
Ming Smith
Casablanca I, Harlem, New York, (Invisible Man Series), 1988
gelatin silver print
8 x 10 in (20.3 x 25.4 cm)
Copyright Ming Smith
Ming Smith (b. 1947, Detroit, Michigan) captures everyday life through a transcendent and ethereal lens. Her work has a collaborative nature, often featuring legends of the art, music, and literary...
Ming Smith (b. 1947, Detroit, Michigan) captures everyday life through a transcendent and ethereal lens. Her work has a collaborative nature, often featuring legends of the art, music, and literary world of Harlem and beyond. Smith documents everyday moments of Black life, whether it be legends such as Grace Jones and James Baldwin or an anonymous man on the street— she creates a dreamlike poignancy for every subject. Smith creates a deliberate blurriness with experimental post-production techniques such as double-exposed prints, which amplify the sacredness of ordinary Black life in her images. Additionally, Smith incorporates painting and collage in her works. Her mother was a painter, and this process of abstraction flows naturally as an extension of her imaginative eye.
'Casablanca I' is a part of Ming’s ‘Invisible Man’ series which deals with the role of light, shadow, and darkness in Black culture. Smith creates a deliberate blurriness with experimental post-production techniques such as double-exposed prints, which amplify the sacredness of Black life while creating dream-like and vibrational images.
'Casablanca I' is a part of Ming’s ‘Invisible Man’ series which deals with the role of light, shadow, and darkness in Black culture. Smith creates a deliberate blurriness with experimental post-production techniques such as double-exposed prints, which amplify the sacredness of Black life while creating dream-like and vibrational images.