Censored by the US Army, Dorothea Lange's unseen photographs are the extraordinary photographic record of the Japanese American internment saga. This work of visual and social history confirms Lange's stature as one of the twentieth century's greatest American photographers. "Impounded" evokes the horror of a community uprooted in the early 1940s ...
Throughout her long working life, Dorothea Lange was an exceptional, often brilliant photographer. In the historic decade of the thirties, she was more - a pioneer, a shaper of the medium, and a motivator of the national conscience. Lange's direct, compelling studies of people forced from the land are both a faithful chronicle and a landmark of ...
A selection of the photographs Dorothea Lange took in Ireland on a "Life" magazine assignment in 1954, with a text written by her son, Dan Dixon, who accompanied her. Gerry Mullins has written a new accompanying essay that takes into account a few aspects of Irish life that Lange left out, in particular the pubs.
A revealing look at the changing face of the American landscape, from the 1850s to today, as depicted by some of America's greatest photographers. 150 photographs provide a fascinating view of our land, juxtaposing what it once looked like with what it is today.
An intriguing collection of archival photographs from the late 1930s and 1940s, depicting women's lives in rural New Mexico. Noted photographers Dorthea Lange, Russell Lee, John Collier, Arthur Rothstein and others produced these compelling images for the Farm Security Administration as part of the WPA project. The images, many showing women ...
In 1937 Margaret Jarman Hagood visited 254 tenant houses in the Carolina Piedmont, Georgia and Alabama, talking with and listening to southern mothers. This text records not only the results of her work, but the voices, attitudes and expectations of the people interviewed.
This book contains a collection of previousl y unpublished photographs taken by Dorothea Lange in 1954, w hich depict Ireland''s customs, mores, population, atmosphere and the texture of its life. '
First published in 1939, An American Exodus is one of the masterpieces of the documentary genre. Produced by incomparable documentary photographer Dorothea Lange with text by her husband, Paul Taylor, An American Exodus was taken in the early 1930s while the couple were working for the Farm Security Administration (FSA) The book documents the ...
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