Minnesota Prairie Roots

Writing and photography by Audrey Kletscher Helbling

From Minnesota & Harlem, photographing everyday life February 20, 2025

I recently finished this book about slavery, freedom and abolition. A must-read. (Book cover sourced online)

DURING THIS, BLACK HISTORY MONTH, I’ve intentionally read books about slavery, Black people and the Black experience. It’s important to me that I widen my knowledge and understanding. Many of the stories are heartbreaking, almost unbelievable in the mental and physical cruelty inflicted upon Blacks. This is hard stuff to read. But it is in the hard stuff that we begin to fully comprehend the importance of empathy, kindness, compassion and the need to stand strong against that which is hateful, hurtful and oppressive.

(Book cover sourced online)

This week, though, I read a Black-focused book which inspired and uplifted me. It’s a children’s picture book, Everywhere Beauty Is Harlem: The Vision of Photographer Roy Decarava. The book, written by Gary Golio and illustrated by E.B. Lewis, won the 2025 Coretta Scott King Illustrator Honor Award.

This book resonates with me personally and professionally in telling the story of 1940s world famous photographer Roy DeCarava, unknown to me until I read this book. Trained in the arts and in photography, he would go on to photograph everyday life in his native Harlem via work for the Works Progress Administration Project, fellowships and more. He worked as a photographer for major publications, has/had his photos featured in exhibits and art museums, became an art professor… And he was Black.

But what I love most about this story is that DeCarava aimed to photograph everyday life, everyday scenes, everyday people in the streets of Harlem. He shows life in raw reality. He worked back in the days of film, admittedly much more challenging than shooting with a digital camera. I started with film, too. You often get only one chance to take a photo. No firing off shots. No digital manipulation. Just a single, unedited print.

I took this portrait, one of my favorites, nearly 11 year ago at International Festival Faribault. (Minnesota Prairie Roots copyrighted file photo 2014)

I will never match the talent of DeCarava. But I do share his focus. I also aim to photograph the ordinary, the everyday, right where I live (or mostly in southern Minnesota). Like him, I notice details. The light. The moments. The expressions. The people, scenes, settings and events that define a place. The anything that might make for an interesting photo.

Unlike DeCarava, my roots are rural. I’ve only ever been to New York City once, while in college. I was awed by the skyscrapers, the street vendors, Chinatown and men hurrying along Wall Street in leisure suits. (This was in 1977.) But I have no desire to return to a place that feels too closed in, too busy, too chaotic.

My photo of Jane chalking art on a Faribault sidewalk. (Minnesota Prairie Roots copyrighted file photo August 2020)

Yet, Harlem in Upper Manhattan was DeCarava’s home, where he found the subjects of his photos. Everywhere Beauty Is Harlem gives a snapshot of the images this photographer snapped. A man on the subway. A boy drawing on the sidewalk with chalk. Black and brown children dancing in water spraying from a fire hydrant.

Beyond the visuals, the story in this children’s picture book encompasses the essence of DeCarava’s photographic focus on the everyday and the ordinary. I really ought to buy a copy of this book for my personal library. If you want to understand my photographic work, then read this multi award-winning children’s picture book. But, more importantly, read this book to learn about a world famous Black photographer whose talent for visual storytelling is a gift to all of us. To see the world through his eyes presents life as it is. Real. Raw. Unedited.

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FYI: I encourage you to also check out the photography of New York City photographer Keith Goldstein, whose work I follow on his blog, “For Earth Below.” His street photography has opened my eyes to humanity in a way that I never see here in southern Minnesota. His talent is remarkable. Goldstein, I think, works much like Roy DeCarava did, with his camera focused on the everyday, the ordinary. And therein both have found the extraordinary.

© Copyright 2025 Audrey Kletscher Helbling

 

14 Responses to “From Minnesota & Harlem, photographing everyday life”

  1. vbollinger's avatar vbollinger Says:

    Thanks for the reviews. I requested* Everywhere Beauty is Harlem* from the library.

  2. Beth Ann's avatar Beth Ann Says:

    It is so good to be aware of other ways of life and history, isn’t it? Sometimes it is very difficult to read but an important thing to do. I just finished Lady Tan’s Circle of Women and it was difficult to read about the customs and traditions. I would have had to. have been a very different person if that was my life. 

  3. beth's avatar beth Says:

    I’m glad that you had the chance to read ‘the invention of wings’ and you’re right, it’s a really tough read in many parts, but so powerful . I’m going to look for ‘everywhere beauty is Harlem’ it looks amazing

  4. Rose's avatar Rose Says:

    I’m so glad you are doing this, celebrating Black History month, and sharing what you’ve read or learned. The stories of slavery and events that were happening in those days, and even the early days of ‘freedom’ are so difficult to read. It’s frightening and heartbreaking that humans would treat each other like that. I searched for “Everywhere Beauty is Harlem” but it’s not in our local Kitchigami system, so I might have to see if it’s available through other library loan sources.

  5. I love Roy’s imagery. I almost studied with him at Hunter College here in NYC when I was looking to get a graduate degree in photography. My decision eventually was to leave NYC for a bit, get away from everything, and just concentrate on my work. Fortunately a small student loan kept me going for two years, enough time to get my degree, MFA, and cement my commitment to my work. I highly recommend two websites to explore – https://www.kamoinge.com/, https://mingsmithstudio.com/work. Both Roy and Ming, were customers of mine when I was working my way through undergraduate school while working in a camera shop. I sold darkroom supplies to them.

  6. Thank you Audrey!! I have an interesting blog post I wrote about Roy awhile back – https://keithgoldstein.me/2023/07/12/a-meeting-with-roy-decarava/

  7. more books to add to the to read list that never ends.


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