7 x 9.75 cm. (2.8 x 3.8 in.) Paul S. Taylor and Dorothea Lange, Migration of drought refugees to California. April 17, 1935 (Washington, D.C.: Farm Security Administration, 1935), p. 12 In Focus: ...
Migrant Woman (1936) might be Dorothea Lange’s most iconic work, but her photographs on assignment documenting Japanese American internment during World War II were so powerful that the U.S.
Migration is global these days. In this country, it echoes the desolation of the 1930s Depression, and the Dust Bowl, when thousands of Americans left home to look for work somewhere ... anywhere. In ...
Two Depression-era American women met for the briefest of moments one day in March, 1936, and it was the fallout from extreme weather -- punishing drought and relentless heat that persisted for years ...
In 1935, President Franklin D. Roosevelt established the Historical Division of the Farm Security Administration with a goal of documenting the individuals, families, and environments impacted by the ...
Introduction: Camera is a tool for learning how to see -- Part 1: Hoboken And San Francisco, 1895-1931 -- Scene 1: -- Child of iron, wounded -- Apprentice to the city -- Becoming a photographer -- ...
Watch “Dorothea Lange — Under The Trees,” an intimate documentary of the American photographer from... Book Excerpts from Dorothea Lange: Grab a Hunk of Lightning Excerpts from the book Dorothea Lange ...
A year after the storm, Dorothea Lange was driving through a California rainstorm. A government photographer on the road for a month, she was already twenty miles past a sign for a pea-pickers' camp ...