DOCUMENTARY and PHOTOJOURNALISM PHOTOGRAPHY Lewis Hine Dorothea Lange.

36
DOCUMENTARY and PHOTOJOURNALISM PHOTOGRAPHY Lewis Hine Dorothea Lange

Transcript of DOCUMENTARY and PHOTOJOURNALISM PHOTOGRAPHY Lewis Hine Dorothea Lange.

Page 1: DOCUMENTARY and PHOTOJOURNALISM PHOTOGRAPHY Lewis Hine Dorothea Lange.

DOCUMENTARY and

PHOTOJOURNALISM PHOTOGRAPHY

Lewis HineDorothea Lange

Page 2: DOCUMENTARY and PHOTOJOURNALISM PHOTOGRAPHY Lewis Hine Dorothea Lange.

Lewis Hine (1874 - 1940)

“If I could tell the story in words, I wouldn't need to lug around a camera.”

Page 3: DOCUMENTARY and PHOTOJOURNALISM PHOTOGRAPHY Lewis Hine Dorothea Lange.

•Born in Wisconsin, attended the University of Chicago for a year, and later earned a Masters Degree in education. Came to New York City in 1901, where, a friend hired him to be nature study and geography teacher, and, without any experience, the school photographer for the Ethical Culture School.

•In 1904, began a photographic documentation of immigrants arriving and being processed on Ellis Island – a project he worked on for the next five years.

•As a freelance photographer for the National Child Labor Committee, he traveled widely, photographing (often secretly) children working in the mines, factories, and sweatshops of the eastern U.S. His relentless documentation of child labor mobilized public concern and was instrumental in generating legislative reform.

Page 4: DOCUMENTARY and PHOTOJOURNALISM PHOTOGRAPHY Lewis Hine Dorothea Lange.

•Also photographed slum conditions, conditions in various industries, and street trades. By the beginning of World War I, Hine had achieved considerable fame as a photographer, social worker, and reformer.

•During the 1920’s and early 1930’s, photographed the American working class, produced over 1,000 pictures of the construction of the Empire State Building, and returned to Ellis Island to make a new series of photographs of immigrants.

•Work reflects his belief in pictures as communication and his unwavering support and compassion for the young, the poor, the immigrant, and the worker.

Page 5: DOCUMENTARY and PHOTOJOURNALISM PHOTOGRAPHY Lewis Hine Dorothea Lange.

Ellis Island

Page 6: DOCUMENTARY and PHOTOJOURNALISM PHOTOGRAPHY Lewis Hine Dorothea Lange.

Climbing Into America, Ellis Island (1905)

Page 7: DOCUMENTARY and PHOTOJOURNALISM PHOTOGRAPHY Lewis Hine Dorothea Lange.

Russian Jewess, Ellis Island (1905)

Page 8: DOCUMENTARY and PHOTOJOURNALISM PHOTOGRAPHY Lewis Hine Dorothea Lange.

Italians at Ellis Island (1905)

Page 9: DOCUMENTARY and PHOTOJOURNALISM PHOTOGRAPHY Lewis Hine Dorothea Lange.

Joys and Sorrows on Ellis Island (1905)

                                                     

Page 10: DOCUMENTARY and PHOTOJOURNALISM PHOTOGRAPHY Lewis Hine Dorothea Lange.

Child Labor

Page 11: DOCUMENTARY and PHOTOJOURNALISM PHOTOGRAPHY Lewis Hine Dorothea Lange.

Girl Worker in Carolina Cotton Mill (1908)

Page 12: DOCUMENTARY and PHOTOJOURNALISM PHOTOGRAPHY Lewis Hine Dorothea Lange.

Newsboys and Newsgirl getting Afternoon Papers, Park Row (1910)

Page 13: DOCUMENTARY and PHOTOJOURNALISM PHOTOGRAPHY Lewis Hine Dorothea Lange.

Street Child (1910)

Page 14: DOCUMENTARY and PHOTOJOURNALISM PHOTOGRAPHY Lewis Hine Dorothea Lange.

Playground in Mill Village (1909)

Page 15: DOCUMENTARY and PHOTOJOURNALISM PHOTOGRAPHY Lewis Hine Dorothea Lange.

New York City Tenement (1910)

Page 16: DOCUMENTARY and PHOTOJOURNALISM PHOTOGRAPHY Lewis Hine Dorothea Lange.

Men At Workand

The Empire State Building

Page 17: DOCUMENTARY and PHOTOJOURNALISM PHOTOGRAPHY Lewis Hine Dorothea Lange.

