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The history of the world is far deeper, broader, and stranger than just political backstabbing, epic battles, and dusty ...
The identity of the “Woman of the High Plains” was revealed in 1979—but five years later, Nettie Featherston was forgotten ...
This notable set of 70 photographs, spanning the years 1919 to 1932, offers Lange's personal observations of a close friend's children growing from infants to young adults.
This was the caption Dorothea Lange wrote to go with her photograph of five displaced tenant farmers, looking dejected but calm in front of a house in Hardeman County, Tex., in 1937.
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 ...
Nearly 100 years ago, Lange chronicled the destitution and desperation of The Great Depression. An exhibition of her work at the National Gallery of Art speaks to the present day migrant crisis.
A new exhibition explores the work of legendary photographer Dorothea Lange, who captured some of the most striking images ever shot of American poverty, hardship and resilience.
3. Native American Girl, Taos, New Mexico, 1931 Native American Girl is one of a series of images of the same child that Lange took on a family trip with her husband and children. At the time ...
Dorothea Lange’s photograph Japanese American-Owned Grocery Store, Oakland, California (1942) Courtesy National Gallery of Art, Washington ...
The WRA hired photographers, notably Ansel Adams and Dorothea Lange, to document the camps for the public. Japanese Americans form a line in San Francisco to appear for "processing" on April 25, 1942.
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