Skip to main content

Home/ mapjd@lcc/ Group items tagged 195

Rss Feed Group items tagged

paul lowe

Unit 2 The Interpreter with Jenny Good - 0 views

  •  
    Reading: Andy Grundberg, Crisis of the Real, 1990, chs: 'The New Photojournalism and the Old', & 'Magnum's Postwar Paradox' (pp. 184-195). and/or: Martha Rosler, 'In, Around, and Afterthoughts (on Documentary Photography)', in Liz Wells, The Photography Reader, 2003, pp.261-271.
paul lowe

AMERICANSUBURB X: THEORY - "Walker Evans and American Life" - 0 views

  •  
    THEORY - "Walker Evans and American Life" Scavenging the Landscape: Walker Evans and American life Afterimage, Jan-Feb, 1996 by Melissa Rachleff The Great American Depression, spanning the 1930s, inscribed into the culture a psychic crisis. Faith in industrial ingenuity, heralded as "progressive," came unhinged. By 1933, four years after the stock market crash, one quarter of the work force was unemployed.(1) Into this dilemma came a multitude of photographic projects, the most famous of which were sponsored by the federal government in the form of agencies that provided relief to farmers, the unemployed and others. The most completely realized project was the documentation of conditions faced by displaced farmers, recorded by the Historic Section of the Resettlement Administration (RA), later the Farm Security Administration (FSA). The socially-oriented photographic book made its appearance, as did the photographic magazine, best exemplified by Life in 1936. Many of the best known American photographers came to prominence during the Depression, including Berenice Abbott, Dorothea Lange, Gordon Parks and Margaret Bourke-White. Of all the photographers from that era, one represented the quintessential photographic style of the Depression while remaining an elusive figure in photographic history: Walker Evans (1903-1975).
1 - 2 of 2
Showing 20 items per page