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'''Prentice Herman Polk''' (born [[1898]] in [[Bessemer]] – died [[December 29]], [[1984]]) was the official photographer for [[Tuskegee University]] from [[1939]] until his death.
'''Prentice Herman Polk''' (born [[1898]] in [[Bessemer]] – died [[December 29]], [[1984]]) was the official photographer for [[Tuskegee University]] from [[1939]] until his death.


Polk, son of a mine worker, enrolled at what was then the Tuskegee Normal and Industrial Institute in [[1916]] with an ambition to study art, unaware that founder [[Booker T. Washington]] had made no provision for non-"practical" instruction at the school. He rejected a suggestion to take courses in house painting. In his second year, Polk became the third student to enroll in the institute's newly-created photography program under the leadership of [[Cornelius Battey]].
Herman Polk was the youngest of four children born to miner Jacob Prentice Polk and his wife Christine Romelia Ward, a seamstress. Jacob died when Herman was 11, just as he entered the [[Hard School]] to begin his formal education. In [[1911]] Polk went to the [[Tuggle Insitute]] in [[Birmingham]] as a boarding student. He left school two years later to work alongside his mother at [[William Freeman]]'s tailoring shop.


Polk left Tuskegee to work in a shipyard in Mobile County, but continued to study photography by taking correspondence courses which encouraged him to study how light is used to build up form in painted masterpieces. After completing the course he moved to Chicago, Illinois to join his mother and sisters there. He worked as a painter for the Pullman Palace Car Company during the day and for the telephone company in the evenings, but still found time to apprentice himself to portrait photographer Fred A. Jensen.
In [[1916]] Polk added his father's middle name to his own and enrolled in evening classes at what was then the Tuskegee Normal and Industrial Institute. His ambition was to to study art, but he soon learned that founder [[Booker T. Washington]] had made no provision for non-"practical" instruction at the institute. He rejected a suggestion to take courses in house painting, and, in his second year became the third student to enroll in the institute's newly-created photography program, led by [[Cornelius Battey]]. He was also a leader in the [[Tuskegee Institute Band|school band]].


Polk married [[Margaret Polk|Margaret Blanche Thompson]] of Brunswick, Georgia in January [[1926]]. Over the course of the next year he began going door to door seeking to find his own portrait clients. Not having much success and dreading the onset of another midwestern winter he moved with his wife and newborn son back to [[Tuskegee]] where he joined the faculty and opened his own photography studio. At the institute he assisted photographer [[Leonard Hyman]], who had succeeded Battey as head of the division.
Polk left Tuskegee in [[1920]] to work in a shipyard in Mobile County, but continued to study photography by taking correspondence courses which encouraged him to study how light is used to build up form in painted masterpieces. After completing the course he moved to Chicago, Illinois to join his mother and sisters there. He worked as a painter for the Pullman Palace Car Company during the day and for the telephone company in the evenings, but still found time to apprentice himself to white portrait photographer Fred A. Jensen.


In [[1932]] Polk was promoted to succeed Hyman as head instructor and in [[1939]] he was named official campus photographer. Over the course of his career he made portraits of nearly all the faculty members and administrators and their families as well as the innumerable visitors to the campus, both humble and esteemed. He went out of his way to capture photographs of laborers and field hands for his "Old Characters" series even as he posed wealthy ladies in furs and jewels for glamorous portraits in his studio. He photographed Tuskegee scientist [[George Washington Carver]] over 500 times and also photographed the [[Tuskegee Airmen]] that trained near the institute for flying missions in [[World War II]]. His [[1932]] image, entitled "The Boss", shows an authoritative female farm worker whom he discovered setting up a produce stand near campus. She stands proudly in her everyday clothes, defying the viewer to dismiss her headscarf and apron as comical or picturesque, like the commercial portraits of "black mammies". The breadth and quality of Polk's work led some to label him a "Southern Van Der Zee" (for the Harlem renaissance documentarian James Van Der Zee.)
Polk married [[Margaret Polk|Margaret Blanche Thompson]] of Brunswick, Georgia in January [[1926]]. Over the course of the next year he began going door to door seeking to find his own portrait clients. Not having much success and dreading the onset of another midwestern winter he moved with his wife and newborn son, Prentice, back to [[Tuskegee]] where opened his own "Polk's Studio". Joining the faculty in [[1927]], he assisted [[Leonard Hyman]], who had succeeded Battey as head of the photography division.


