Tumgik
#jillfreedman
thatbendintheriver · 2 years
Text
“I like to work two ways, either on a specific idea or just wandering around, getting lost, snapping.  Eventually all the wanderings go together, and then I find out what I’ve been doing.” Jill Freedman, Photographer
0 notes
lumilumsiti · 3 years
Text
my time with jill
The end of my adolescence was spent in solitude. It was not a voluntary way of being, at least not in the beginning. But eventually I began to identify with it and several self-imposed solitary practices were born out of an inability to find peace within the stillness. One of which was my habit of visiting estate sales that evolved into something of a ritual in its entirety: each weekend, I would prepare to drive to a new location, enter a home, and begin a new acquaintanceship. The moment I walked into these homes a profound heaviness fell upon me like a thick blanket, immobilizing me until I could begin to absorb that which I was experiencing. 
  Gaining access to what was once one’s home, filled with the remnants of their lives, were some of the most intimate moments I had ever experienced at that point in my life. I felt I had become an accidental voyeur, walking into bedrooms and discovering elegantly strewn slippers next to the bed and perfectly crooked toothbrushes still poking out of their holders in the bathroom. Kitchen table conversations would echo in my mind with voices I had never heard before as I observed the magnetized kitsch on the fridge and chipped paint on the chairs. Sometimes, an electrifying energy would snake up my spine and burn through my muscles. This was beyond superstition. It was especially powerful on the occasions that I bumped into decaying family photographs with their eternally forced smiles and coiffed hairdos and unblinking eyes gazing back at me as if to say what are you doing here? 
 Roland Barthes wrote about the punctum of a photograph: a particular detail, different for every onlooker, that pierces or punctures or wounds them in an inexplicable way. It’s never quite the same for any two viewers; it is an interpretation from one’s own visceral experience. I wonder if he would have been overcome with the same grief that washed over me every time I placed these images back into their closets and parted ways with the lives I had intersected with for just a moment until they prepared for the next. 
I was well seasoned with this practice when I got a phone call from an old teacher asking if I’d be interested in helping a local family manage the archives of their cousin, a prolific New York City street photographer who had recently passed away, leaving behind her life’s work with no immediate family to inherit them. The first step was to help clear her apartment on Manhattan Avenue in Harlem. I felt it in my spine the instant I walked inside. There it was again. I was thunderstruck; the apartment was drenched in hazy sunlight, opening its eyes as if from an accidental nap, orienting itself to accommodate the entry of a new life force. Dusty jazz records sat stacked on top of each other with handwritten letters from friends, planning for the next show to attend. A colony of dust particles teased me every time I excavated battered notebooks from between books on the shelf and opened their pages to find fragments of affirmations scrawled across yellowing pages: the key is persistence; I have to keep moving.
 I transported boxes of vintage prints back to the photographer’s cousin’s home in New Jersey where I would spend the next year working in the basement. I would always greet her when I entered her archives, promising to take great care of her work and apologizing if I crossed too many boundaries with my nosiness. Going box by box, I felt a jolt of electricity every time I came across a print signed with the photographer’s name Jill Freedman taking up the entire backside. 
I time traveled with Jill. She took me to the protests against the Vietnam War in 1973 and showed me the flipside too: the intense faraway stare of an unsmiling veteran at the Home With Honor parade, donning an “I was in Vietnam and I’m proud of it” hat. A proud veteran, she writes on the back, yeah, just check the happy eyes. With every backside annotation, she lets me in on her thoughts with a dry wit that made me laugh aloud as if she were pulling me aside, pointing with her cigarette between her fingers and saying, hey, get a load of this. She takes me to the six week Poor People’s Campaign in Washington D.C and shows me the man who fell asleep on the bus ride there from Newark. When we arrive to the makeshift city, I’m introduced to the dancing couple, the beaming grandfather, the hand painted messages across walls that demand economic justice and civil rights. Most of all, though, I loved wandering New York City with Jill and watching the theater of the streets like a flaneur entranced by the present moment. All she really wanted was to capture real life, whatever that is. The fleeting became eternal in her images, letting me visit over and over again. I’d like to believe we became good friends after all our time together, melting the eerie solitude away in the archives. 
