About

Visualizing the Unseen

A Photographer’s Journey



For the past five decades, artist Chester Higgins has been using his camera to search for the unseen — “that which is innate within all things and informs the appearance of our world.” …

Higgins’s passion for ordinary people and the rituals that enrich our lives are prominent… “It is inside simple moments where I look for windows into larger meaning,” he says. “Art is an expression of the soul that gives visual definition to an experience.” The images in “Unseen Spirit” are intimate, personal scenes in which most of the subjects appear unaware of the camera. Using light, which “energizes and informs everything it touches,” Higgins gives voice to the essence of what he photographs.

“When I’m photographing, I feel time begin to shift between the present, the past, and the future — which is the nature of the Spirit,” he continues. “My challenge is to reveal the Spirit’s fleeting presence.” Wrestling with issues of memory, place, and identity, Higgins sees his life as a narrative and his photography as its expression. “My art gives visual expression to my personal and collective memories.”

Higgins’s work has culminated in exhibitions worldwide and in numerous books, including Feeling the Spirit: Searching the World for the People of Africa and his biography Echo of the Spirit. Currently he is researching and photographing monuments and other antiquity sites along the River Nile from the 6,000-foot high mountains of Kush (modern-day Ethiopia) through Nubia (Sudan) down to the ancient land of Kemet (Egypt). In this latest project, entitled Sacred Nile, Higgins narrates the story of the African beginnings of spirituality, antecedents of the Biblical world.

— by Betsy Kissam

 


contact

write us or contact us on our social media

Biography

“Wrestling with issues of memory, place and identity, I see my life as a narrative and my photography as its expression. My art gives visual voice to my personal and collective memories. It is inside ordinary moments where I find windows into larger meaning. Light, perspective, and points in time are the pivotal elements I use to reveal an interior presence within my subjects as I search for what I identify as the Signature of the Spirit.”

b. Fall 1946


Education

Alumni, Tuskegee University, 1970


Mentored in photography under

P.H. Polk (1967-69) Tuskegee University;

Arthur Rothstein (1969-78) LOOK magazine/FSA;

Cornell Capa (1970-80) International Center of Photography (ICP)

and Gordon Parks (1971-80) LIFE magazine.

Mentored in art under

Romare Bearden (1972-80)

Profession

Photographer, author, public speaker

Staff photographer retired, The New York Times, 1975—2014.

Exclusive Gallery Representation:

Bruce Silverstein Gallery

529 West 20th Street, NYC

212.627.3930

https://www.brucesilverstein.com/