Cal State Northridge acquires historic collection from Black photojournalist Vera Jackson
The Tom & Ethel Bradley Center at Cal State Northridge has acquired a new collection of historical images from photojournalist Vera Jackson, a news release said.
Jackson, who died in 1999 at age 86, was the only female photographer at The California Eagle, L.A.’s oldest Black newspaper in the 1940s. She was one of five female photographers, among close to 50 photographers, featured in the 1983 exhibition “The Tradition Continues: California Black Photographers,” the release said.
CSUN journalism professor and Bradley Center director José Luis Benavides said that the new addition, among the center’s collections of other pioneering photojournalists, intends “to honor the legacy of Vera Jackson and promote her work among scholars, artists, students and the larger community.”
Photojournalist Vera Jackson holds a Graflex Speed Graphic camera with a King Sol flash. (Courtesy of the Tom and Ethel Bradley Center at California State University, Northridge)
Newspaper publisher and editor Charlotta Bass, U.S. Representative Adam Clayton Powell Jr. and jazz and classical pianist Hazel Scott, photographed by Vera Jackson. (Courtesy of the Tom and Ethel Bradley Center at California State University, Northridge)
Print portrait by Vera Jackson of singer Jimmy Grisson, 1946. (Courtesy of the Tom and Ethel Bradley Center at California State University, Northridge)
Jessica Jackson, the granddaughter of Vera Jackson, with Keith Rice and José Luis Benavides at the Bradley Center after an oral history interview in Los Angeles, Oct. 6, 2024. Photo by Keith Rice. (Courtesy of the Tom and Ethel Bradley Center at California State University, Northridge)
Bride Jesse Mae Brown with her bridesmaids, including Dorothy Dandridge, bottom center. Brown was the society editor of the California Eagle in the 1940s. Photo by Vera Jackson, Los Angeles, 1947. (Courtesy of the Tom and Ethel Bradley Center at California State University, Northridge)
Max the Printer, Los Angeles, 1940s, by Vera Jackson. (Courtesy of the Tom and Ethel Bradley Center at California State University, Northridge)
Photo by Vera Jackson of the birthday celebration for American educator, philanthropist, humanitarian and civil rights activist Mary Jane McLeod Bethune. Lena Horne stands at the far left. (Courtesy of the Tom and Ethel Bradley Center at California State University, Northridge)
Print portrait by Vera Jackson of Dorothy Dandridge in Los Angeles. (Courtesy of the Tom and Ethel Bradley Center at California State University, Northridge)
Members of the American Veterans Committee and the American Youth for Democracy picketed to demand an end to employment discrimination at the corner of 35th Place and Normandie. Photo by Vera Jackson, Los Angeles, 1946-47. (Courtesy of the Tom and Ethel Bradley Center at California State University, Northridge)
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Photojournalist Vera Jackson holds a Graflex Speed Graphic camera with a King Sol flash. (Courtesy of the Tom and Ethel Bradley Center at California State University, Northridge)
The collection is instrumental for both CSUN and for Black photographers — where nationally there is very little representation, especially of Black women, Benavides said. He was eager that, through this collection, more people will get to know Jackson’s story. The acquisition builds on the university’s efforts to research and preserve L.A. diversity in a visual way.
Jackson worked for California Eagle publisher and editor Charlotta Bass, who was known to be a civil rights leader and prominent voice of the Black community. As a photojournalist working primarily under the society section, Jackson captured images of the elite and celebrities such as Hattie McDaniel, Dorothy Dandridge, Jackie Robinson, Philippa Schuyler, Jane McLeod Bethune, Lena Horne, Adam Clayton Powell Jr. and Hazel Scott, the release said.
She also photographed families and personalities in the Black community, businesses, and political and civil rights events around Los Angeles. In the 1950s, Jackson pursued teaching, traveling, and continued photography for magazines and exhibitions. Her work has been exhibited in various libraries, media and museums.
“Vera Jackson’s images are much more than a photographic record,” Benavides said. “They are also a form of artistic expression of a pioneer photographer helping us appreciate and better understand life in Black Los Angeles… (her) photographs not only reflected a woman’s perspective and artistic sensibility, but also a focus more on women in the community, documenting their work, their achievements, and their image.”
The collection — in the process of being archived, cataloged and preserved at the Bradley Center — will hopefully be available for public access within the next year, Benavides said.
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