wood’s American Gothic on a lark. I had seen the painting many times as one of the many tourists who flock to the American wing of the Art Institute of Chicago, looked at it from various angles, and debated its import as kitsch or haute culture. But this time, I had Parks and Watson in my head, and I found myself less interested in the farmer and his daughter (many people mistake the woman for a wife) and more invested in Parks’s transformation of a double portrait into a single one.

In Parks’s version, Watson stood in for both figures. In Wood’s painting, the division of labor falls along traditional gender lines. The older man and the younger woman are outdoors, and the pitchfork is the main clue to their labor. The farmer uses it daily, making it a crucial part of his routine and work, as the painting suggests, in public. The young woman’s gaze suggests a dependency on him, and her kitchen garb indicates that she does not work alongside him but might take care of the home. By replacing those two figures with Watson, a Black cleaning woman, Parks troubled the notions of gender, race, and work. As Watson cleaned those stairwells and offices in the after-hours, the wartime bureaucracy of the FSA became a domestic space, and women’s labor was no longer unseen.

I am drawn to those photographs that fully refuse Watson’s invisibility and revel in her interiority. Parks travels with her far beyond the office building and witnesses her different types of emotional, familial, and intergenerational labor: her preparing to go to and returning from work; her feeding and dressing her grandchildren, and combing their hair.

Ella Watson Washington DC. August 1942. Mrs. Ella Watson receives anointment from Reverend Clara Smith during the Flower bowl demonstration, a service held once a year at the St Martin’s Spiritual church. (The Gordon Parks Foundation) Ella Watson Washington DC. August 1942. Mrs. Ella Watson, a government chairwoman, with three grandchildren and her adopted daughter. (The Gordon Parks Foundation)

Interspersed are moments in which Watson created an alternative to the racism she experienced at work and a curative to her daily grind. As poignant as but less popular than her overt dissent in front of the American flag in the most famous photograph is her embrace of religious ritual and her exercising her right to rest. Tenderness is on display when Watson’s grandchild naps midafternoon or when we see her silhouette projected on the mirror behind her bedroom altar. Eyes closed, head down, Watson appears in a solo portrait again, but this time in prayer. Parks helps us see how, despite her economic poverty, surrounded by rows of neatly lined-up statues and candles, Watson made her home a sanctuary, a place where she, and maybe even he, for a time, could connect to something far better than the segregated country into which they both were born.

“I was in my very late teens when I was first made aware of the images,” Ella Watson’s great-granddaughter Rosslyn Samuels told me in an interview. “And I didn’t grasp the magnitude of it until my later years, because, to me, she was just Grandma.” When she saw Parks’s photographs, she said, “I thought, Oh, someone took professional pictures of her. I regret not knowing about them when she was alive, because she and I shared a bedroom, and we talked about everything.” Knowing Watson only as a retiree meant that Samuels’s primary memories of her great-grandmother are more like the photographs Parks took outside the office, the large majority of moments he documented: Watson as a loving, pious, nurturing Black woman who seemed to delight in looking after those she loved.

And here, Watson still inspires. “I get an overwhelming feeling when I look at Parks’s photographs of her now,” Samuels revealed. “It’s just like, ‘Wow.’ But … I’m not surprised, because she was always so big to us. She had that impact on a lot of people. We revered her. And it’s not like she commanded it; she just had a certain effect on people.”

Fortunately, one of them was a 29-year-old photographer named Gordon Parks.

Ella Watson (The Gordon Parks Foundation)

This article has been excerpted from “’She Was Always So Big to Us’: Ella Watson as Style and Substance," an essay by Salamishah Tillet, that appears in Gordon Parks's new book American Gothic: Gordon Parks and Ella Watson.


