A Language We Share: Beverly Price and Gordon Parks, on view from March 20 through June 19, 2026 at the Center for Art & Advocacy, presents a compelling intergenerational dialogue between contemporary photographer Beverly Price and 20th-century icon Gordon Parks. The exhibition highlights how photography functions simultaneously as a historical document and a symbolic medium, transmitting meaning across time while emphasizing enduring commitments to dignity, truth, and social responsibility.
Price began her photographic practice in 2016, ten years after returning from incarceration, focusing on Washington, D.C.’s Southeast neighborhoods, particularly Anacostia and Barry Farms. Her images center children in their everyday lives, capturing moments of spontaneity, play, and reverie. In hyper-violent and over-policed environments, these photographs act as an assertion of care, preserving forms of childhood often threatened by structural inequities. By documenting lived experiences with both intimacy and attentiveness, Price transforms photography into a tool of protection and accountability.
Parks’ work in the same neighborhoods, beginning in 1942 under the Julius Rosenwald Fellowship and his roles with the Farm Security Administration and Office of War Information, serves as both precedent and conversation partner. His photographs chronicled Black life in Washington, D.C., portraying children and communities with a blend of social critique and profound empathy. Parks’ images established the camera as a moral instrument, capable of bearing witness while shaping public understanding of social conditions.
In
A Language We Share, Price’s photographs are not imitations but continuations of Parks’ legacy. The exhibition pairs tender, playful, and resolute images of children with photographs documenting social and political protest, reflecting the intertwined nature of everyday life and civic struggle. Together, their works insist that joy, play, and creativity coexist with advocacy and social responsibility, and that photography can publish a first draft of history that remains alive, open, and carried forward by those who inherit it.
Coinciding with the twentieth anniversary of Parks’ passing and the twentieth anniversary of Price’s return home in 2006, the exhibition emphasizes the persistence of images across generations, demonstrating how photographs continue to resonate and inspire dialogue beyond their creation.
Image:
Beverly Price, Water Boys, Washington DC, 2016 © Beverly Price, courtesy of the Center for Art & Advocacy