Ming Smith: Jazz Requiem – Notations in Blue offers an intimate journey into the early artistic path of Ming Smith, focusing on the shaping forces of place, identity, and creative freedom that marked her emergence in the 1970s and 80s. At a time when many Black artists sought opportunities beyond the United States, Smith found in Europe a space that welcomed experimentation and allowed her to refine her vision. This exhibition reflects on those formative travels and how they continue to echo through her work today.
The selected photographs, many newly printed, reveal Smith’s nuanced approach to depicting the Black experience—capturing fleeting gestures, shadows of movement, and the quiet poetry found in daily life. Her images resist the traditional documentary expectations once imposed on photographs of Black communities. Instead, she expands the medium toward a more expressive, introspective language. By challenging the assumptions surrounding the photographic gaze, Smith both acknowledges and subverts the medium’s history, offering images that feel at once personal and universal.
Central to the exhibition is the influence of music and dance, especially jazz, whose improvisational rhythms have long guided Smith’s approach behind the camera. Her encounters with the atmospheric works of Brassaï and
Henri Cartier-Bresson during her time in Paris deepened her interest in mood, motion, and the lyrical possibilities of the photograph. These early influences merge with her own instincts, resulting in a style defined by blur, abstraction, and a sensitivity to the ephemeral.
Smith’s legacy is anchored in her groundbreaking achievements and unwavering dedication to portraying the depth of Black life. From her early days in New York—balancing modeling with photographing city streets and intimate cultural spaces—to her historic milestones with the Kamoinge Workshop and major museum collections, she has continually expanded what photography can express. Her images, alive with emotion and spontaneity, function as both memory and meditation, honoring the complexity of lived experience while inviting viewers to feel its resonance.
Image:
Ming Smith (United States, born 1950), Judith Jamison, 1981, archival pigment print, 36 x 24 inches. Courtesy of the artist and The Gund at Kenyon College © Ming Smith