Читать статью полностью на: theatlantic.com
706 people named Kyle descend on Texas town for world record attempt
When 706 people named Kyle in the same place is not enough.
cbsnews.com
WATCH: Comet lights up the sky over Spain and Portugal
A bright comet fragment lit up the skies in a spectacular display visible over parts of Spain and Portugal late Saturday night, according to the European Space Agency.
abcnews.go.com
Gayle King’s ex-husband, William Bumpus, praises her ‘fantastic’ Sports Illustrated Swimsuit Issue cover: ‘My teenage fantasy’
Bumpus was married to the "CBS Mornings" host from 1982 to 1993 and they share two children.
nypost.com
Patricia Heaton defends Harrison Butker’s controversial graduation speech: ‘He’s not a monster’
"The guy is espousing his own opinions and Catholic doctrine. So what? It’s his opinion. He can have one," Patricia Heaton said about Harrison Butker.
nypost.com
What’s Happening With the Women on Fox News?
Legs are still everywhere. Blond reigns supreme. But small changes are afoot.
slate.com
Botanists are scouring the US-Mexico border to document a forgotten ecosystem split by a giant wall
Roughly 1,000 volunteers armed with the iNaturalist app on their smartphones are documenting as many species as possible along the US-Mexico border in May.
nypost.com
CNN mourns death of political commentator Alice Stewart
Stewart, 58, was found dead Saturday in the Belle View neighborhood of northern Virginia, leaving her CNN colleagues stunned and saddened.
latimes.com
Brittany and Patrick Mahomes make surprise appearance at Kelce Jam, spotted dancing on stage with Travis Kelce
The couple, who seemed to particularly enjoy Lil Wayne's set, was seen dancing together at the musical festival in Kansas City.
nypost.com
Noncitizen voting, already illegal in federal elections, becomes centerpiece of 2024 GOP messaging
In recent months, the specter of people who aren't American citizens and are voting in the United States has become a rallying cry for Republicans.
latimes.com
John Krasinski’s ‘IF’ tops box office with $35M debut as families flock to theaters
“Families came out in force and they loved the film,” said Chris Aronson, who heads Paramount’s domestic distribution.
nypost.com
OG Anunoby returns to Knicks’ starting lineup after injury in massive Game 7 boost vs. Pacers
All hands were back on deck for the Knicks in Game 7 against the Pacers, as wing OG Anunoby returned Sunday after missing the previous four games.
nypost.com
Guy Fieri reveals the key piece of fitness gear that helped him lose 30 pounds
The 5-foot-10 Mayor of Flavortown shares his diet and exercise secrets.
nypost.com
CNN commentator Alice Stewart’s shocking death sparks tributes from both sides of the aisle
“Alice was like a sister to me,” fellow CNN commentator Maria Cardona, a Democratic strategist, said of her Republican colleague.
nypost.com
Josh Hart officially starting for Knicks, playing through pain in Game 7 vs. Pacers
Josh Hart is in clear pain. He is not letting it stop him from suiting up.
nypost.com
Full transcript of "Face the Nation," May 19, 2024
On this "Face the Nation" broadcast, Sen. J.D. Vance and Sen. Gary Peters join Margaret Brennan.
cbsnews.com
Aerodynamic electric hypercar is packing some serious horsepower
A nod to MG's storied history, the EXE181 concept car could become the world's most aerodynamic vehicle, leading the charge in energy-wise automotive design.
foxnews.com
7 things Google just announced that are worth keeping a close eye on
Tech wizard Kurt "CyberGuy" Knutsson runs down the seven most interesting takeaways from Google's I/O 2024 conference. Google's AI figured prominently in the conference.
foxnews.com
Raul Lara's spring debut at Mater Dei leads to passing tournament championship
Raul Lara takes over coaching football at Mater Dei, which wins the Long Beach Tournament of Champions seven-on-seven passing tournament.
latimes.com
NBA Playoffs Injury Report: Knicks Given Life Ahead of Win-Or-Go Home Game 7
Will the 3-and-D forward suit up for a must-win contest against the Indiana Pacers?
newsweek.com
Colorado mom tackles alleged peeping Tom outside department store dressing room
A man was caught with his pants down after allegedly trying to record a mother of five on camera while changing in a fitting room at a Denver-area mall.
foxnews.com
PM Update: Stray shower possible but slowly trending clearer and drier
Patchy fog will be possible the next couple mornings in the D.C. area but won’t stop our warming, brightening trend.
washingtonpost.com
Rubio backs Trump deportation plan, reversing previous statements: 'Invasion of the country'
Sen. Marco Rubio seemingly changed his stance on former President Trump's plan to use the military to deport millions of illegal immigrants from the country.
foxnews.com
Caitlin Clark leveled by Breanna Stewart screen in latest welcome-to-WNBA moment
Caitlin Clark collided with Breanna Stewart and crumbled to the court late in the first quarter, with Courtney Vandersloot dribbling to her left.
nypost.com
Families flee Boy Scouts of America as organization moves toward ‘progressive vision’
"Anytime organizations lose their rootedness, and especially if we chase these progressive visions, we end up waking up in a world that's really hard to recognize and very difficult to navigate, and I think that's what's happening to some of these organizations," Matt Markins said.
nypost.com
Straphanger slashed on Manhattan subway station — with attacker still at large
A 36-year-old woman is in stable condition after being slashed by a blade-wielding madman in a Lower East Side subway station early Sunday morning, the NYPD said.
