Chester Higgins: Shared Memories, presented from April 16 through June 18, 2026 at Bruce Silverstein Gallery, brings together more than forty photographs spanning nearly seven decades of artistic practice. The exhibition offers a powerful overview of the work of Chester Higgins, whose images form one of the most sustained photographic explorations of the African diaspora. Moving between black-and-white and color works, the exhibition traces a lifelong engagement with memory, heritage, and the spiritual and cultural continuity that connects communities across continents.
Born in Fairhope in 1946 and raised in the rural American South during the Civil Rights era, Higgins developed his early photographic sensibility within a close-knit community shaped by church life, family ties, and the intellectual environment surrounding Tuskegee University. His earliest photographs reflect everyday moments of Black life in the South—scenes of worship, family gatherings, and community traditions that reveal resilience and dignity within a segregated society. When he later moved to New York City in the late 1960s, his perspective expanded while remaining deeply connected to the cultural foundations that shaped his upbringing.
A pivotal journey to Senegal in 1971 opened a broader dialogue between African American history and its ancestral roots in Africa. Higgins returned repeatedly to the continent over the following decades, photographing spiritual ceremonies, cultural rituals, and landscapes tied to the history of the Atlantic diaspora. Images such as those made at Gorée Island confront the legacy of the transatlantic slave trade while emphasizing endurance, memory, and cultural survival. Other photographs made in Brazil, Egypt, and the United States reveal how traditions, beliefs, and identities continue to evolve across generations and geographies.
Alongside his personal projects, Higgins spent nearly forty years as a staff photographer for The New York Times, producing widely circulated images that helped reshape public representations of Black life in the United States. His photographs portray families, scholars, spiritual leaders, and artists with intimacy and respect, offering an alternative visual narrative to the stereotypes that often dominated mainstream media.
At the heart of Higgins’s practice lies a belief that photography serves as both witness and affirmation. Through portraits, documentary images, and his ongoing
Black Pantheon series honoring influential cultural figures, his work constructs a living archive of memory and presence.
Shared Memories gathers these decades of observation into a compelling meditation on identity, continuity, and the enduring strength of a global community.
Image:
Chester Higgins | State of Affairs, 2018 © Chester Higgins, courtesy of the Bruce Silverstein Gallery.