Impromptu hoedown in a horse barn.

$400.00

11x14 Lifetime archival ink jet print. Printed under the supervision of Wayne F. Miller, 2008.

Impromptu hoedown on the third floor of a horse barn. Chicago, IL. 1948.

Wayne F. Miller’s photographs of “Black Life'' chronicle the south side of Chicago as thousands of African Americans, almost exclusively from the South, settled in the city during the Great Migration of the World War II years. Funded by two Guggenheim grants, and taken over three years beginning in 1946, these photographs capture the major industries and activities of the time, in addition to intimate moments in the daily lives of ordinary people. Many of these photographs were published in the book Chicago’s South Side.

Appears in Wayne F. Miller Photographs 1942-1958 published by powerHouse Books, 2008.

Add To Cart

11x14 Lifetime archival ink jet print. Printed under the supervision of Wayne F. Miller, 2008.

Impromptu hoedown on the third floor of a horse barn. Chicago, IL. 1948.

Wayne F. Miller’s photographs of “Black Life'' chronicle the south side of Chicago as thousands of African Americans, almost exclusively from the South, settled in the city during the Great Migration of the World War II years. Funded by two Guggenheim grants, and taken over three years beginning in 1946, these photographs capture the major industries and activities of the time, in addition to intimate moments in the daily lives of ordinary people. Many of these photographs were published in the book Chicago’s South Side.

Appears in Wayne F. Miller Photographs 1942-1958 published by powerHouse Books, 2008.

11x14 Lifetime archival ink jet print. Printed under the supervision of Wayne F. Miller, 2008.

Impromptu hoedown on the third floor of a horse barn. Chicago, IL. 1948.

Wayne F. Miller’s photographs of “Black Life'' chronicle the south side of Chicago as thousands of African Americans, almost exclusively from the South, settled in the city during the Great Migration of the World War II years. Funded by two Guggenheim grants, and taken over three years beginning in 1946, these photographs capture the major industries and activities of the time, in addition to intimate moments in the daily lives of ordinary people. Many of these photographs were published in the book Chicago’s South Side.

Appears in Wayne F. Miller Photographs 1942-1958 published by powerHouse Books, 2008.