Several months later the first gallery show of a Jill retrospective opened up on a warm October night glistening with a light drizzle. A cacophony of intellectual meanderings filled the tight space, bouncing off of pristine walls and well-dressed attendees who explain to one another with manicured gestures that in fact, the iconological symbolism in Freedman’s work is completely different from Arbus, it’s actually a commentary on —. Their analyses blended together in the background and the guests became muted in my peripheral vision when I locked eyes with a print I hadn’t visited in a long time. It was a wink across the room from Jill herself. The negative belonged to her first roll of film, bought on a whim and placed into a borrowed camera the fateful day that she woke up, snapped a few shots, and decided that was that. The elongated shadows of people standing in line stretched across the frame, washed over by a bright winter sun, living in their transitory moment for eternity. Hey, just stop for a second and look, it’s saying to me. I’m not sure how long I stood there until I shook myself out of the stillness and decided to go outside for a cigarette lit in Jill’s honor. Light droplets of rain fell on my jacket and the evening became languid when a familiar chill traversed up my spine and burned my muscles. I was in good company.  
2 notes · View notes
santedorazio · 4 years
Photo
Tumblr media
#JillFreedman #nyc Who we are, who are we... 🇺🇸 https://www.instagram.com/p/CEb6AiMlAqk/?igshid=oxbncqzvrzrm
1 note · View note
ctporter · 5 years
Photo
Tumblr media
Mo 7/15/2019: Mail art, back of the envelope. #collage #collageart #jillfreedman #vintageadvertising #joebradley #canoe #newspaper #scraps #ryb #salome #mailart #papercollage #artonpaper #artonenvelope #gluepaperscissors #cutandpaste #analogcollage https://www.instagram.com/p/Bz9IwE-BgrL/?igshid=esevkkefpyss
1 note · View note
artbookdap · 6 years
Photo
Tumblr media
This week Martin Luther King and Ralph Abernathy's 1968 Poor People's Campaign was taken back up by Pastor William Barber of Greenleaf Christian Church in Goldsboro, North Carolina, and Liz Theoharis, a minister and anti-poverty campaigner from New York. People began by gathering outside the U.S. Capitol to protest economic inequality and racial injustice. After 40 days of these protests — in D.C., North Carolina, Missouri, and California — activists from around the country will converge on Washington for a mass demonstration on 23 June. These images are reproduced from ‘Jill Freedman: Resurrection City, 1968’ – documenting the culmination of the 1968 Poor People’s Campaign in Washington DC, during which 3000 people set up camp for 6 weeks in a makeshift town that was dubbed Resurrection City, and participated in daily protests. Freedman lived in the encampment for its entire 6 weeks, photographing the residents, their daily lives, their protests and their eventual eviction. Published by @damiani @poorpeoplescampaign @jillfreedmanphoto #poorpeoplescampaign @liztheoharis #revwilliambarber #jillfreedman #resurrectioncity
1 note · View note
intheartworld · 5 years
Photo
Tumblr media
#JillFreedman #kismithgallery #intheArtworld #photography #NewYork (at Ki Smith Gallery) https://www.instagram.com/p/B5y9rnAlQY8/?igshid=1hehgvmtwj93m
0 notes
eddieethos · 6 years
Video
vimeo
rad.
