Categories
In Profile

Makeda Best

BY Jean Dykstra, November 4, 2018

“It’s a special job,” says Makeda Best, referring to her position as the Richard L. Menschel Curator of Photography at the Harvard Art Museums. Best approaches photography as a fine art, of course, but also as a teaching tool. “I collect and install strategically,” she says. “How is it going to fit into the broader story we are telling at the museum, but also how can I complicate what the students think they know about photography and its histories.”

Best’s current exhibition, Time Is Now: Photography and Social Change in James Baldwin’s America, on view through December 30 at Harvard’s Carpenter Center for the Visual Arts, explores the life of the acclaimed African-American author as well as the issues of the day, many of which remain painfully relevant. One of the works in the show is a 1949 portrait by Marion Palfi of Mrs. Caleb Hill, titled Wife of a lynching victim. “The photograph has never been exhibited here, but now I think of all the widows we’ve seen in the last few years,” says Best. 

When Best took the job at Harvard nearly two years ago, it was a homecoming of sorts: she had earned an MA and PhD in art history from Harvard after earning a BFA and MFA in photography from the California Institute of the Arts, where she studied with Allan Sekula (she also has a BA in history and art history from Barnard). Before joining Harvard, she was an assistant professor of visual studies at the California College of the Arts. “One of the things we’re known for around Cambridge and Boston is that we encourage slow looking,” says Best. “Photography is a medium people need to stop and look at. People don’t do that now.”

Best’s interest in photography came well before her formal education, growing up in San Francisco and watching the 14-part television documentary Eyes on the Prize with her parents. “I was really taken by the Civil Rights imagery,” she recalls. She read Time and Vanity Fair, cutting out pages and making scrap books out of images she liked, and poring over photography books like I Dream a World: Portraits of Black Women Who Changed America. Later, she volunteered at the now-defunct magazine Photo Metro: “I would open the mail and educate myself about what I was seeing.”

Best’s family wasn’t involved in the arts – her mother was a farmer, and that worldview taught her to ”notice the details and understand the context of events,” says Best – but they were supportive of anything she wanted to do. When she was 16, her mother bought her a camera, and when she wanted a membership to SFMOMA, they got her one. Her mother and step-father worked for the City of San Francisco, and she spent a lot of time at City Hall, which was across the street from SFMOMA at the time. Best attended a prestigious private school, and while her friends from school may have had the resources to travel, she says, “I had this space in the city that was my own, my own space to dream and wander, and I knew I would never forget it. Something really clicked with me.” It’s an experience that she’s brought with her as a curator and teacher: “I was a kid who found a space, and from that space I could think about everything.”