Photograph signed. Selma to Montgomery

James KARALES

Item#: 87770 We're sorry, this item has been sold

Photograph signed. Selma to Montgomery

“A PICTORIAL ANTHEM OF THE CIVIL RIGHTS MOVEMENT”: LARGE VINTAGE GELATIN SILVER PRINT OF KARALES’ ICONIC PHOTOGRAPH OF THE 1965 SELMA-TO-MONTGOMERY CIVIL RIGHTS MARCH, SIGNED AND DATED 1965 BY HIM, HANDSOMELY MATTED AND FRAMED

KARALES, James. Photograph signed. Selma-to-Montgomery Civil Rights March. No place: 1965. Vintage gelatin silver print (11 by 16 inches), matted and framed (total 17-3/4 by 23 inches).

Large vintage gelatin silver print of the 1965 Selma-to-Montgomery Civil Rights March, signed and dated the same year in the lower corner of the image by famed photographer James Karales, a fine print handsomely matted and framed.

This iconic vintage gelatin silver print of the Selma-to-Montgomery Civil Rights March by highly regarded photojournalist James Karales—signed at the lower corner and dated 1965 by him—powerfully evokes the hopes of a generation in his striking image of “determined marchers outlined against a lowering sky.” Karales’ photograph quickly “became a pictorial anthem of the civil rights movement… While many photojournalists trained their cameras on the brutally confrontational, Karales often took quietly sober pictures that, the critic Vince Aletti noted in The Village Voice, had ‘the weight of history and the grace of art.’ To study Karales’s iconic picture of the March in Alabama from Selma to Montgomery is to appreciate the power and poetry that he packed into a seemingly casual picture. Leading the march, and setting its tone, are two young men and a young woman, all in shirts and dark pants and striding in step. There is a scattering of Stars and Stripes. But as if hinting of what is to come, the sky is a huge mass of dark clouds.” Like his mentor, W. Eugene Smith, “Karales underscored the human dimension in even his most harrowing pictures. And like Smith, he immersed himself in the subjects of his photo essays” (New York Times). Karales was Smith’s assistant before becoming a staff photographer for Look Magazine, where this photograph was featured in the award-winning photo essay. His photographs have been exhibited at New York’s Museum of Modern Art and the prestigious Howard Greenberg Gallery. Gallery label on frame verso.

A fine signed and framed print.

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