Powerhouse Mechanic (1920)

Page 18: DOCUMENTARY and PHOTOJOURNALISM PHOTOGRAPHY Lewis Hine Dorothea Lange.

Man on Girders, Mooring Mast, Empire State

Building (1931)

Page 19: DOCUMENTARY and PHOTOJOURNALISM PHOTOGRAPHY Lewis Hine Dorothea Lange.

Man on Hoisting Ball, Empire State

Building (1931)

Page 20: DOCUMENTARY and PHOTOJOURNALISM PHOTOGRAPHY Lewis Hine Dorothea Lange.

Worker on Empire State

Building (1931)

Page 21: DOCUMENTARY and PHOTOJOURNALISM PHOTOGRAPHY Lewis Hine Dorothea Lange.

Icarus Atop the Empire State

Building (1931)

Page 22: DOCUMENTARY and PHOTOJOURNALISM PHOTOGRAPHY Lewis Hine Dorothea Lange.

Dorothea Lange (1895 - 1965)

“The camera is an instrument that teaches people how to see without a camera.”

Page 23: DOCUMENTARY and PHOTOJOURNALISM PHOTOGRAPHY Lewis Hine Dorothea Lange.

•Born in New Jersey. Having polio as a young girl left her with a lifelong limp, which she believed heightened her sensitivity to the sufferings of others.

•In 1914, she received her first camera from a portrait photographer on Fifth Avenue. Studied photography at Columbia University from 1917-18. Moved to San Francisco in 1919 and worked as a portrait photographer.

•In 1932, shocked by the number of homeless people in search of work during the Great Depression, she started taking pictures of people in the streets to draw attention to their plight. In 1935, she joined the Farm Security Administration (FSA) and documented the bitter poverty of migrant workers, sharecroppers, and tenant farmers in 22 states of the rural U.S. Her pictures not only showed the hopelessness and despair, but also the pride and dignity with which people endured their circumstances. She was awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship in 1941.

Page 24: DOCUMENTARY and PHOTOJOURNALISM PHOTOGRAPHY Lewis Hine Dorothea Lange.

•With the onset of World War II, from 1942-45, Lange worked for the U.S. War Relocation Agency and the Office of War Information. Many of these photographs were lost in transit.

•After several years of poor health, she conducted photo seminars and participated in conferences from 1950-51, worked as a staff photographer for Life in 1954-55, and again as a freelance photographer from 1958-65 in America, Asia, South America, and the Middle East.

•Placed on the Honor Roll of the American Society of Magazine Photographers in 1963 and has had numerous exhibits in major museums around the world. She died of cancer in California in 1965.

Page 25: DOCUMENTARY and PHOTOJOURNALISM PHOTOGRAPHY Lewis Hine Dorothea Lange.

Street Demonstration, San Francisco

(1933)

Page 26: DOCUMENTARY and PHOTOJOURNALISM PHOTOGRAPHY Lewis Hine Dorothea Lange.

Demonstration Sign, San

Francisco (1934)

Page 27: DOCUMENTARY and PHOTOJOURNALISM PHOTOGRAPHY Lewis Hine Dorothea Lange.

White Angel Bread Line (1932)

Page 28: DOCUMENTARY and PHOTOJOURNALISM PHOTOGRAPHY Lewis Hine Dorothea Lange.

Hoe Culture (1936)

Page 29: DOCUMENTARY and PHOTOJOURNALISM PHOTOGRAPHY Lewis Hine Dorothea Lange.

Cotton Picker (1940)

Page 30: DOCUMENTARY and PHOTOJOURNALISM PHOTOGRAPHY Lewis Hine Dorothea Lange.

Jobless on Edge of Pea Field (1937)

Page 31: DOCUMENTARY and PHOTOJOURNALISM PHOTOGRAPHY Lewis Hine Dorothea Lange.

Back (1938)

Page 32: DOCUMENTARY and PHOTOJOURNALISM PHOTOGRAPHY Lewis Hine Dorothea Lange.

Crossroads Store (1937)

Page 33: DOCUMENTARY and PHOTOJOURNALISM PHOTOGRAPHY Lewis Hine Dorothea Lange.

Near Los Angeles, California

(1938)

Page 34: DOCUMENTARY and PHOTOJOURNALISM PHOTOGRAPHY Lewis Hine Dorothea Lange.

Ditched, Stalled,

Stranded (1935)

Page 35: DOCUMENTARY and PHOTOJOURNALISM PHOTOGRAPHY Lewis Hine Dorothea Lange.

Migrant Family (1936)

Page 36: DOCUMENTARY and PHOTOJOURNALISM PHOTOGRAPHY Lewis Hine Dorothea Lange.

Migrant Mother (1936)