Jim Goldberg
I love David, but he is too fragile for a rough father like me
1978-1983
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Jim Goldberg
I love David, but he is too fragile for a rough father like me
1978-1983
Physical Qualities
Gelatin silver print, Sheet: 355 x 278 mm. (14 x 10 15/16 in.)
Credit Line
Gift of George H. Dalsheimer, Baltimore
Object Number
1998.187
Using his camera as a tool for social activism, Jim Goldberg has dedicated his career to documenting marginalized populations, including homeless teenagers, the elderly, and refugees. His inclusion of his subjects’ handwritten comments brought a novel element to the tradition of documentary photography. From 1977 to 1984, Goldberg photographed people from two groups in San Francisco: residents of a transient hotel and an art school’s trustees (and their family members). While the dramatic contrast in their environments illustrates the vast difference in the two groups’ financial means, the subjects’ expressions and highly personal confessions suggest a mutual feeling of loneliness. Goldberg’s 1975 book Rich and Poor compiled the resulting pictures. In the afterword to his book, Goldberg described himself as a “translator” and wrote of his hope that by sharing stories such as these, society could break down the myths that divide it.
(K Hileman, Seeing Now, 20 Feb - 15 Mar 2011)
The Baltimore Museum of Art by gift, 1998; George H. Dalsheimer, Baltimore
Seeing Now: Photography Since 1960
Rich and Poor: The Photographs of Jim Goldberg, New York: Random House, 1985, ill. section 1, 53rd unnumbered page
Inscribed: lower left verso in graphite: "The Pain These People Feel Destroys Their Very Souls"; lower right verso in graphite: "Jim Goldberg 1979/84"; upper right verso in graphite: "JG.026.2"
