BOSTON, MASS.- Gallery Kayafas is exhibiting Jack Lueders-Booths iconic series, Women Prisoners. In 1977, Jack Lueders-Booth, and his daughter, Laura Booth, went to MCI Framingham where they converted long abandoned prison cells to photographic darkrooms, as basis for the photography classes that they would teach to the inmates. When their time there was to end, in the Summer of 1978, Lueders-Booth could not bring himself to leave. He remained for seven more years, making photographs of insightful and sensitive depth, and recording oral histories of remarkable and trusting candor, later writing:
What repeatedly drew me to this prison for more than seven years was a fascination with, and a fondness for, the women themselves the profound sadness of their lives, their persistence in asserting values of their own derivation, and most remarkably, their ability to find hope, and even optimism, in the seemingly impossible, and against the worst of all odds. I admired them greatly for this. It was never my intention in this work to photographically describe the physical place of the prison itself (although some photographs inevitably do), but rather, my interest from the beginning was only in the women themselves, and their families, and their friends.
By time and familiarity alone, the guards, the warden, and his entire administration, had come to allow me with my cameras to wonder wherever I wished, unescorted, and unaccountable. Jack Lueders-Booth
These vintage prints: black and white gelatin silver prints, 4x5 Polacolor II prints and hand-processed chromogenic prints, document this photographers unprecedented access to these women prisoners. The prison cells have been made to look more like home than jail by hiding their window bars within faux window slats, their impenetrable steel doors with the veneer of bedroom paneling, and their bullet proof latches with brushed aluminum door knobs- all these disguising and thoughtful appointments were made to these cells under the first term of Governor Dukakis. Lueders-Booths genuine portrayal of these lives provides an intimate reveal of mothers, daughters, and sisters; women of all ages, races, and circumstance; woman who gave up everything even their children because of illegal mistakes and decisions.
Anyone who observes these photographs with the same care with which they were made will come away knowing something of these women, something central. While photographing, he interviewed the women, giving a voice to a disenfranchised, marginalized group. The integrity of each image reveals the trust between photographer and subject. Individual and group portraits display pride, dignity and sometimes defiance. Images of family visits are energized, full of action as children reunite with their mothers. These images are honest portrayals of the everyday lives and activities for these women.
This work was supported by fellowships from the National Endowment for The Arts, The Massachusetts Council on the Arts of Humanities, The Artists Foundation, The Polaroid Foundation, and The Massachusetts Prison Art Project.
Earlier selection from this project were featured in: Aperture Quarterly's 1983 Spring Edition; Boston Now, The Institute of Contemporary Art; New American Photography, Columbia College of Photography, Chicago IL.
New selections from this same project will also be included in Aperture Quarterlys 2018 Spring Edition, "Prison Nation", accompanied by a traveling exhibition of the same name, opening at The Aperture Foundation Gallery, February 7 - March 7, 2018.
Lueders-Booths photographs are included in important collections, including those of The Addison Gallery of American Art, The Art Institute of Chicago; The DeCordova Museum and Sculpture Park; The Hood Museum; The Fogg Art Museum; The Library of Congress; The Museum of Modern Art, NYC; The Museum of Modern Art, San Francisco CA; The David Rockefeller Center for Latin American Studies at Harvard University.
Jack Lueders-Booth continues to photograph and to teach. He resides at his home and studio, in Cambridge MA.