Charles Brittin and his wife Barbara were will 
known an thought highly of for his work in 
photographing political events and figures in the Sixties and Seventies
http://www.latimes.com/news/obituaries/la-me-charles-brittin-20110129,0,5229273,full.story
Charles Brittin dies at 82; photographer who 
chronicled movements of 1950s and '60s




The relatively unknown artist documented L.A.'s 
beat culture and emerging arts scene, the civil 
rights movement, the Black Panthers and antiwar protests.

'Critical figure'



Charles Brittin examines negatives for some of 
the photographs in a 1999 exhibition. (Al Seib / Los Angeles Times)
<http://www.facebook.com/sharer.php?u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.latimes.com%2Fnews%2Fobituaries%2Fla-me-charles-brittin-20110129%2C0%2C290972.story&src=sp>60Share
 

    * 
<http://www.latimes.com/news/obituaries/la-charles-brittan-obituary-pictures,0,1182567.photogallery>
    Photos: Charles Brittin | 1928 - 2011
    
<http://www.latimes.com/news/obituaries/la-charles-brittan-obituary-pictures,0,1182567.photogallery>Photos:<http://www.latimes.com/news/obituaries/la-charles-brittan-obituary-pictures,0,1182567.photogallery>
 
Charles Brittin | 1928 - 2011
By Valerie J. Nelson, Los Angeles Times
His unblinking yet compassionate photographs in 
the 1950s and '60s documented Los Angeles' beat 
culture and emerging art scene, the civil rights 
movement here and in the Deep South, the Black Panthers and antiwar protests.

Yet Charles Brittin was relatively unknown.

Sidelined by declining health beginning in the 
'70s, he faded from the scene as 
<http://www.latimes.com/topic/arts-culture/genres/documentary-%28genre%29-0100000004593864.topic>documentary
 
photographers were first being recognized as 
artists, said Andrew Perchuk, deputy director of 
the 
<http://www.getty.edu/research/scholars/research_projects/pst/remembering_brittin.html>Getty
 
Research Institute, which holds Brittin's photographic archive.

"He was an absolutely critical figure in Los 
Angeles, because he was at the intersection of so 
many things that were happening," Perchuk said. 
"He also was one of the great civil and political photographers of the age."

Brittin, who had liver and kidney transplants in 
the 1990s, died Sunday of pneumonia at Saint 
John's Health Center in Santa Monica, said his 
lawyer, Salomon Illouz. He was 82.

One of the first subjects to fascinate Brittin as 
a photographer was a sleepy Venice Beach, where 
he took pictures "freighted with a hushed beauty 
and forlorn sweetness," according to the book 
<http://www.artbook.com/9783775728362.html>"Charles 
Brittin: West and South," scheduled to be published in April.

He preserved a pre-gentrified Venice that has all 
but vanished: 
<http://www.laobserved.com/intell/2008/06/the_photographs_of_charles_bri.php>Oil
 
derricks jockey with houses 
<http://www.laobserved.com/archive/2010/12/when_venice_was_covered_i.php,>and 
a waterway and decay creeps into the frame of a 
once-grand colonnade. In "Big Head, Ocean Park" 
(1957), a slightly disturbing and clownish ticket 
booth stands sentry at a funhouse.

A chance meeting in the 1950s with seminal 
beat-scene artist Wallace Berman pulled Brittin 
into a circle of avant-garde artists who hung out 
on La Cienega Boulevard at the Ferus Gallery, the 
influential contemporary art gallery.

Brittin's Venice Beach shack became the group's 
second home, and he turned into the unofficial 
house photographer of a crowd that included 
actors 
<http://www.latimes.com/topic/entertainment/dean-stockwell-PECLB003783.topic>Dean
 
Stockwell and 
<http://www.latimes.com/topic/entertainment/dennis-hopper-PECLB002432.topic>Dennis
 
Hopper, artist John Altoon, curator Walter Hopps and poet David Meltzer.

"He was probably the beat generation 
photographer," said 
<http://www.craigkrullgallery.com/>Craig Krull, a 
Santa Monica gallery owner who exhibited Brittin's work in 1999.

"A lot of the people Charles took pictures of 
ended up becoming legendary figures," Krull said. 
"His photographs are more than just documents of 
artists and events. They are very incisive and powerful and poetic and tough."

They also have a "romantic resonance," because 
many of the elements in them are "gone forever," 
Brittin said in the catalog for the 1999 show.

As the beat movement gave way to civil unrest in 
the 1960s, Brittin took his camera to the front 
lines, and his often tightly focused images were 
filled with raw emotion. One from a 1965 protest 
at the Federal Building in Los Angeles shows no 
faces, only body parts ­ the splayed legs of a 
black female protester being gripped by a white officer.

His political activism had its roots in his 
childhood in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, where Charles 
William Brittin was born May 2, 1928.

He was the youngest of three children of a father 
who quit teaching and eventually ran a grocery 
store. "Keenly aware" that his family had "lost 
status," he came to identify with the oppressed, 
Brittin recalled in the catalog.

At 15, he moved to the 
<http://www.latimes.com/topic/us/virginia/fairfax-county/fairfax-%28fairfax-virginia%29-PLGEO100101138020000.topic>Fairfax
 
district in Los Angeles with his mother after his 
father died. The liberal student body at Fairfax 
High School influenced his political views, and 
he was soon a Marxist "on my way to changing the 
world," Brittin 
<http://articles.latimes.com/1999/jan/24/entertainment/ca-1019>told 
The Times in 1999.

He moved again, to Pomona, and after graduating 
from high school spent several years studying at 
<http://www.latimes.com/topic/education/colleges-universities/university-of-california-los-angeles-OREDU0000192268.topic>UCLA.

In the 1950s, he married and divorced twice ­ and bought his first camera.

His third wife, Barbara, whom he married in 1961, 
shared his commitment to activism.

While donating money to the Congress of Racial 
Equality, the couple attended a meeting where the 
group posed a question: "Who is prepared to be arrested this week?"

"In six months, Barbara was teaching techniques 
of nonviolent resistance, and I was taking 
political photographs," Brittin said in The Times in 1999.

He made dramatic black-and-white prints of 
protests in Southern California and in 
Mississippi and Louisiana, where he and his wife 
spent three months in 1965. By the end of the 
'60s, Brittin was chronicling the Black Panther movement.

"He had an absolutely phenomenal sense of 
composition," Perchuk said. "Even when he was in 
the midst of action at a demonstration, he found 
a perfect way to frame it that conveyed very precisely what was going on."

 From 1963 to 1970, Brittin worked as the 
official photographer in the Los Angeles studio 
of noted midcentury designers Charles and Ray Eames.

Throughout his career, he also photographed still 
lifes composed of unlike objects such as a 
woman's high-heeled feet with an iron-link chain or doll heads.

Brittin's photographs will be featured in 
<http://www.getty.edu/pacificstandardtime/>"Pacific 
Standard Time," an exhibit of collected works 
scheduled to open Oct. 1 at the Getty Center.

When a slowly progressing condition caused his 
health to deteriorate, he put his cameras away 
until the 1990s, when his health improved after his transplants.

With Barbara, he lived for decades in Santa 
Monica Canyon. She died at 74 in 2003. He has no immediate survivors.

Before the civil rights movement, he did not have 
"the confidence to exploit the opportunities that 
came my way," Brittin said in the 1999 catalog. 
"Then, something more important than my personal 
comfort was at stake, so I was able to be 
aggressive and do things that seemed unnatural to me."

<mailto:valerie.nel...@latimes.com>valerie.nel...@latimes.com






John Johnson
Change-Links Progressive Newspaper
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