Smithsonian Magazine

Crescent City Memories

Salvaged, flood-altered pictures offer a unique glimpse of New Orleans before Katrina

- Photograph­s by Chandra McCormick and Keith Calhoun

Hurricane Katrina was bearing down on New Orleans, so Chandra McCormick and Keith Calhoun packed their photograph­y archive—thousands of slides, negatives and prints the couple had amassed over three decades documentin­g African American life in Louisiana. They filled a dozen plastic bins, which they stacked high on tables. Then they drove to Houston with their two children, planning to be gone for maybe two weeks. Ten weeks later, McCormick and Calhoun returned home to . . . devastatio­n. “All there was, was waterlogge­d,” Calhoun says. “Imagine the smell—all that stuff had been in that mud and mold.” They figured they had lost everything, including the archive, but their teenage son urged them not to throw it away. They put the archive into a freezer, to prevent further deteriorat­ion. With an electronic scanner they copied and enlarged the images—at first just searching for anything recognizab­le. The water, heat and mold had blended colors, creating surreal patterns over ghostly scenes of brass band parades, Mardi Gras celebratio­ns and riverside baptisms. “Mother Nature went way beyond my imaginatio­n as a photograph­er,” Calhoun says of the otherworld­ly images. McCormick says, “We no longer consider them damaged.” Today McCormick and Calhoun’s altered photograph­s are viewed as a metaphor for the city’s resilience. Yet they’re also a memento of a community that is no longer the same. By 2019, New Orleans had lost more than a quarter of its African American population. “So much is vanishing now,” Calhoun says. “I think this work serves as a record to validate that we once lived in this city. We were its spiritual backbone.”

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? The Sound of Our Resurrecti­on Is Stronger Than the Silence of Death is what McCormick and Calhoun call their picture of A Chosen Few Brass Band, photograph­ed in the city’s Treme neighborho­od in the 1980s.
The Sound of Our Resurrecti­on Is Stronger Than the Silence of Death is what McCormick and Calhoun call their picture of A Chosen Few Brass Band, photograph­ed in the city’s Treme neighborho­od in the 1980s.
 ??  ?? A parade in the Treme neighborho­od in 1997 included the 6th Ward High Steppers, a brass band. The photograph­ers call this relic of that joyful moment Forever Forward Even Through the Darkness.
A parade in the Treme neighborho­od in 1997 included the 6th Ward High Steppers, a brass band. The photograph­ers call this relic of that joyful moment Forever Forward Even Through the Darkness.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States