Polk remained a fixture on Tuskegee's campus for the rest of his life. During the time that collector [[Paul R. Jones]] was in Tuskegee to assist president [[Benjamin Payton]] with development efforts, he befriended the photographer. Jones purchased more than a hundred of Polk's photographs and instigated the publication of a monograph by Atlanta's Nexus Contemporary Art Center. The renewed attention on Polk's photographs before and after his death in [[1984]] led to several exhibitions. After Jones donated a large portion of his massive art collection to the University of Delaware in [[2001]], Polk's work became the focus of doctoral studies.
In [[1933]] Polk was promoted to succeed Hyman as head instructor. He resigned in [[1938]] to open a studio in Atlanta, Georgia. He won three awards at the Southeastern Photographer's Convention held there that year. He returned to Tuskegee in [[1939]] to accept the position of official campus photographer. During his tenure on the faculty, Polk mentored countless aspiring photographers, including [[Charles Lang]], [[Chris McNair]], [[Frank Godden]], [[Albert Carter]], and [[Chester Higgins, Jr]].


In [[2010]] an exhibition of Polk's work curated by [[Amalia Amaki]] was shown at the [[Birmingham Museum of Art]].
Over the course of his career he made portraits of nearly all the faculty members and administrators and their families as well as the innumerable visitors to the campus, both humble and esteemed. He went out of his way to capture photographs of laborers and field hands for his "Old Characters" series even as he posed wealthy ladies in furs and jewels for glamorous portraits in his studio. He photographed Tuskegee scientist [[George Washington Carver]] over 500 times and also photographed the [[Tuskegee Airmen]] that trained near the institute for flying missions in [[World War II]]. His [[1932]] image, entitled "The Boss", shows an authoritative female farm worker whom he discovered setting up a produce stand near campus. She stands proudly in her everyday clothes, defying the viewer to dismiss her headscarf and apron as comical or picturesque, like the commercial portraits of "black mammies". The breadth and quality of Polk's work led some to label him a "Southern Van Der Zee" (for the Harlem renaissance documentarian James Van Der Zee.)
 
Polk remained a fixture on Tuskegee's campus for the rest of his life. He continued to develop his artistic capabilities and even went to Winona, Indiana to take a 7-week professional development course. During the [[Civil Rights Movement]] he photographed visiting movement leaders as well as campus protests and the Selma to Montgomery March. A selection of his photographs was exhibited at the New York City Museum of Natural History in [[1974]]. Over the next few years his work was also shown at the Washington Gallery of Photography in Washington D. C. and the Studio Museum of Harlem in New York. Some of Polk's photographs traveled in a group exhibition that made stops in the Soviet Union and Nigeria.
 
In the early 1980s, while collector [[Paul R. Jones]] was visiting Tuskegee to assist president [[Benjamin Payton]] with development efforts, he befriended the photographer. Jones purchased more than a hundred of Polk's photographs and instigated the publication of a monograph by Atlanta's Nexus Contemporary Art Center. In [[1981]] he was awarded a fellowship from the National Endowment for the Arts and an exhibition of his work was mounted at the Corcoran Museum of Art in Washington D. C. Polk gave a lecture on his work at the International Center of Photography in New York that same year. The [[Birmingham Museum of Art]] prepared a solo exhibition in [[1983]].
 
Polk died in December [[1984]] and was buried at the [[Tuskegee University Campus Cemetery]].


==References==
==References==
* ''P. H. Polk Photographs'' (1980) Atlanta, Georgia: Nexus Press
* Weeks, Edward F. (1983) ''P. H. Polk''. Birmingham: Birmingham Museum of Art
* Weeks, Edward F. (1983) ''P. H. Polk''. Birmingham: Birmingham Museum of Art
* Higgins, Chester Jr (December 1998) "P. H. Polk and me." ''The New Crisis''
* Amaki, Amalia (2004) "Hidden Messages in the Photographs of P. H. Polk" in ''A Century of African American Art: The Paul R. Jones Collection''. Rutgers University Press ISBN 0813534569
* Amaki, Amalia (2004) "Hidden Messages in the Photographs of P. H. Polk" in ''A Century of African American Art: The Paul R. Jones Collection''. Rutgers University Press ISBN 0813534569
* "[http://www.artsbma.org/exhibitions/to-make-a-picture-the-photography-of-p-h-polk-from-the-paul-r-jones-collection To Make a Picture: The Photography of P. H. Polk from the Paul R. Jones Collection]" exhibit description (2010) ''Birmingham Museum of Art''
* "[http://www.artsbma.org/exhibitions/to-make-a-picture-the-photography-of-p-h-polk-from-the-paul-r-jones-collection To Make a Picture: The Photography of P. H. Polk from the Paul R. Jones Collection]" exhibit description (2010) ''Birmingham Museum of Art''
==External links==
* [http://www.udel.edu/museums/past/polk/ Through These Eyes: The Photographs of P.H. Polk], 1998 exhibition at the University of Delaware
* [http://www.artsbma.org/about-the-museum/newsroom/press-releases/736-p-h-polk-photography To Make A Picture], 2010 exhibition at the Birmingham Museum of Art


{{DEFAULTSORT:Polk, P. H.}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Polk, P. H.}}

Revision as of 00:29, 10 March 2010

Prentice Herman Polk (born 1898 in Bessemer – died December 29, 1984) was the official photographer for Tuskegee University from 1939 until his death.

