Dorothea Lange
Dorothea Lange (1895-1965) attended the New York Training School for Teachers and from 1917 to 1918, attended a photography course run by Clarence H. White at Columbia University. Lange moved to San Francisco in 1918, and in 1919 she set up a successful portrait studio. With the Stock Market crash of 1929 Lange began to photograph the effects of the economic decline. She had her first one-woman show at the Brockhurst Studio of Willard Van Dyke in Oakland, CA (1934), and in the same year met the economist Paul Schuster Taylor, under whom she worked for the California State Emergency Relief Administration in 1935. Later that year she transferred to the Resettlement Administration, set up to deal with the problem of the migration of agricultural workers. She continued to work for this body, through its various transformations (including its time as the Farm Security Administration), until 1942.
One of her most famous photographs from this project is Migrant Mother, Nipomo, California, 1936, which depicts an anxious, distracted mother and three children. In 1939, in collaboration with Taylor, who provided the text, she published An American Exodus, which dealt with the same social problems. In 1941 she was awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship, and this allowed her to take a series of photographs of religious groups in the USA, such as those of the Amish. In 1942 she worked for the War Relocation Authority and from 1943 to 1945 for the Office of War Information in San Francisco. In 1958–9 she worked with Taylor in East Asia and in 1960 accompanied him to South America. She worked in Egypt and the Middle East in 1962–3, producing such photographs as Procession Bearing Food to the Dead, Upper Egypt in the detached, documentary style that characterizes her work.
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Printer Savant
Lumiere Press and the Art of the Photo Book 20 Jun - 23 Aug 2024An exhibition exploring the relationship between master book maker, Michael Torosian of Lumiere Press and gallerist Howard Greenberg will be on view at Howard Greenberg Gallery from June 20 through...Read more -
One Third of a Nation
The Photographs of the Farm Security Administration 15 Mar - 18 Nov 2020NEW YORK—A tale of America, told through iconic photographs from the 1930s, is the subject of One Third of a Nation: The Photographs of the Farm Security Administration , which...Read more -
The Immigrants
14 Dec 2017 - 27 Jan 2018The Immigrants A Group Exhibition of Works by Select Photographers December 14, 2017 – January 27, 2018 Issues relating to immigration have been front and center in the news, from...Read more -
Scenes from the South 1936 - 2012
3 May - 1 Jun 2013Scenes from the South, 1936-2012 , an exhibition of thirty photographs interweaving historical and contemporary images made in the American South over more than 75 years, will be on view...Read more
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Staff Picks 2012
9 Aug - 8 Sep 2012Howard Greenberg Gallery is pleased to announce our summer exhibition Staff Picks: Favorite Photographs from Our Inventory . An eclectic group of images, chosen by the entire gallery staff, includes...Read more -
Men With Hats; Women With Shoes
9 Aug - 8 Sep 2012Read more -
Selections From Private Collections
29 Apr - 1 Sep 2011Howard Greenberg Gallery is pleased to present Selections from Collections . Comprised of seminal photographs culled from important private collections, the exhibition features a selection of photographs by 20th century...Read more -
Farm Security Administration 1935-1940
14 Sep - 23 Oct 2010Read more
