Dorothea Lange was a documentary photographer that was best know for the work she did with farm security administration also known as the FSA. She was born in Hoboken, New Jersey in 1895, and studied photography at Columbia University. Then she went to pursue her career as a portrait photographer in San Francisco. During the Great Depression she decided to take pictures outside of her studio and do it on the streets to report her findings. Her photos of the homeless and unemployed in San Francisco got her a job with the FSA. From 1935 to 1939 her pictures of the poor and needy people was put out for the public to view and realized what was happening around them. One of the most known documentary photographs was done by her, it is the Migrant Mother …show more content…
He was moved multiple times and attended many middle schools. His academic record wasn’t so good and neither was his college experience because he left only after a year. As a child he painted, collected postcards and took pictures of his friends and family with a small Kodak. After he quit college he moved to New york City and worked at the New York Public Library. He went to Paris to try and get better on his French but came back after a year to New York to become a writer. He also started taking pictures as well. Walker Evans had great achievements during the great depression years. In June of 1935 he took a job from the U.S. Department of the Interior to photograph unemployed coal miners in West Virginia. This lead to a full-time position as an information specialist in the Resettlement Administration which later became the farm security administrations. He then was assigned to document small-town life and he had to show how the federal government was trying to improve rural communities during the great depression. He took great pictures that showed traditions such as his pictures of rural churches and
Dorothea Puente was not always a Puente. She was born as Dorothea Helen Gray in Redlands, California on January 9, 1929. Trudy Mae Yates, her mother, and Jesse James Gray, her father, according to Dorothea Puente, were alcoholics and abused her. Her father was a cotton-picker, and Puente claimed that her mother was a prostitute. However, how accurate is this information is debatable since Puente has been proven as a compulsive liar. She has lied about her life since she was young so as to make her seem more interesting to others and gain attention. When she was eight years old, her father died from tuberculosis in 1937. Her mother died a year later from a motorcycle accident in 1938. Left as an orphan at a very young age, she was sent to an
So, he went to Paris, France in the 50s to learn more art techniques, that later helped him advance in his art work. He was always surrounded by creativity, even his brother Joseph Delaney was an aspiring painter. His family of 12 were hardworking people who faced much hardship. His mother was even a slave, and the Delaneys often faced intense racism. Causing only four of the children
In 1935 photojournalist Dorothea Lange was commissioned by the Farm Security Administration, which sought to improve the lives of sharecroppers, migrants, and displaced tenant farmers, to document the lives of people of the Dust Bowl. Although her most famous photos like Migrant Mother and White Angel Breadline are portraits, Lange also photographed many signs and billboards, comparing the text and images on the billboards with the reality migrants faced. Although these photos are not well known, and are relatively simple in composition, when paired with other photos in the Dust Bowl series they reveal how large corporations’ treatment of migrants had corrupted American Pride.
Dorothea was born in May 26, 1895 and died in the year october 1965. Dorothea was a women that took pictures of farmers and people who were unemployed during the great depression. Dorotheas worked for Roy Striker and worked form a security administrator. The times she worked for him, she did not agree with the types of pictures he wanted her to take. During the time of World War I Dorothea took pictures of the japanese when they were headed to the camps.
Who is Walker Evans? Walker Evans was one of many influential photographers along with being a writer. As a writer he found it better to explain his work with his photographs. Walker Evans was born on November 3, 1903 in St. Louis, Missouri. There really isn’t that much information on who his family was or what they did but for now we only know that he did have a father, a mother and had no siblings. However he did have 2 spouses before he died but both marriages didn’t last. Evans also was a painter for a while when he was a younger. Evans’s school life was very hectic. For a year he went to Williams College. After his first year he quit school and moved to New York City, which led him to finding work in bookstores and at the New York
Frances Johnston will be remembered for her love in photography and inspiration for others to follow their dreams as photographer. She was the first woman to have a successful career in artistry, journalist and a photographer. She captured the reality of society and expressed her opinions through pictures.
Lange 's family inspired her later career in photography by exposing her to endless possibilities of creativity. After studying at Columbia University, Lange boldly decided to become a photographer although she knows nothing about photography. Lange said in an interview: "I had never owned a camera, but I just knew that was what I wanted to do" (Oral). She supported her dream with economically plausible means, that is, working in several portrait studios. Using photography as a business rather than artistic expression, Lange started a portrait studio in San Francisco.
Dorothea Lange is one of the most influential documentary photographer and photojournalist of the twentieth century. She was born on May 26, 1895 in Hoboken, New Jersey. Died of esophageal cancer at the age of 70, on October 11, 1965, in San Francisco, California. Her birth name was Dorothea Margaretta Nutzhorn but when she grow up, she drop her middle and last name and adopted her mother last name as a result of the abandonment of her father when she was 12 years old. This event played a big role on her life and made her the woman she was. Another even that marked her life was her contraction of polio when she was seven years old, which left her with a weakened right leg and a permanent limp. Dorothea studied to become a photographer. With
Another important photograph by Lange is “Migrant Mother” where she took the photo in February/March of 1936 in Nipomo, California. She was in the middle of a month’s trip photographing migratory farm labour around the state when she spotted a small camp on the road. “I saw and approached the hungry and desperate mother, as if drawn by a magnet” (Dorothea Lange, 1960). The photo is of a mother named Florence Owen Thompson and her three children huddling together. The mother is in a slouched position, with her hand resting under her chin looking worried. On the mother’s lap is an infant wrapped in a jacket.
She had gone to school for glass making, though finding herself even deeper in the art madness that would soon bring her to her own fame, though since the war had started the school had been shut down and she had left to join the Red Cross and put her passions aside. Her work had mostly been seen as cutouts from a newspaper, some eyes being placed upon a new face and so on. Some seem to have empowered women even. Her work in my opinion was great, just nothing that interests me too much
On January 14, 1928, in Bronx, New York, one of our best photographer was born. At Columbia University where he studied painting, he became a photographer for the school newspaper, this really got Winogrand into photography and the darkroom. He later studied photography on a scholarship at the New School for Social Research, there they taught him to take photos through instinct rather than taking them “the right way”.
He was a Spanish painter and sculptor, born into a wealthy family in Madrid in 1887. He abandoned, at the age of seventeen, his engineering studies to dedicate himself to learn to paint. Two years later, in 1906, he moved to Paris and settled in the prestigious artists’ residence and meeting place, Le Bateau-Lavoir. This is where he met Picasso, Max Jacob, Pierre Reverdy and Guillaume Apollinaire, with whom he contributed to the evolution of Cubism.
“To be nostalgic is to be sentimental. To be interested in what you see that is passing out of history, even if it’s a trolley car you’ve found, that’s not an act of nostalgia,” says Walker Evans.1 Throughout his photographic career Walker Evans was just that, interested in the history that he lived through. As an FSA photographer, Evans mission was to “introduce America to America” and showcase “the reality of its own time and place in history” says Stryker, the leader of the FSA movement.2 Evans produced images that revealed Americas’ despair in the depression, but also the hope for the future. In the photograph “Alabama Cotton Tenant Farmer Family”, Evans portrays an American farming family during the Great Depression.
John went to Pamona College for two years when he realized that college was not for him. After he dropped out he decided that he would travel the world (PBS, 2001). He traveled to Europe for a year and a half and worked with Jose Pijoan for a little while. There he became interested in music and painting. He left Paris, moved to
his own style of writing. As a schoolboy he spent two years in Switzerland and Paris and