nypost.com
U.S. to Withdraw All Troops From Niger by September
The announcement spells out the terms of a pullout that the Biden administration unveiled last month and comes after a military junta ousted Niger’s president last July.
nytimes.com
Marco Rubio's Response to Accepting Election Results Met With Alarm
"If it's an unfair election, I think it's going to be contested by either side," the Republican senator said.
newsweek.com
‘Fresh Prince’ star Alfonso Ribeiro says show ‘became a sacrifice’ that ended his acting career
"Fresh Prince of Bel-Air" star Alfonso Ribeiro said his role on the show was a "sacrifice" for his acting career, but doesn't hold resentment.
foxnews.com
Border Patrol agents reveal how easily terrorists and killers get into US despite being screened
"It's a catch-and-release operation, so they bring in busloads of people, they fingerprint them and [run them through a system], and initially, a lot of times, nothing comes back on these people," a Border Patrol agent said of the distastrous situation.
nypost.com
Marco Rubio won’t accept 2024 election results if they’re ‘unfair’
"If it's unfair, we are going to do the same thing Democrats do," Rubio said. "We're going to use lawyers to go to court and point out the fact that states are not following their own election laws."
nypost.com
Seriously injured FDNY firefighters sue NYC for $80M over ‘closure’ policy they claim endangered their lives
Four Bravest nearly lost their lives in a 2023 blaze because of a city policy that closes firehouses for annual physicals -- and the rule continues to pose a threat to residents and responders, new lawsuits charge.
nypost.com
Rep. Stefanik rallies for ‘total victory’ over Hamas during trip to Israel, blasts Biden
New York Rep. Elise Stefanik championed Israel's push for "total victory" against Hamas terrorists and called out antisemitism on campuses in the US as well as President Biden for standing in the way.
nypost.com
Transgender high school runner in Oregon booed after winning girls’ state title
Aayden Gallagher, of McDaniel High School, was booed while being crowned as the Oregon Girls' 6A 200-meter state champion.
nypost.com
Kendall Jenner and Bad Bunny are ‘having fun together’ amid reconciliation rumors: report
“There’s a strong connection between them whenever they’re together and they have the same chemistry that they’ve always had,” a source revealed.
nypost.com
Mavericks center Dereck Lively pays tribute to late mom after playoff clincher
The Mavericks center has been playing with a heavy heart.
nypost.com
Glen Powell believes he and Sydney Sweeney are Hollywood's next dynamic duo: 'It's like Julia and George'
Glen Powell believes he and Sydney Sweeney's partnership mirrors that of other famous Hollywood duos, including Julia Roberts and George Clooney.
foxnews.com
Kentucky inmate reveals what Scottie Scheffler thought of shocking arrest
An inmate in jail with Scottie Scheffler relayed what the world No. 1 golfer thought of his arrest on Friday morning before the PGA Championship's second round.
foxnews.com
Child is among 3 dead after Amtrak train hits a pickup truck in upstate New York
A young boy is among three people dead after an Amtrak train hit a pickup truck in upstate New York
abcnews.go.com
Gates says campus protesters "don't know much of that history" in Middle East
"What has gone on, transpired between Israel and the Palestinians going back decades is very complex, very difficult," former Defense Secretary Robert Gates said on "Face the Nation."
cbsnews.com
Selena Gomez cries over lengthy standing ovation for ‘Emilia Perez’ at Cannes Film Festival
Selena Gomez's new movie got the longest standing ovation so far at the 2024 Cannes Film Festival.
nypost.com
Ohio judge could rule near-ban on all abortions as early as Monday
The 2019 law under consideration by Hamilton County Common Pleas Judge Christian Jenkins bans most abortions once cardiac activity can be detected, which can be as early as six weeks into pregnancy, before many women are aware.
nypost.com
On GPS: China's authoritarian slide
New York Times columnist Nick Kristof, who reported on the Tiananmen Square massacre in 1989, tells Fareed that a freer China will arrive some day but that the US needs to be careful not to inflame Chinese nationalism.
edition.cnn.com
Biden mocked for apparent small showing of supporters in Dem city: 'Nobody cared'
President Biden was criticized on social media for video footage showing an apparent small showing of supporters greeting his motorcade as it drove through Atlanta.
foxnews.com
Fox Host Skeptical of Joe Biden Drug Use Claim: 'We're Not Doctors'
During a speech on Friday, Donald Trump demanded Biden take a drug test ahead of this year's presidential debate.
newsweek.com
Fanatics Reportedly Suing Cardinals' WR Marvin Harrison Jr. Over Strange Contract Dispute
Cardinals rookie wide receiver Marvin Harrison Jr. has found himself in a legal battle with Fanatics.
newsweek.com
Mom Supports 9-Year-Old's Side Hustle, Unprepared for How Life Looks Now
The mom admitted she "marketed too hard" in a quest to help her daughter embark on her dream.
newsweek.com
‘Outer Range’ Season 2 Episode 4 Recap: Once Upon a Time in the West
The great thing about heavily serialized Peak TV storytelling is that when a standalone episode like this one does come along, it really pops.
nypost.com
Bill Maher bored by claims Trump would rule as a dictator: ‘Wake me when he blows up the world’
Comedian Bill Maher said during a recent interview the repeated warnings that presumptive GOP nominee Donald Trump is going to be a dictator bored him.
nypost.com