Milton Rogovin: Buffalo Troublemaker
By Robert Hirsch
From The Photo Review, March/April 2011, pages 19 -20.
Milton Rogovin (190–2011) was a first-generation American born to Jewish Ukrainian parents (Jacob and Dora) in New York City. He graduated
from Columbia University's optometry school in 1931 as the Great Depression unsettled the world and propelled him on a path towards political awareness. Rogovin first took on the responsibility of being a "Troublemaker" by challenging unfair working conditions and defending worker rights, which led him to organize the Optical Workers Union in New York City. In 1938 he came to work in Buffalo, NY, but
after picketing his boss's offices for unfair labor practices,
he was fired. With union backing, he opened
his own practice the following year and continued his
political activities until he entered military service
during World War II when he also acquired his first
camera.
As the librarian of Buffalo's communist party,
Rogovin was subpoenaed in 1957 and ordered to appear
before the House Committee on Un-American
Activities (HUAC) where he refused to name names.
The next day The Buffalo Evening News headline
proclaimed: "Rogovin Named as Top Red in Buffalo."
The fallout was immediate and devastating. His
children were shunned and his optometry business
dropped by 50 percent. Fortunately, Milton's wife,
Anne Setters, a special education teacher, resolutely
stepped into this breach. She encouraged and supported
Milton, allowing him to concentrate on his
photography, which he did with mentoring from
Minor White. Responding to an invitation from his
friend, Professor William Tallmadge of Buffalo State
College, Rogovin began his first significant body of
work Storefront Churches — Buffalo (1961). This
led to numerous other projects from street corners
of Buffalo's West Side and the Lackawanna, NY
steel mills, to fields in Chile, and coal mines in Appalachia,
China, Cuba, Mexico, Spain, Zimbabwe
and elsewhere.
Rogovin operated within the parameters of social
documentary practice that can be traced back to
John Thomson, Jacob Riis, and Lewis Hine, utilizing
photography in the service of social reform. He
also admired the photographs of Margaret Bourke-
White and the Farm Security Administration group,
especially Walker Evans, Dorothea Lange, plus the
work of his friend Paul Strand. Utilizing a twin-lens
Rollieflex camera, Rogovin's direct approach was
relaxed and unpretentious: people posed themselves
within their environment. Working as a team with
his wife Anne, a driving, behind-the-scenes force,
18
Rogovin only asked his subjects to look at the camera,
rarely making more than three exposures. He
processed and printed his black-and-white materials
in a simple basement darkroom and gave prints to
his subjects. His vision rationally chronicles, rather
than subjectively imagining, concretely representing
rather than transforming his subjects. Although his
photographs are implicitly political, he did not engage
in mythmaking, rather he openly showed people in
relation to their social and working conditions.
In the early 1970s, Rogovin began a series of
portraits that featured working-class people who
lived near his downtown Buffalo optical business. At
the suggestion of Anne, he returned to rephotograph
the same people in the early 1980s and again in the
1990s. The resulting photographs were published
as Triptychs: Buffalo's Lower West Side Revisited
(1994). This condensed time capsule, with its underlying
pathos of loss, allows one to witness how these
people changed and endured over time.
Milton told me, "I wanted to make sympathetic
portraits of the poorest of the poor in our community
that showed them as decent human struggling to get
by. Most are considered los olvidados,1 the forgotten
ones, who are without a voice or power. Most people
don't even know these people exist. By photographing
them I bring to the attention of the general public
that they are people just like us and should not be
looked down upon or abused in any way. It was the
poor people who interested me and I wanted to photograph.
I was never interested in photographing the
rich."
This kind of historical "forgetfulness" is socially
dangerous, allowing us to ignore or trivialize the historical
plight of those beyond our purview. Rogovin
thought it was absolutely necessary to act in the here
and now to remedy problems that confront us; thus his
photographs look reality straight in the eye to arouse
one's empathy and social conscience. This echoes
Elie Wiesel statement, "The opposite of history is not
myth. The opposite of history is forgetfulness."2
Commenting on the death of his father, Mark
Rogovin informed me, "It is rewarding to have the
mainline press and individuals from around the
world send their condolences. This is what my parents
referred to as ‘Harvest Time,' a gathering and
recognition of their combined works."3 In addition to
having the photographs seen in galleries and museums,
his family wanted to have their efforts utilized
in classrooms. For this purpose they've constructed
a website, www.MiltonRogovin.com, which has a
section devoted to educators in both English and
Spanish.
Rogovin's photographs have been internationally
admired, collected, and exhibited; they are in museum
collections nationwide including the Creative
Center for Photography, the J. Paul Getty Museum,
the Library of Congress, and the Burchfield-Penney
Art Center. Even so, Milton continued to find beauty
in everyday living, such as having mural-size photographs
of steel workers installed in Buffalo subway
stations, holding a book signing at Wegmans food
market, and regularly attending Buffalo anti-war
demonstrations. As Rogovin lived to be an elderly
man, many people thought of him as a kindly grandfather
figure. However, this was not the case. Milton
Rogovin remained a feisty troublemaker with a fine
sense of humor. Milton ultimately got the last laugh,
not only outliving his enemies, but also living long
enough to see his work recognized by The Man who
once tried to silence him.
1. This phrase came from Luis Bunuel's Los
Olvidados (The Forgotten Ones), a 1950 social
realistic/surrealistic film.
2. Wiesel, Elie. "Myth and History," in Myth,
Symbol, and Reality, Alan M. Olson ed. (Notre
Dame: University of Notre Dame Press, 1980), p.
30.
3. Telephone conversation between Mark Rogovin
and the author, February 7, 2011.
Robert Hirsch, © 2011
Robert Hirsch is the Focal Press Sponsored
Speaker at the National Society for Photographic
Education Conference in Atlanta, GA on Thursday,
March 10, 2011 at 1:30 PM. His presentation will
cover his latest book Exploring Color Photography:
From Film to Pixels, Fifth Edition and his latest
installation The 1960s Cubed: A Visual History,
which will open this spring at both CEPA and Indigo
Galleries in Buffalo, NY.
For more information visit:
www.lightresearch.net.
Additional Information:
Herzog, Melanie Anne. Milton Rogovin: The Making
of a Social Documentary Photographer, (Seattle,
WA: Center of Creative Photography in association
with University of Washington Press, 2006).
For a full-length interview see, "Milton Rogovin:
Activist Photographer," see: http://lightresearch.
net/interviews/rogovin_afterimage.html.
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