The Talk | Michael Darough

The Talk (2018-Present)

These images were created in response to the Black Lives Matter Movement.  The faceless men represent individuals affected by this systemic issue.  Those void of the figure symbolize the stories that struggle to be told; they ones that do not receive news coverage.  Incarceration rates, racial profiling and fatalities from law enforcement disproportionately affect individuals of color.  Police officers have the difficult task of protecting and serving our communities.  They are people we depend on in common and extreme situations. I have nothing but respect for these women and men who risk their lives daily, but every black family still has to have “the talk” with their children; especially their sons.  Every few months a high-profile story emerges about another individual who is a victim of the criminal justice system.  These situations have become all too common.

Social media and the digital age have given us access to see how excessive force has been used in several situations with individual’s of color.  These problems are not new.  As a country we transitioned from slavery and Jim Crow laws to segregation to civil rights.  These issues went from overt to covert.  Although these matters regarding race are better than they have been in decades, we still have problems within our society that have yet to be properly addressed and fixed.

 
 

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Artist Bio

Michael Darough graduated from the University of Memphis, earning an MFA in photography in 2011. He received his BFA in photography from Arizona State University in 2007. His work explores personal and cultural identity though tableau and portraiture. Darough received a Fulbright seminar grant addressing diversity in German education, which was hosted by the Eberhard Karls University of Tübingen in Baden-Württemberg, Germany.  He is a nationally exhibiting artist whose work has recently been shown at the Brooks Museum of Art in Memphis, TN, the Center for Fine Art Photography in Fort Collins, CO.  Darough was  a Silver Eye Fellowship 20 recipient and was a finalist for the 2020 Arnold Newman Prize for New Directions in Photographic Portraiture.

http://www.michaeldarough.com/