How is it possible for half a dozen of a photographer's images to be
instantly recognizable around the world, and yet for the photographer himself
to be almost unknown?
Bob Parent was a New York-based photographer whose lucid, defining images
appeared regularly in Life, Downbeat magazine (the "jazz bible"), in books
and on album covers. He became increasingly well known, especially for his
pictures of jazz musicians. He also developed ingenious ways to sidestep the
use of flash in order to avoid disturbing performers. His pictures were shown
in galleries, libraries and colleges.
A brain tumor felled Parent in 1987 after a busy life that had left him
little time for self-promotion. His nephew, Dale Parent, manages the archive
of more than 200,000 images, which continue to appear in magazines,
newspapers, galleries, museums and historical institutions such as the
Smithsonian.
Yet today the archive, which also contains some of the only known
photographs of many civil rights events, is in serious danger.
Most of the thousands of negatives, contact sheets and transparencies are
stored in mildly acidic glassine envelopes which are chemically eating away
at them. Some images are already irretrievably lost. The envelopes need to be
carefully replaced with chemically neutral, state-of-the-art, archival
quality film storage pages, which were not available in Bob Parent's time.
The Archive also needs to be organized so that its contents are identified,
documented and readily available. The artist left his archive in severe
disarray. Countless negatives, transparencies and contact sheets contain
images that have not been specifically identified and are almost randomly
placed in the file. This chaotic jumble of crumbling storage folders conceals
treasures that are being found and identified every day by Dale Parent with
the help of a pair of assistants and a number of helpful jazz musicians and
experts who have volunteered their time. Some recently identified photographs
are of John Coltrane, Malcolm X, Mahalia Jackson and Richard Nixon.
The archive is not profitable, so there are virtually no funds available to
perform the work of rescuing the archive. Dale Parent maintains the archive
with volunteer assistance.
One day, the Bob Parent archive might become profitable, and there will be
no need for outside funding to maintain it. That day is probably a long way
away. Today, Dale Parent is essentially maintaining the archive as a labor of
love, putting in an average of 30 hours a week. The archive requires grants
to survive. Otherwise, in half a century, historians will have suffered an
irretrievable loss.
The Life of Bob Parent
Bob Parent (1923-1987) began his career as a photographer in about 1945.
From then until his death, he spent countless nights in the dimly lit jazz
clubs of Boston and New York, capturing images of all the jazz greats of the
post-war era, from Sidney Bechet to John Coltrane.
The Canadian-born son of a sign maker, Bob Parent was one of the first
photographers to regularly work inside jazz clubs. The clubs for many decades
did not welcome photographers, particularly because of the disruptive flashes
that were necessary in the dark conditions. Parent personally disliked
flashes because he felt they could interfere with a scene in its most
sensitive moments, such as in the middle of a solo. Early on, he created
equipment that cast an ambient, glare-free, spreading light. By the early
1950s, he abandoned the use of flash altogether, having learned to make the
most of available light.
Parent amassed an archive of over 200,000 images including some of the most
definitive and well-known shots of, to name just a few: Billie Holiday, Duke
Ellington, Charles Mingus, Charlie Parker, Malcolm X, Miles Davis, Ella
Fitzgerald, Louis Armstrong, Fidel Castro, Che Guevara and Malcolm X. The
pictures have appeared on major album covers, in jazz textbooks, in major
newspapers worldwide, and in dozens of exhibitions.
Parent's subjects also include sporting events, dance, theater,
artists, politicians, civil rights leaders, New York and Boston city life,
New England farms and countryside, Japan under U.S. occupation, post-war
Havana and the 1964 World's Fair. The Archive also contains hundreds of
original clippings, correspondence, flyers and other pieces of memorabilia
concerning jazz and the civil rights movement.
Besides their countless newspapers and magazine appearances, Parent's
photos have been in many books on music and politics, including Jazz Is by
Nat Hentoff; Celebrating Bird by Gary Giddins, and Malcolm X Speaks. He
created the art and cover designs for several Charlie Parker and Duke
Ellington albums, among others.
Bob Parent's career paralleled a period in American culture that witnessed
some of our greatest achievements, music perhaps first among them, as well as
outsized personalities from all walks of life. Parent was there to record it
all. He constantly attended concerts and visited artists at their homes and
studios. He paid calls on everyone from jazz artists great and small to
Marcel Duchamp in his New York apartment. He attended nearly every civil
rights rally in New York and Washington in the 1960s and '70s. His output is
staggering: there are more than enough photos, for example, to make a book of
his portraits of Ellington, or to make a yearbook - say, "Jazz 1956" - that
would be virtually definitive.
Because Parent never had time to organize his files fully, his Archive
contains thousands of unknown treasures which are still being uncovered day
after day.
In 1995, Dale Parent, Bob's nephew, inherited the Archive, along with the
massive responsibility of both preserving it and making it available to
educators, historians and museums, such as the Smithsonian, that have shown
interest in using the photographs for the public benefit.
Visit the Bob Parent Archive Website.