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What Hiram Maristany Saw Looking Through The Lens At El Barrio

"Kite Flying on Rooftop," 1964
Hiram Maristany
/
Smithsonian American Art Museum
"Kite Flying on Rooftop," 1964

Photographer Hiram Maristany first picked up a camera as a teenager in 1959 at the urging of a social worker named Dan Murrow. He used it to document his world in El Barrio — or East Harlem — a close and vibrant Puerto Rican community that regularly dealt with poverty and violence. His photographs show metaphors for hope in scenes of everyday life, without glossing over the grit.

But unless you closely follow the Puerto Rican Arts Movement or go to a lot of art shows in East Harlem, you may not have seen his work. Maristany is protective about sharing his photographs online, and some of his newer work remains unscanned.

Luckily, some of his photos are on display at the Smithsonian American Art Museum as part of Down These Mean Streets: Community and Place in Urban Photography. The show celebrates the work of 10 Latinx photographers who belong to the communities they document.

"Group of Young Men on 111th Street," 1966 — "In some form or another they're all reaching, touching each other. That is something of a different generation," Maristany says. He says people ask him how he got them all to touch each other. "'Did you instruct them to do that?' And I said, "No I had nothing to do with that. It was the way they felt comfortable with each other."
/ Hiram Maristany/ Smithsonian American Art Museum
/
Hiram Maristany/ Smithsonian American Art Museum
"Group of Young Men on 111th Street," 1966 — "In some form or another they're all reaching, touching each other. That is something of a different generation," Maristany says. He says people ask him how he got them all to touch each other. "'Did you instruct them to do that?' And I said, "No I had nothing to do with that. It was the way they felt comfortable with each other."

Having an exhibit at the Smithsonian is a big deal for Maristany, but to some people in his community, he's still just the guy with a camera.

"Casa Evita," 1965
/ Hiram Maristany/ Smithsonian American Art Museum
/
Hiram Maristany/ Smithsonian American Art Museum
"Casa Evita," 1965

"They refer to the Smithsonian as Smith and Wesson," he says. "'You finally got into the Smith and Wesson. What's the big deal?'" he recounts a family member in El Barrio saying. "He doesn't mean any harm, he just has a different perspective."

The photographers included in the show vary in approach and location, but the exhibit uses the "urban crisis" — a period in the mid-20th century when American cities were gutted by highway construction, abandoned by many for the suburbs, and left to cope — as a jumping off point for a visual conversation on the duality that exists in those places.

"Children at Play," 1965, Printed 2016
Hiram Maristany / Smithsonian American Art Museum
/
Smithsonian American Art Museum
"Children at Play," 1965, Printed 2016

"You see this beauty and you see this destruction, and it's like how do you reconcile that? How do you express outrage over that?" asks curator E. Carmen Ramos as she walks through the gallery looking at the images she picked for the exhibit. "I see a lot of these works as a form of intervention."

That was certainly the case for Maristany, who used the photography skills he'd developed as a young teen to document the activism of the Young Lords starting in 1969. The radical Latino (mostly Puerto Rican) activist group was inspired by the Black Panthers and Maristany was not only a member, he was the official documentarian. But his work wasn't always so overtly political.

"Young Man with Roses," 1971 — "Who are the flowers for? There's two stories. For his girlfriend, or for his mother. In East Harlem, you do not walk around with roses in your hand. If you do, you are a badass. This is no joke of a man. He's a gentle giant who wouldn't harm a fly. I think they were for his girlfriend, but it was easier for him to say they were for his mother."
/ Hiram Maristany/ Smithsonian American Art Museum
/
Hiram Maristany/ Smithsonian American Art Museum
"Young Man with Roses," 1971 — "Who are the flowers for? There's two stories. For his girlfriend, or for his mother. In East Harlem, you do not walk around with roses in your hand. If you do, you are a badass. This is no joke of a man. He's a gentle giant who wouldn't harm a fly. I think they were for his girlfriend, but it was easier for him to say they were for his mother."

While Maristany acknowledges the difficulties of life in El Barrio, showing the positive aspects of the neighborhood motivated him.

"Clothing Drive," 1971
/ Hiram Maristany/ Smithsonian American Art Museum
/
Hiram Maristany/ Smithsonian American Art Museum
"Clothing Drive," 1971

"That I even survived was a major accomplishment," he says, but adds, "there were a lot of people who cared about each other, who did a lot of positive and beautiful things that never got recognized. East Harlem was always represented in the most negative way that the media would portray it."

