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 ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Dorothea Lange / National Archives Catalog Following the attack on Pearl Harbor, the US instated relocation camps for all ...
Friday: A look at the Golden State’s past, and present, in Dorothea Lange’s images of California workers. By Jill Cowan Woman Holding Pail of Tomatoes, Coachella Valley, March 1935Credit...Dorothea ...
Ars gratia artis is all very well, but how about art for the sake of the Farm Security Administration? In the National Gallery’s new exhibition, “Dorothea Lange: Seeing People,” many of the ...
The most famous photo ever created in San Luis Obispo County is “Migrant Mother.” The image by Dorothea Lange is of a woman under lean-to tent with her children Norma, Katherine and Ruby. A public ...
Dorothea Lange, “White Angel Bread Line, San Francisco” (1933), gelatin silver print, 10 3/4 x 8 7/8 in. The Museum of Modern Art, New York. Gift of Albert M. Bender In the midst of the Great ...
On June 26, Historic Woodland Train Depot board president Richard Wheeler and board member Raylene Ewing accepted a gift of six framed Dorothea Lange photos from Woodland residents Floyd and Ruth ...
Dorothea Lange was a seminal American documentary photographer. Best known for her Depression-era pictures, she compassionately captured the squalid conditions of the people most effected by poverty ...