Current:Home > InvestIn today's global migrant crisis, echoes of Dorothea Lange's American photos -PrimeWealth Guides
In today's global migrant crisis, echoes of Dorothea Lange's American photos
View
Date:2025-04-14 00:28:26
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 Dorothea Lange: Seeing People an exhibition at the National Gallery in Washington, D.C., the photographer shows the desolation of those days. Migrant Mother, her best-known picture, from 1936, is a stark reminder of the times
Curator Philip Brookman sees worry in the migrant mother's face. Three children, the older ones clinging to her. She's Florence Owens Thompson. Thirty two years old, beautiful once. Now staring into an uncertain future, wondering about survival.
But Brookman also sees "a tremendous amount of resilience and strength in her face as well."
It's an American face, but you could see it today in Yemen, Darfur, Gaza.
Lange was worlds away 16 years earlier in San Francisco. She started out as a portrait photographer. Her studio was "the go-to place for high society" Brookman says.
For this portrait of Mrs. Gertrude Fleishhacker, Lange used soft focus and gentle lighting. Researcher Elizabeth Fortune notices "she's wearing a beautiful long strand of pearls." And sits angled on the side. An unusual pose for 1920. Lange and some of her photographer friends were experimenting with new ways to use their cameras. Less formal poses, eyes away from the lens.
But soon, Lange left her studio and went to the streets. It was the Depression. "She wanted to show in her pictures the kind of despair that was developing on the streets of San Francisco," Fortune says. White Angel Breadline is "a picture she made after looking outside her studio window."
Fortune points out Lange's sensitivity to her subject: "He's anonymous. She's not taking anything from him. He's keeping his dignity, his anonymity. And yet he still speaks to the plight of a nation in crisis.
A strong social conscience keeps Lange on the streets. She becomes a documentary photographer — says it lets her see more.
"It was a way for her to understand the world," Fortune says.
The cover of the hefty exhibition catalogue shows a tightly cropped 1938 photo of a weathered hand, holding a weathered cowboy hat. "A hat is more than a covering against sun and wind," Lange once said. "It is a badge of service."
The photographs of Dorothea Lange serve our understanding of a terrible time in American history. Yet in its humanity, its artistry, it speaks to today.
More on Dorothea Lange
veryGood! (3)
Related
- SFO's new sensory room helps neurodivergent travelers fight flying jitters
- Get (on) my swamp! You can book Shrek's home on Airbnb this fall
- Pioneering Black portraitist Barkley L. Hendricks is first artist of color to get solo show at Frick
- With spying charges behind him, NYPD officer now fighting to be reinstated
- Newly elected West Virginia lawmaker arrested and accused of making terroristic threats
- Ex-prosecutor who resigned from Trump-Russia probe nears confirmation to Connecticut’s Supreme Court
- Police chief in Massachusetts charged with insider trading will resign
- Nearly 600 days since Olympic skater's positive drug test revealed, doping hearing starts
- Google unveils a quantum chip. Could it help unlock the universe's deepest secrets?
- Why Fans Think Travis Kelce Gave a Subtle Nod to Taylor Swift Ahead of NFL Game
Ranking
- US wholesale inflation accelerated in November in sign that some price pressures remain elevated
- Brooks Robinson, Orioles third baseman with 16 Gold Gloves, has died. He was 86
- Donatella Versace slams Italian government’s anti-gay policies from La Scala stage
- Temple University chancellor to take over leadership amid search for new president
- 2025 'Doomsday Clock': This is how close we are to self
- Can't buy me love? Think again. New Tinder $500-a-month plan offers heightened exclusivity
- Louisiana’s struggle with influx of salt water prompts a request for Biden to declare an emergency
- Hunter Biden sues Rudy Giuliani and another lawyer over accessing and sharing of his personal data
Recommendation
Moving abroad can be expensive: These 5 countries will 'pay' you to move there
Defendant in Michigan fake elector case seeks dismissal of charges over attorney general’s comments
A woman died after falling from a cliff at a Blue Ridge Parkway scenic overlook in North Carolina
Cost of building a super-size Alabama prison rises to more than $1 billion
Paige Bueckers vs. Hannah Hidalgo highlights women's basketball games to watch
Writers will return to work on Wednesday, after union leadership votes to end strike
Public to weigh in on whether wild horses that roam Theodore Roosevelt National Park should stay
U.S. sues Amazon in a monopoly case that could be existential for the retail giant