A lot has changed for East Harlem since the 1970s. Last year The New York Times called it one of the "Next Hot Neighborhoods." But Maristany has been there through it all. Fifty years after many of these images were taken, I asked him if he'd kept in touch with any of the people in these photos. "They're all around me I can't get away from them," he laughs.

"The Gathering," 1964 — One of the people in this photo asked Maristany "half a dozen times," to take their portrait. "One day they said, 'Are you gonna do this?'" As Maristany was looking down to take their photo with a 70mm camera, the sitter's friends joined in the frame. "This was over 50 years ago," he says, "When that person died, I went to their services with prints to give to the family."
/ Hiram Maristany/ Smithsonian American Art Museum
/
Hiram Maristany/ Smithsonian American Art Museum
"The Gathering," 1964 — One of the people in this photo asked Maristany "half a dozen times," to take their portrait. "One day they said, 'Are you gonna do this?'" As Maristany was looking down to take their photo with a 70mm camera, the sitter's friends joined in the frame. "This was over 50 years ago," he says, "When that person died, I went to their services with prints to give to the family."

While Maristany has always lived among his photographic muses and says he knows 80 percent of his subjects, it's not exactly true that he can't get away from them. Many are simply no longer there.

He went to a Father's Day event, and says, "there was food, there was music, there was good companionship. That used to happen all the time. Now it's rare. I took some photos of my contemporaries. It was a celebration of a different era. It's the exception rather than the rule. Each year there are fewer and fewer of us. Most of the Puerto Ricans who are still here are seniors; the young children cannot afford to live in East Harlem."

"Lechón / Roasting Pig in Alley," 1971 — At first Maristany walked past this this group of people roasting a pig and listening to music, and then he decided to turn around, leaning over the edge to take this photo. "This was taken at an auto repair place that was an excuse to drink beer."
/ Hiram Maristany/ Smithsonian American Art Museum
/
Hiram Maristany/ Smithsonian American Art Museum
"Lechón / Roasting Pig in Alley," 1971 — At first Maristany walked past this this group of people roasting a pig and listening to music, and then he decided to turn around, leaning over the edge to take this photo. "This was taken at an auto repair place that was an excuse to drink beer."

The dissolving of community, Maristany says, "is the first level of gentrification. The destruction of history is another level."

It makes sense that reverence for history is valued by someone who has dedicated his life to documenting what he sees.

"Every day I see people coming out with suitcases and they are oblivious to the history who was here before them. They're oblivious to the history that this community was an Italian community, further back an Irish community, further back a Jewish community," he says. "That history is gone because the gentrifiers don't care about history. They believe the party begins when they arrive."

"Night View," 1961 — "It's a photograph of my block ... [I was] showing that in the midst of this poverty there was extraordinary beauty. And rarely, rarely did we ever see it. So I was pleased when people did see it ... I just remember looking through the viewfinder and thinking once I let the shutter release go. I felt it, I knew there was something unique and special about what just occurred."
/ Hiram Maristany/ Smithsonian American Art Museum
/
Hiram Maristany/ Smithsonian American Art Museum
"Night View," 1961 — "It's a photograph of my block ... [I was] showing that in the midst of this poverty there was extraordinary beauty. And rarely, rarely did we ever see it. So I was pleased when people did see it ... I just remember looking through the viewfinder and thinking once I let the shutter release go. I felt it, I knew there was something unique and special about what just occurred."

And yet Maristany keeps at it, documenting a changing community. He hopes his art will encourage someone else to thoughtfully pick up a camera.

"Some younger artists need to hear my voice," he says. "I hope for young people who are in similar realities, it will give them inspiration to love their community, to love their culture, to love their people, to be engaged."

Maristany says when he first told his mother he wanted to be a professional photographer, her response was dream destroying: "'Hiram, there's no such thing as a Puerto Rican photographer.' But three months later I came back and said, 'Well Ma, I'm gonna be the first one.' She looked at me and smiled and said, 'Why did it take you so long?'"

You can see more images from Down These Mean Streets: Community and Place in Urban Photography here.

Copyright 2023 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

Corrected: August 3, 2017 at 10:00 PM MDT
A previous version of this story incorrectly identified curator E. Carmen Ramos as Carmen E. Ramos.
Becky Harlan is a visual and engagement editor for NPR's Life Kit.
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