This Is Not a Fashion Photograph. Ming Smith
The Kamoinge Workshop, a group of Black photographers formed in New York in 1963 “to address the underrepresentation of African Americans in their field,” is
Ming Smith, “Instant Model”, Brooklyn, 1976 ("Coney Island” series). From “Ming Smith: An Aperture Monograph” (Aperture/Documentary Arts 2020). © Ming Smith, courtesy the artist and Aperture.
When Ming Smith joined the Workshop in 1973, at Draper’s invitation, she became the first and, for many years, the only woman in the group; six years later, when the Museum of Modern Art bought two works, she became the first Black woman in their photography collection. Her work stands out at the Whitney and is the subject of an excellent monograph, just out from Aperture. Largely self-taught, Smith acknowledges influences as varied as Diane Arbus, Romare Bearden, Lisette Model, Matisse, Brassaï, and DeCarava, but she has an instinctive, improvisational approach to photography that only deepened when she became what critic Greg Tate calls “a creative compatriot and fellow traveler” with jazz musicians. (She married one–saxophonist David Murray– in 1979, and many of her later photographs were made on the road with his band.) For her, “photography is mystical, spiritual, magical,” and her black-and-white work can be vividly impressionistic and process-driven, involving painting, tinting, collage, double-exposure, and exhilarating passages of blur. That said, the image above, one of a series made at Coney Island, is uncharacteristically straightforward. Smith, who modeled for several years before joining Kamoinge, titled it “Instant Model” in recognition of her subject’s flair, modesty, and quiet, faintly amused assurance at being picked out from the crowd.
Vince Aletti is a photography critic and curator. He has been living and working in New York since 1967. A contributor to “Aperture”, “Artforum”, “Apartamento” and “Photograph”, he co-wrote “Avedon Fashion 1944-2000”, published by Harry N. Abrams in 2009, and is the author of “Issues: A History of Photography in Fashion Magazines”, published by Phaidon in 2019.