Baldwin Lee
Overview
In 1983, Baldwin Lee (b. 1951) left his home in Knoxville, Tennessee, with his 4 × 5 view camera and set out on the first of a series of road trips to photograph the American South. The subject of his pictures were Black Americans: at home, at work, and at play, in the street, and among nature. This project would consume Lee—a first-generation Chinese American—for the remainder of that decade, and it would forever transform his perception of his country, its people, and himself. The resulting archive from this seven-year period contains nearly ten thousand black-and-white negatives. The monograph, Baldwin Lee, presents a selection of eighty-eight images edited by the photographer Barney Kulok, accompanied by an interview with Lee by the curator Jessica Bell Brown and an essay by the writer Casey Gerald. Arriving almost four decades after Lee began his journey, the monograph reveals the artist’s unique commitment to picturing life in America and, in turn, one of the most piercing and poignant bodies of work of its time.
Works
Exhibitions
Publications
News
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WSJ ‘Baldwin Lee’ Review: A Photographer’s Empathetic Eye
Wall Street Journal January 6, 2025In 2022, Hunter’s Point Press, a small publisher of books of art, poetry, art history and architecture, published “Baldwin Lee,” a monograph of work the...Read more -
Baldwin Lee has been shortlisted for the 2023 Arles Book Awards
Les Recontres de le Photographie June 27, 2023Created to support the extraordinary development of photographic publishing and to contribute to its wider dissemination, the Book Awards of Les Rencontres d'Arles reward three...Read more -
Lessons From Black and Chinese Relations in the Deep South
June 13, 2022Lessons From Black and Chinese Relations in the Deep South Baldwin Lee, ‘Mississippi Triangle,’ and the limits of upward mobility By Imani Perry Mississippi Triangle...Read more
