DEBORAH WILLIS
Reflections in Black:
A History of Black Photographers
1840 to the Present
Norton 2000

Carl Chiarenza’s copy with his name on front paste down.
348 pp. Profusely illustrated with photographs. Tall quarto, black cloth. Corners lightly bumped, else a very good, clean copy in dust wrapper.
Reflections in Black, the first comprehensive history of black photographers, is Deborah Willis's long-awaited, groundbreaking assemblage of photographs of African American life from 1840 to the present. 

Willis, a curator of photography at the Smithsonian Institution, has selected nearly 600 stunning images that give us rich, hugely moving glimpses of black life, from slavery to the Great Migrations, from rare antebellum portraits to 1990s middle-class families. 

Featuring the work of undisputed masters such as James Presley Ball, C. M. Battey, James VanDerZee, Morgan and Marvin Smith, Gordon Parks, Moneta Sleet, Jr., and Carrie Mae Weems, among hundreds of others, Reflections in Black is, most powerfully, a refutation of the gross caricature of the many mainstream photographers who have continually emphasized poverty over family, despair over hope. Recalling Roman Vishniac's Vanished World in terms of its documentary importance, and Brian Lanker's I Dream a World in terms of its exceptional beauty, Reflections in Black is not only an exceptional gift book for any occasion but also a work so significant that it has the power to reconfigure our conception of American history itself. It demands to be included in every American family's library as the record of an essential part of our heritage. Publication coincided and with a major exhibition at The Smithsonian Institution in Washington, DC, which then traveled to Milwaukee, Wisconsin; Albany, New York; Corpus Christi, Texas; and other cities.