As we celebrate the accomplishments and contributions of African Americans during Black History Month, we’re exploring the impact of a talented and prolific photographer, , whose work left powerful images of what life was like for African Americans living in the Great Plains in the early 20th century.
Johnson’s photography can now be found in museums across the country, from the in DC, to the , where some of Johnson’s work is currently on display in the “Black and White in Black and White” through May 28th, 2022.
begins in the 1960s, when a teenager in Lincoln, Nebraska named Doug Keister acquired a heavy box from a friend. The box was filled with hundreds of glass-plate negatives, a photography technology that was in use around the turn of the 20th century.
He kept these negatives over the decades, and in 1999, saw an article from his hometown newspaper about historians uncovering glass negatives from the 1910s and 1920s that featured portraits of the city’s African American population. The negatives found by historians featured images similar to the ones Keister had acquired decades before, leading him to investigate further.
The negatives found by the city’s historians, and the hundreds Keister acquired in the 1960s featured the work of John Johnson, who documented life for African American communities in the Great Plains in striking, contrast-rich portraits.
To further explore the life, work and legacy of John Johnson, we speak with , a curator of photography and visual culture at the Smithsonian’s National Museum of African American History and Culture and a fellow with the , at the Library of Congress.