Eugene Richards: The Run-On of Time: Too Rough for a Museum?
When we first enter the Nelson Atkins Museum of Art’s retrospective of 146 photographs
called “Eugene Richards: The Run-On of Time,” it is through the eyes of a 25-year-old
VISTA worker who put no distance between himself and the “few comforts or surprises” of
the people of the Arkansas Delta. He became the vehicle for sharing their hardships with
intimacy and truth through his photographs. Perhaps only his youth allowed such an altruistic
immersion to begin his decades long journey.
We are overwhelmed by the scope and dedication of Richards’s work documenting poverty,
addiction, cancer, aging, mental health, racism, and war over the past 45 years. We have all
known suffering but to witness what Richards has seen brings us literally face to face with it
and we wonder what kind of emotional toll it has taken on him. Listening to his voice as he
narrates some of the show’s images through the Detour© app and on his website in 11
videos based on his books – we can hear it, as he slowly and gravely recounts the people
and places in his images. We can tell that his accumulated experience with each image is
formed of melancholic memories.
Depicting others can get lost in the broad category of documentary photography where it is
often seen as an emotionally removed and distanced look at time and place. However, here
there is little room to breathe as Richards puts us up close to his subjects with one searing
image after another.
In After a Flood, he puts our face right next to a farmer’s in Arkansas as his hand, weathered
like his land, covers and cradles his own.
At age 35, both Richards and his partner and collaborator Dorthea Lynch documented her
battle with breast cancer through her writings and his images until her death four years later.
We never question why they would expose their own struggles but only admire their
selflessness – sharing an intimacy that only two who loved each other could about life and
death. In his photo Final Treatment, Dorthea looks through Richards and holds our hand as
the viewer and we feel privileged to be allowed to share in it.
When Richards was 42 and working on his book Below The Line, Living Poor in America,
he gazed down and took the photo of John coming down from crack staring off into space
through a reflection of tree branches that extend from his temple like pulsating arteries on
drugs.
After walking through many more years of concerned projects documenting 9/11, health,
aging, birth, homicide, and public asylums in Mexico, Paraguay and Hungary, we come to
Richards at age 64 facing the ravages and devastation of war seen in the photo, Jose’s
mother, Nelida Bagley, where a mother comforts her son.
The exhibit moves us to the final room of large color images where for the first time his
photos are bereft of people. One wonders if the transference of so many other’s suffering
had became too much. There is a sadness that is no longer of other’s sorrow but of his own
and the impermanence of things that truly expresses “the run-on of time.”
We hold off visiting an exhibit about the real stuff of our political, social and economic lives
because we know it will be rough to look at but Richards’s photos need to be seen. The
museum will still be a place of refuge where you can sit right outside the end of the exhibit by
the sound and sight of running water hugging a Noguchi carved basalt fountain that is
meditative, calm and elevating.
Thankfully the curators April Watson and Lisa Hostetler felt strongly about the relevance,
especially in this political climate, of bringing Richards’s work to the museum. In her
introduction to the book accompanying the show, In Dogged Pursuit of Complex Truths: The
Photographs of Eugene Richards, Watson reminds us why… “For all its complexities,
Richards’s work retains a fundamental hope – a hope that resides in his dedication to
continue making photographs that cut directly to our hearts and minds, while challenging us
to do more for one another in an increasingly fragile and volatile world.”
Eugene Richards: The Run-On of Time is currently on view from Saturday, December 9,
2017 to Sunday, April 15, 2018 at the Nelson Atkins Museum of Art.