Master Photographers of the 1920s, 1930s & 1940s

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Transcript Master Photographers of the 1920s, 1930s & 1940s

Master Photographers
of the 1920s, 1930s & 1940s
{
Edward Weston
Dorothea Lange
Gordon Parks
Edward Weston
(1886 – 1958)
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Has been called “one of the
most innovative and influential
American photographers”
Weston photographed a wide
variety of subjects, including
still lifes, landscapes, nudes,
and portraits
Focused on the people and
places of the American West
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Born in Chicago and moved to
California at age 21
Knew he wanted to be a
photographer from an early age
Attended the Illinois School of
Photography
Opened his own studio in 1911,
taking portraits of children and
friends
Gained recognition for his work
and won prizes in national
competitions
Weston in 1915
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His early work was part of a
photography movement called
“pictoralism”
Pictoralists manipulated their
images to make them look more
artistic
Images often lacked sharp focus,
were printed in colours other
than black & white, and had
visible brushstrokes or other
surface textures
Karl and Ethel, 1923
Other examples of Weston’s early Pictoralist work
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He moved to Mexico from 1923 to 1927 and the
different culture and scenery forced him to look at
things in new ways
He moved away from pictoralism and embraced
realism
“The camera should be used for a recording of life,
for rendering the very substance and quintessence of
the thing itself…I feel definite in the belief that the
approach to photography is through realism”
Janitzio, Patzcuaro, 1926
Charrito, 1926
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Weston is well known for many of the nude portraits
he took throughout the 1920s and 1930s
His photos often isolated specific body parts and
reduced the human figure down to its basic forms
Nude, 1925
Nude, 1927
Nude, 1936
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Weston developed a similar interest in the organic
forms of fruits, vegetables, rocks, and seashells
Shell, 1927
Pepper No. 30, 1930
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In 1937, Weston was the first photographer to receive
a Guggenheim Fellowship
In 1947 he was diagnosed with Parkinson's disease
and he stopped photographing soon thereafter
He spent the remaining ten years of his life
overseeing the printing of more than 1,000 of his
most famous images
Weston died at age 71 in Big Sur, California
Dorothea Lange
(1895 – 1965)
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An influential American
documentary photographer
and photojournalist
Best known for her
Depression-era work for the
US government
Lange's photographs
humanized the consequences
of the Great Depression
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Born in Hoboken, New Jersey
Educated in photography at
Columbia University in New
York City
Moved to San Francisco in
1918 and opened a successful
portrait studio the following
year
When the Great Depression
began in 1929, Lange turned
her camera lens from the
studio to the street
White Angel Bread Line, San
Francisco, 1933
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Lange’s photos of
unemployed and
homeless people led
to her employment
with the federal Farm
Security
Administration
From 1935 to 1939,
Lange documented
sharecroppers,
displaced farm
families, and migrant
workers
Poor mother and children,
Oklahoma, 1936
Mississippi Delta Children, 1936
Mother & children, Tulelake,
California, 1939
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Distributed free to
newspapers across the
country, Lange’s images
became icons of the era
Her best-known picture is
titled "Migrant Mother“
“I saw and approached the
hungry and desperate
mother, as if drawn by a
magnet. She had just sold
the tires from her car to buy
food.”
Migrant Mother, 1936
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In 1941, Lange was awarded a
Guggenheim Fellowship for
excellence in photography
Following the attack on Pearl
Harbor, she covered the
internment of Japanese
Americans
Her images were so obviously
critical that the Army
impounded most of them, and
they were not seen publicly for
more than 50 years
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In 1945, Lange was invited to teach photography at
the California School of Fine Arts
In 1952, she co-founded the photographic magazine
Aperture
Lange died of esophageal cancer on October 11, 1965
in San Francisco, California at age 70
Gordon Parks
(1912 – 2006)
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An American photographer,
musician, writer and film
director
Parks was the first AfricanAmerican staff photographer
for Life magazine and later
the first African-American to
direct a major motion picture
He is known for his striking
fashion photography
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Parks was born in Fort Scott,
Kansas and attended a
segregated elementary school
At the age of 25, he was struck
by photographs of migrant
workers in a magazine and
bought his first camera
The photography clerks who
developed Parks' first roll of
film, applauded his work and
prompted him to seek work as
a fashion photographer
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Parks moved to Chicago in
1940, where he began a
portrait business and
specialized in photographs
of society women
In 1944, he became a
freelance fashion
photographer for Vogue
He developed a distinctive
style, often photographing
his models in motion, or
casual poses
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His photographs seemed like he caught his subjects off
guard and mid-action, as if they were waiting for a bus,
in the middle of shopping, or expecting a lunch date
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Parks composed his images dramatically and made
them seem as if they were part of a narrative
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In 1948, Parks began a staff
job as a photographer and
writer with Life magazine
For 20 years, he covered
subjects including fashion,
sports, Broadway, poverty,
racial segregation, and
portraits of famous
celebrities
In 1971, Parks directed the
major hit film Shaft
He died of cancer at the
age of 93 while living in
Manhattan
Muhammad Ali, Miami, Florida,
1966