0 notes
treehouse-shop · 6 years
Photo
Tumblr media
If you’re in need for some summer reading we are stocked with some amazing books including this one by Jill Freedman 📸🤙🏽🌿 #filmisnotdead #treehousehawaii #jillfreedman (at Honolulu, Hawaii)
0 notes
buffalogirlsdesign · 6 years
Photo
Tumblr media
Happy Monday to all! Photo by Jill Freedman #jillfreedman #streetphotography #photography #womenphotographers #womenartists #art #happymonday #monday
0 notes
untitledxuntitled · 8 years
Video
vimeo
'Reely and Truly' - a short film on photography (Director's Cut)
0 notes
cheryldunn · 5 years
Photo
Tumblr media Tumblr media
#cameraon @jillFreedman show #sohophoto gallery . #ripJill
0 notes
lilyyiphotography · 5 years
Text
Jill Freedman
Jill Freedman is a New York based photographer. She focuses mostly on street photography and have done many different stories that show different views about New York city streets.
Freedman, Jill.”New York City”, jillfreedman, http://www.jillfreedman.com/new-york-city.
New York City:
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Her photographs are are all done in black and white. This way of editing really allows the image to not be distracted by the colours and we are really able to focus on the emotion and the action of the images she captures. These images that i picked out of her New York City collection are my favorites. although all her images captures a sense of emotion I enjoyed these because the images or the feel she captured in these gave me a sense of warmth to it. The smiles that the people have are so sincere and beautiful that when you look at the images it brings a sense of smile onto your own face.
Circus Days:
Freedman, Jill.”Circus Days”, jillfreedman, http://www.jillfreedman.com/circus-days/ueel4tq52e50uggqajm3mb4w0tk5y2.
This story she focused on photographs taken during a circus. Once again her images are in black and white, but this time this story compared to New York City’s gave me more of an uncomfortable feeling, with the masks in contrast with normal faces and the animals shown all tired and caged. This really shows the circus in a way that normal advertising dose not. instead of showing all the exciting shows, the exciting people thats part of the circus she shows the behind the stage processes, the actors preparing, the animals, all of the things that we would never have known.
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
These images really stood out to me above the others. the photographs with the elephants gave a sad emotion when i see them, the pictured of the small rooms theyre put in, the chains, the caged lions. all these photographs showed a sense of discomfort, which to me was something I never really thought to express through photography. to me photography has always been about showing happiness or warmth or even the struggles of difficult times, but these they make me feel more uncomfortable the longer i stare at them. same with the circus acts, the black and white and their masks and makeup really shows a haunting feel like horror films.
0 notes
santedorazio · 5 years
Photo
Tumblr media
#JillFreedman #RIP #street #photographer #NYC #great https://www.instagram.com/p/B3dZ0Ntl-Dy/?igshid=n7pckdq8ki6f
2 notes · View notes
lisafran-twd · 4 years
Photo
Tumblr media
#Repost @dixon_distraction • • • • • • #normanreedus #daryldixon #teamdaryl #bigbaldhead @bigbaldhead #jillfreedman #twdfamily #thewalkingdead #twd https://www.instagram.com/p/CLMxU4WD_iI/?igshid=147jb1mz3pccx
0 notes
artbookdap · 5 years
Photo
Tumblr media
Honoring Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. with 'Jill Freedman: Resurrection City, 1968' “Now we are tired of being on the bottom. We are tired of being exploited. We are tired of not being able to get adequate jobs. We are tired of not getting promotions after we get those jobs. And as a result of our being tired, we are going to Washington, D.C., the seat of government, and engage in direct action for days and days, weeks and weeks, and months and months if necessary, in order to say to this nation that you must provide us with jobs or income.” —Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., from Jill Freedman: Resurrection City, 1968 @damiani_books #martinlutherking #resurrectioncity #jillfreedman #civilrights https://www.instagram.com/p/B7eEWYtppOA/?igshid=1j2w1kpsj74ka
0 notes
intheartworld · 5 years
Photo
Tumblr media
#JillFreedman #kismithgallery #intheArtworld #NewYork (at Ki Smith Gallery) https://www.instagram.com/p/B5y5cvZFQtF/?igshid=q9p34gmdj26f
0 notes