BUFFALO, N.Y. -- The life's work and accomplishments of
University at Buffalo scholar Bruce Jackson will be honored during
a special tribute titled "A Celebration of the Arts to Honor Bruce
Jackson: Working in Time" hosted by the Office of the Vice
President for Research and Economic Development on Friday, Sept.
21, 2012, from 1:00 - 5:00 p.m. in Slee Hall on the North
Campus.
A reception in the Center for the Arts Atrium will follow from
5:00 - 6:00 p.m.
The event is free and open to faculty, students, staff and the
community. To RSVP, visit the
web
site.
Vice president for research Alexander Cartwright said, "This
celebration is a new event for us, and one which we hope to do on a
regular basis, perhaps annually. Bruce was a natural first choice
because of his excellence in the arts, which is widely recognized
internationally."
Jackson, SUNY Distinguished Professor in the Department of
English and James Agee Professor of American Culture, said he was
both surprised and delighted when he received news about the
tribute a few months ago.
"Honors like this usually come from elsewhere, not home,"
Jackson said. "At home, they usually only do things like this when
you're retiring or dead, neither of which I am."
The program festivities will open with greetings from UB
president Satish K. Tripathi.
"UB has a long history of leadership in scholarly and creative
excellence at the vanguard of the arts," Tripathi said, "and as we
launch a new annual tradition that celebrates that tradition of
cutting-edge work, Bruce really emerged as an ideal figure to
spotlight in this inaugural event.
"Like much of the very best work in the arts and humanities,
Bruce's work defies easy definition. His films, photographs, social
commentary, and scholarship all cut across multiple fields and have
tremendously broad relevance, from the academy to popular culture,
to international social policy. The incredible scope and reach of
those achievements embody the complex, interdisciplinary
contributions of the arts—and of the research university
itself."
The tribute to Jackson will be moderated by Jackson's wife and
collaborator, Diane Christian, PhD, SUNY Distinguished Teaching
Professor, English.
"This is an important event for the university -- it honors a
senior humanistic scholar and artist and it focuses the celebration
not just on lifetime accomplishments but on the artistic element
and voice," said Christian.
Images from Jackson's forthcoming book "Inside the Wire:
Photographs from Texas and Arkansas Prisons," will be accompanied
by a soundtrack recorded in 1964 and 1966 for "Wake UP Dead Man,"
Jackson's Grammy-nominated CD.
The celebration will also feature the world premiere of "A
Garland for Bruce" by David Felder, SUNY Distinguished Professor
and Birge-Cary Chair in Composition, Department of Music, with
cello performance by Jonathan Golove, associate professor of music
performance.
Jackson describes Felder as "one of the people who makes UB a
viable intellectual and artistic community."
Jackson's long-time friend, renowned documentary filmmaker
Frederick Wiseman, whom he has known since 1965, will deliver a
brief introduction to the screening of his film, "Crazy Horse"
(2011).
This will be followed by an open discussion with Felder, Jackson
and Wiseman.
Jackson is an acclaimed folklorist, ethnographer, documentary
filmmaker and photographer. He has written or edited 32 books, one
of which is "In This Timeless Time: Living and Dying on Death Row
in America," in collaboration with Christian.
His 20 solo photograph exhibits include, "Death Row," on view
this fall at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. In
spring 2013, the Burchfield Penney Art Center will present an
exhibit of more than 350 of his photographs.
Christian, who has been Jackson's colleague for 42 years and
been married to him for 39 said their collaboration has been
wonderful and fun. She said Jackson has been a word artist since he
was a teen-age radio book reviewer and a musical artist who traded
his guitar for his tape recorder when he heard black convict work
songs.
Christian met Jackson in 1970 when she joined the UB English
department. She describes Jackson at that time as a "young Turk"
who worked in multiple media and was an outspoken anti-war activist
and an advocate for the poor and imprisoned.
"I loved his energy and politics and brilliance and his
willingness to use his remarkable academic credentials for social
issues. To me, he was the ideal intellectual. He's also
unapologetically vital and sexy, interesting," she said.
It may be difficult to imagine a career of the depth and breadth
of Jackson's let alone what he might choose as particularly
significant accomplishments. But he is able to identify three
things of which he is especially proud.
"I was able to document black convict work songs--a tradition
derived from slavery and which began in Africa--just before they
disappeared forever, and that the book is still in print, the film
is available on the Web, most of the recordings are in print, and
all the original materials are now in the Library of Congress,
where they are being catalogued and digitized, so they won't be
lost.
"Second that I'm still at it: I was photographing in the
Chihuahuan desert last December, I've done 10,000 photographs of
Buffalo's grain elevators in the past three years, I've
photographed every writer in Just Buffalo's Babel series, and I've
had four university press books published in the past five years
(counting the one about to come out from University of Texas
Press).
"And third, I still love teaching and get great students to hang
out with."
Jackson says that while "it's all been a great deal of fun," one
of the most challenging moments in his career happened on death
row.
"A guy on death row said he wanted to cut my throat and the guy
in the cell next to him said he did too. A few minutes later, I was
in a locked room with them and maybe a dozen other guys and we got
it worked out."
Winner of a Guggenheim fellowship, Jackson has been president of
the American Folklore Society and chairman of the board of trustees
of the American Folklife Center in the Library of Congress.
The French government has twice honored him, in 2002 as
Chevalier de l'Ordre des Arts et des Lettres, and in 2012 as
Chevalier de l'Ordre National du Mérite.
With all of these accolades, Jackson could have gone almost
anywhere to pursue his academic and artistic interests, but he
stayed at UB.
"I've been very lucky here in that I've just about always been
able to teach things I'm really interested in. That's one of the
reasons I've stayed at Buffalo. I'm based in the English
department, but over the years I've been adjunct and taught
graduate classes in art (and now visual studies), sociology, law,
architecture, and even in library science.
"Few universities I know are flexible enough to let someone do
that. I've been able to do all those things in part because UB
provided an environment that nourished that kind of exploration and
experimentation."
When it comes to describing himself, Jackson says he's someone
who gets curious about things and that, like most academics, he
adores questions.