Eugene Richards - Red Ball of a Sun Slipping Down - 2014






Founded and directed two French book fairs; nearly 20 years of experience in contemporary books.
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Eugene Richards' first edition Red Ball of a Sun Slipping Down presents stark black and white Delta photographs alongside newer color images, a compelling window into the Civil Rights era.
Description from the seller
Beautiful book from former Magnum photographer Eugene Richards in excellent, as new condition. This book contains both evocative black and white images of his stay and trips to The South during the Civil Rights Movement Era (around the time of his first monography 'Few Comforts or Suprises") with later colour photographs.
The Arkansas Delta has been called at different times the soul of the South, the land of opportunity, a place ruled by race, a forgotten place. Eugene Richards (born 1944) first went to the delta as a VISTA volunteer in 1969. It was less than a year after the assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., a time when cotton, religion, prejudice and poverty were what characterized most peoples' lives. Increasingly drawn to this both sorrowful and beautiful place, Richards would stay for more than four years, working as a social worker and reporter until the community service organization and newspaper he helped found were forced to close their doors. But over the years he would keep returning.
Red Ball of a Sun Slipping Down is a book that speaks of remembrance and change, of struggle and privation, of loving and loss, of then and now. Black-and-white photographs made long years ago but never before published are interwoven with recent color photographs and, in turn, with a short story that relates Richards' relationship with an impoverished delta family as well as a growing awareness of his own aging and mortality.
Beautiful book from former Magnum photographer Eugene Richards in excellent, as new condition. This book contains both evocative black and white images of his stay and trips to The South during the Civil Rights Movement Era (around the time of his first monography 'Few Comforts or Suprises") with later colour photographs.
The Arkansas Delta has been called at different times the soul of the South, the land of opportunity, a place ruled by race, a forgotten place. Eugene Richards (born 1944) first went to the delta as a VISTA volunteer in 1969. It was less than a year after the assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., a time when cotton, religion, prejudice and poverty were what characterized most peoples' lives. Increasingly drawn to this both sorrowful and beautiful place, Richards would stay for more than four years, working as a social worker and reporter until the community service organization and newspaper he helped found were forced to close their doors. But over the years he would keep returning.
Red Ball of a Sun Slipping Down is a book that speaks of remembrance and change, of struggle and privation, of loving and loss, of then and now. Black-and-white photographs made long years ago but never before published are interwoven with recent color photographs and, in turn, with a short story that relates Richards' relationship with an impoverished delta family as well as a growing awareness of his own aging and mortality.
