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Courtesy of Virginia Museum of Fine Arts

Biography

Herb Robinson has been documenting the human experience as a photographer for over 50 years. Born in Kingston, Jamaica, he immigrated to New York City as a young child. His early work includes black and white street scenes, abstract works and portraits which were influenced by the renowned photographer Roy DeCarava. Robinson was one of the original members of The Kamoinge Workshop, the legendary Black photography collective founded in 1963 at the height of the American Civil Rights Movement.

Robinson’s work has been shaped by cinema, painting and jazz. The painters Peter Paul Rubens, El Greco, Chardin and Vermeer were notable influences, shaping Robinson’s sense of composition and use of light. During his formative years he was enthralled by the live jazz being played by his neighbors, many of whom were famous musicians. That jazz aesthetic and spontaneity are apparent in both his earlier street photography and his more recent photographic series of the past decade. Robinson has stated, “My instrument is the camera, it is the vessel that responds to and carries my emotions.” His humanist street photography incorporates experimental approaches in framing, use of blurring and edge tension that heighten abstract and surreal dimensions of urban life. In addition to his fine art photography, Robinson trained as a still life photographer and operated his own commercial studio in New York.

Robinson’s work was part of the major Tate Modern exhibition, Soul of a Nation: Art in the Age of Black Power, which first opened in London in 2017. Following the Tate Modern, Soul of a Nation traveled to Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art in Bentonville, Arkansas; the Brooklyn Museum; the Broad Museum in Los Angeles; the de Young Museum in San Francisco and the Museum of Fine Arts in Houston. Robinson’s work is also part of the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts exhibition in Richmond, Working Together: Louis Draper and the Kamoinge Workshop, which has traveled to the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York; Cincinnati Art Museum and The J. Paul Getty Museum in Los Angeles. Robinson’s photographs are part of the Katherine E. Nash Gallery of the University of Minnesota exhibition, A Picture Gallery of the Soul.

Robinson is the co-editor of Timeless: Photographs by Kamoinge (Schiffer Publishing, 2015.) The book was recognized by the New York Times as one of the best photography books of the year. He curated the Timeless exhibition at Kenkeleba Gallery in 2016.

Herb Robinson’s METRO / New York / London/ Paris, curated and edited by Eve Sandler, was released in 2022 by Schiffer Publishing.

Robinson’s work is in the permanent collections of the Museum of Modern Art; Whitney Museum of American Art; J. Paul Getty Museum; National Gallery; Virginia Museum of Fine Arts and Baltimore Museum of Art. He is represented by the Bruce Silverstein Gallery in New York City.

Chronology

Selected Exhibitions

2022 

J. Paul Getty Museum

Katherine E. Nash Gallery, University of Minnesota

Cincinnati Art Museum

2020

Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, N.Y.

Virginia Museum of Fine Arts, Richmond, VA

Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, TX

2019-2020 

de Young Museum, San Francisco, CA

2019 

Broad Museum, Los Angeles, CA

2018-2019 

Brooklyn Museum, Brooklyn, N.Y.

2018 

Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art, Bentonville, AR

2017 

Tate Modern, London, England

2015-2016 

Wilmer Jennings Gallery, New York, N.Y.

2012 

Gordon Parks Gallery, Bronx, N.Y. 

2010 

Calumet Gallery, New York, N.Y.

2009 

Calumet Gallery, New York, N.Y. 

2008 

Columbia University, New York, N.Y.

2006 

Columbia College, Chicago, Ill.

Brooklyn Academy of Music, Brooklyn, N.Y.

2004 

G.R. N’Namdi Gallery, New York, N.Y.

G.R. N’Namdi Gallery, Detroit, Michigan; Chicago, Ill.

2002 

New York University, New York, N.Y.

2001 

Brooklyn Museum of Art, Brooklyn, New York

1999 

UFA Gallery, New York, N.Y.

1974 

International Center of Photography, New York, N.Y.

American Museum of Natural History, New York, N.Y. 

1973 

Harvard University School of Design, Cambridge, MA

1972 

The Studio Museum in Harlem, New York, N.Y.

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