Bud Lee (1941-2015) is a self-taught photographer, who first took
up a camera professionally in the military and received fine art
training at the National Academy in New York. He had an
idiosyncratic eye unconstrained by the conventions of documentary
photography. Between 1967 and 1974, he worked on assignment for
Life, Esquire, Rolling Stone, and many other publications, somehow
finding himself at the centre of some of the biggest stories of the
time. An outsider who got insider access, his work is poetic and
painterly, occasionally droll and irreverent. The War Is Here is
the first book to collect his photographs.
The Honorable Ras J. Baraka is the 40th Mayor of the City of
Newark. Born and raised in Newark, with family who've lived in the
city for more than 80 years, Mayor Baraka's progressive approach to
governing has won him accolades from grassroots organizations to
the White House. His father, the late Amiri Baraka, a legendary
poet, playwright and political activist, was intimately connected
with the events that occurred in Newark in 1967.
Chris Campion is a British author, journalist, and editor, and has
written for publications that include The Guardian, The Times (UK),
Los Angeles Times, Rolling Stone, NME, Dazed & Confused, and Vice.
He is an archivist for the Estate of Bud Lee, the editor of The War
Is Here, and contributes an essay on Bud Lee and the story behind
photographs, entitled "On Avon, Between Badger and Livingston".
"The Summer of 1967 lives in the DNA of our city-the traumatic
pain, the savage injustices, the violence and destruction. Also,
what was born from that summer was a Newark with a better
understanding of its own indelible core. The stirring images within
The War is Here bring Newark's summer of 1967 back to life in vivid
detail, reminding us that the past is with us."
-New Jersey Senator Cory Booker
"Bud Lee captures the 1967 Newark riots.... Lee's pictures opened
up a nationwide debate about police violence. A new book, The War
Is Here: Newark 1967, collects those images, many of them
unpublished, and reinhabits not only the fear and the violence-but
also ... the defiance of that bloody week in Newark history."
-Tim Adams, The Observer
"The War Is Here represents one of the most comprehensive
collections of photos about the 1967 Newark Rebellion and Billy
Furr that I have ever seen. It tells a story of police violence,
community response, and the destructive narrative that was like a
weight upon the city of Newark for many years. I can appreciate it
both as a memorial to the photographer, who I never met, and as a
story about what we once endured."
-Junius Williams, Official Newark Historian, author of Unfinished
Agenda: Urban Politics in the Era of Black Power
"Bud Lee was a graphic storyteller who made informative, often
gripping, pictures of despair and anger. He watched and documented
Billy Furr being fatally shot in the back and the critical wounding
of twelve-year-old Joey Bass, Jr. His photographs of death and
destruction were given the cover and a six-page feature in Life.
Six pages and a cover were effective then, but now we have The War
Is Here, an in-depth record by a gifted and empathetic
photographer, 'lest we forget.'"
-Anne Wilkes Tucker, Gus and Lyndall Wortham Curator of Photography
Emerita at the Museum of Fine Arts Houston.
"Powerful."
-Dave Simpson, The Guardian
"We live in a time when journalists, including photojournalists,
have lost the public trust. Bud Lee was a reporter. He wasn't
seeking to impress you with his singular vision. He was in Newark
to look, listen, and report on the complex, tragic events unfolding
in front of him. And he did his job, but it's the way that Bud Lee
addressed the tragedy that sets him apart. We see that in The War
Is Here."
-Eugene Richards, photojournalist (formerly with Magnum Photos, now
VII Photo Agency), author of Cocaine True, Cocaine Blue, The Fat
Baby, and War Is Personal
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