Herman Polk was the youngest of four children born to miner Jacob Prentice Polk and his wife Christine Romelia Ward, a seamstress. Jacob died when Herman was 11, just as he entered the Hard School to begin his formal education. In 1911 Polk went to the Tuggle Insitute in Birmingham as a boarding student. He left school two years later to work alongside his mother at William Freeman's tailoring shop.

In 1916 Polk added his father's middle name to his own and enrolled in evening classes at what was then the Tuskegee Normal and Industrial Institute. His ambition was to to study art, but he soon learned that founder Booker T. Washington had made no provision for non-"practical" instruction at the institute. He rejected a suggestion to take courses in house painting, and, in his second year became the third student to enroll in the institute's newly-created photography program, led by Cornelius Battey. He was also a leader in the school band.

Polk left Tuskegee in 1920 to work in a shipyard in Mobile County, but continued to study photography by taking correspondence courses which encouraged him to study how light is used to build up form in painted masterpieces. After completing the course he moved to Chicago, Illinois to join his mother and sisters there. He worked as a painter for the Pullman Palace Car Company during the day and for the telephone company in the evenings, but still found time to apprentice himself to white portrait photographer Fred A. Jensen.

Polk married Margaret Blanche Thompson of Brunswick, Georgia in January 1926. Over the course of the next year he began going door to door seeking to find his own portrait clients. Not having much success and dreading the onset of another midwestern winter he moved with his wife and newborn son, Prentice, back to Tuskegee where opened his own "Polk's Studio". Joining the faculty in 1927, he assisted Leonard Hyman, who had succeeded Battey as head of the photography division.

In 1933 Polk was promoted to succeed Hyman as head instructor. He resigned in 1938 to open a studio in Atlanta, Georgia. He won three awards at the Southeastern Photographer's Convention held there that year. He returned to Tuskegee in 1939 to accept the position of official campus photographer. During his tenure on the faculty, Polk mentored countless aspiring photographers, including Charles Lang, Chris McNair, Frank Godden, Albert Carter, and Chester Higgins, Jr.

Over the course of his career he made portraits of nearly all the faculty members and administrators and their families as well as the innumerable visitors to the campus, both humble and esteemed. He went out of his way to capture photographs of laborers and field hands for his "Old Characters" series even as he posed wealthy ladies in furs and jewels for glamorous portraits in his studio. He photographed Tuskegee scientist George Washington Carver over 500 times and also photographed the Tuskegee Airmen that trained near the institute for flying missions in World War II. His 1932 image, entitled "The Boss", shows an authoritative female farm worker whom he discovered setting up a produce stand near campus. She stands proudly in her everyday clothes, defying the viewer to dismiss her headscarf and apron as comical or picturesque, like the commercial portraits of "black mammies". The breadth and quality of Polk's work led some to label him a "Southern Van Der Zee" (for the Harlem renaissance documentarian James Van Der Zee.)

Polk remained a fixture on Tuskegee's campus for the rest of his life. He continued to develop his artistic capabilities and even went to Winona, Indiana to take a 7-week professional development course. During the Civil Rights Movement he photographed visiting movement leaders as well as campus protests and the Selma to Montgomery March. A selection of his photographs was exhibited at the New York City Museum of Natural History in 1974. Over the next few years his work was also shown at the Washington Gallery of Photography in Washington D. C. and the Studio Museum of Harlem in New York. Some of Polk's photographs traveled in a group exhibition that made stops in the Soviet Union and Nigeria.

In the early 1980s, while collector Paul R. Jones was visiting Tuskegee to assist president Benjamin Payton with development efforts, he befriended the photographer. Jones purchased more than a hundred of Polk's photographs and instigated the publication of a monograph by Atlanta's Nexus Contemporary Art Center. In 1981 he was awarded a fellowship from the National Endowment for the Arts and an exhibition of his work was mounted at the Corcoran Museum of Art in Washington D. C. Polk gave a lecture on his work at the International Center of Photography in New York that same year. The Birmingham Museum of Art prepared a solo exhibition in 1983.

Polk died in December 1984 and was buried at the Tuskegee University Campus Cemetery.

References

  • P. H. Polk Photographs (1980) Atlanta, Georgia: Nexus Press
  • Weeks, Edward F. (1983) P. H. Polk. Birmingham: Birmingham Museum of Art
  • Higgins, Chester Jr (December 1998) "P. H. Polk and me." The New Crisis
  • Amaki, Amalia (2004) "Hidden Messages in the Photographs of P. H. Polk" in A Century of African American Art: The Paul R. Jones Collection. Rutgers University Press ISBN 0813534569
  • "To Make a Picture: The Photography of P. H. Polk from the Paul R. Jones Collection" exhibit description (2010) Birmingham Museum of Art

External links