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Dorothea Lange

Adapted from Wikipedia · Adventurer experience

Dorothea Lange, a famous photographer, sitting on her car with her camera in California.

Dorothea Lange was an American photographer and photojournalist, born on May 26, 1895, and passed away on October 11, 1965. She is best known for her photographs taken during the Great Depression. Her work helped people understand the hard times many families faced.

Lange worked for the Farm Security Administration, taking pictures that showed the real struggles of everyday people. Her photographs told important stories about life during difficult times and changed how people thought about documentary photography. Through her camera, she showed the world the strength and challenges of those affected by the Great Depression.

Early life

Dorothea Lange was born in Hoboken, New Jersey to parents from Germany. She had a younger brother named Martin. When she was seven, she got a disease called polio, which made her right leg weaker and gave her a lasting limp.

When she was twelve, her father left the family, and they moved to a less wealthy area in New York City. She grew up in Manhattan's Lower East Side, attending PS 62 on Hester Street. While her mother worked, she watched people from a distance. This helped her learn to observe others carefully, a skill that would become important in her work as a photographer.

Career

Lange finished school at the Wadleigh High School for Girls in New York City and decided she wanted to be a photographer. She studied at Columbia University with a teacher named Clarence H. White.

In 1918, Lange moved to San Francisco. She worked in a photography shop and later opened her own portrait studio. When the Great Depression began, she started taking photos of people who were struggling.

Lange’s photos of people affected by the Depression caught attention and led to her work for government agencies. Her pictures showed the hard lives of many families who had lost jobs and homes. Her work showed the real struggles of everyday people during a difficult time.

Lange later married economist Paul Schuster Taylor, and they traveled together, documenting poverty and the lives of workers.

In 1941, Lange chose to document the forced relocation of Japanese Americans during World War II. Her photos showed families waiting to leave their homes.

In 1945, Lange began teaching photography at the California School of Fine Arts, now called the San Francisco Art Institute.

Aperture and Life

In 1952, Lange helped start a photography magazine called Aperture. A few years later, Life magazine asked Lange and Pirkle Jones to take pictures of a town in Monticello, California. The town was disappearing because a dam was being built on Putah Creek to create Lake Berryessa. Even though Life magazine decided not to use these photos, Lange used them for an issue of Aperture. This work was later shown at the Art Institute of Chicago in 1960.

Lange also worked on another project for Life magazine starting in 1954. This project looked at how people with limited money were treated in court. She became interested in this topic because of her brother’s experience when he was arrested and went to trial.

Death and legacy

Unemployed lumber worker goes with his wife to the bean harvest. Note social security number tattooed on his arm. Oregon.

Dorothea Lange's health got worse in her last years. She died from a sickness of the throat on October 11, 1965, in San Francisco, at the age of seventy. She is remembered for her important work.

After she died, a big art place in New York showed many of her photos. In 2020, they showed her work again and talked about how her pictures told important stories about history. Over the years, she was honored in many places and schools were even named after her. Her pictures helped people remember hard times and important moments in history.

Art market

In May 2023, an art event in New York sold a big, old photograph called Migrant Mother for more money than people expected.

Collections

Dorothea Lange's photographs are kept in many famous places around the world. Some of these places include the Kalamazoo Institute of Arts, the Museum of Modern Art in New York, the Whitney Museum of American Art, the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, the National Gallery of Victoria in Melbourne, Australia, and the Oakland Museum of California.

Images

A mother and her children during the Great Depression, capturing a moment of resilience and everyday life in 1930s America.
A family from Missouri traveling during the Great Depression, captured by photographer Dorothea Lange in 1937.
Dorothea Lange, a famous photographer, sitting on a car with her camera in California during the 1930s.

Related articles

This article is a child-friendly adaptation of the Wikipedia article on Dorothea Lange, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

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