Pirkle Jones, Documentary Photographer, Dies at 95

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/03/23/arts/23jones.html

By WILLIAM GRIMES
Published: March 23, 2009

Pirkle Jones, whose images of migrant farm workers, threatened 
California towns and valleys and the Black Panthers at the peak of 
their power made him one of the most admired photographers of his 
generation, died on March 15 in San Rafael, Calif. He was 95 and 
lived in Mill Valley, Calif.

The death was confirmed by Jennifer McFarland, the director of the 
Pirkle Jones Foundation.

Mr. Jones, a disciple of Ansel Adams, brought a sensitivity to visual 
texture and a sense of historic urgency to subjects as varied as the 
California landscape, the San Francisco skyline and a countercultural 
houseboat community in Sausalito. Perhaps his most remarkable 
photographs, taken in the tumultuous year 1968, captured the leaders 
of the Black Panther Party as they would have liked to be seen: bold 
revolutionaries poised to overturn the white power structure.

"He was a man of huge social conscience, and he brought that to the 
work," said Karen Sinsheimer, the curator of photography at the Santa 
Barbara Museum of Art, which gave Mr. Jones his first retrospective 
exhibition in 2001. "But he also made absolutely beautiful prints, 
just perfect, with crisp detail and a vast tonal range in black and white."

Adams, his mentor, who died in 1984, once paid him a high compliment. 
"His photography is not flamboyant, does not depend upon the 
superficial excitements," Adams said. "His pictures will live with 
you, and with the world, as long as there are people to observe and 
appreciate."

Mr. Jones was born in Shreveport, La., and bought his first camera, a 
Kodak Brownie, when he was 17. He began exhibiting his work at camera 
clubs in the 1930s.

In 1941, when he was employed at a shoe factory in Lima, Ohio, he 
enlisted in the Army and served in the Pacific theater. He passed 
through San Francisco on the way out and returned after the war to 
enroll in the new photography department at the California School of 
Fine Arts, headed by Adams.

 From 1947 to 1953 he worked as an assistant and printmaker to Adams, 
who brought him into an artistic circle that included Edward Weston, 
Dorothea Lange and Minor White. He also met and married Ruth-Marion 
Baruch, a fellow photography student and poet, who became a lifelong 
collaborator. She died in 1997.

In 1956 Ms. Lange asked Mr. Jones to help her document the Berryessa 
Valley, soon to disappear underwater with the completion of the 
Monticello Dam. Their photo essay, "The Death of a Valley," recorded 
the last year of life in the valley's towns and farms and, published 
as a single issue of Aperture in 1960, became a classic of 
photojournalism. Mr. Jones later called the collaboration "one of the 
most meaningful photographic experiences of my professional life."

He went on to collaborate with Adams on a photo essay on the building 
of the Paul Masson Mountain Winery. In 1961 he and his wife spent 
time in Walnut Grove, Calif., to create the portrait of a dying town.

"I've always thought of my career as a bridge between the classic 
photography of Ansel Adams and the documentary work of Dorothea 
Lange," he told Art & Antiques last year.

In 1968 Ms. Baruch became a friend of Kathleen Cleaver, the wife of 
the Black Panther leader Eldridge Cleaver, through their work with 
the Peace and Freedom Party. From July to October 1968, Mr. Jones and 
Ms. Baruch photographed Black Panthers in the Bay Area with the 
stated goal of promoting a better understanding of the party.

The moment was fraught. Huey P. Newton, the party's minister of 
defense, was on trial on a charge of murder in the death of a police 
officer, and relations between the Panthers and the police threatened 
to become open warfare. (Newton was convicted of manslaughter.) Mr. 
Jones's photographs of three Panthers standing on courthouse steps 
holding a "Free Huey" banner and of male and female Panthers posing 
with guns became emblematic images of the era.

An exhibition of the Panther photographs at the De Young Museum in 
San Francisco drew more than 100,000 visitors. The photographs were 
published in book form as "Black Panthers," with an introduction by 
Ms. Cleaver.

Mr. Jones turned to more peaceful subject matter. For years, 
beginning in the early 1970s, he photographed the drop-outs of Gate 
5, an alternative houseboat community in Sausalito that he nearly 
joined. In the final decades of his life, he concentrated on the 
landscape around his glass-and-redwood house in Mill Valley.

It was not because of failure of nerve. Only once, he told Art & 
Antiques, had he ever stepped back from taking a picture.

"In the '70s, I saw a fortuneteller at a flea market," he recalled. 
"She said that she'd put a curse on me for the rest of my life if I 
took her picture. So I didn't."

.


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