Enrico Natali’s Detroit 1968 was first published in 1972 under the title New American People, a photography series of everyday people at work and at home in urban America, having been exhibited at the Art Institute of Chicago in 1969 as New American Life. In his introduction to the 1972 edition, Hugh Edwards, former Curator of Photography at that Chicago institute:
“All the photographs in the present collection were taken in 1967–1970 in Detroit, which in no way restricts their presentation as a brief of how Americans look and live today. These scenes and incidents might have occurred anywhere in the United States in this time when regional characteristics are disappearing … this is a view of a situation and condition, not a localization.”
Here we look at Natali’s pictures of groups – the city’s tribes, determined by fashion, rank and race – which from the prom goers to the upper-class whites and the business chiefs speak of belonging and hint at exclusion in a once prosperous city.
Pictures via ArtBlart and Joseph Bellows.
“My intent is to make visible the beauty of that which we take for granted, that which is so common that it all but disappears. For in the experience of the beautiful, the inherent nature of reality—that every moment is complete in and of itself, independent of subject matter, time, or place—is revealed. From this perspective, the door to paradise is as easily accessed through McDonald’s as through the Museum of Modern Art.
“In my view art, philosophy, religion, and science are all pointing in the same direction, to Truth, to the Unknown. Their value lies solely in how effective they are in that pursuit.”
– Enrico Natali, via Leaping Clear
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