Lange, Dorothea
Dorothea Lange (born Dorothea Margaretta Nutzhorn; May 26, 1895 – October 11, 1965) was an American documentary photographer and photojournalist, best known for her Depression-era work for the Farm Security Administration (FSA). Lange's photographs influenced the development of documentary photography and humanized the consequences of the Great Depression.
Read more on Wikipedia →Artworks by Lange, Dorothea
Vietnam
Lange, Dorothea
On the Great Plains, near Winner, South Dakota
Lange, Dorothea
John and Dan Dixon, Berkeley, California
Lange, Dorothea
Mexican American child, San Francisco
Lange, Dorothea
Near Coolidge, Arizona. Migratory cotton picker with his cotton sack slung over his shoulder rests at the scales before returning to work in the field.
Lange, Dorothea
Grandfather and grandson of Japanese ancestry at a War Relocation Authority center, Manzanar, California
Lange, Dorothea
Street Demonstration, San Francisco
Lange, Dorothea
Farm Security Administration camp for migrant agricultural workers at Shafter, California
Lange, Dorothea
Grayson, San Joaquin Valley, California
Lange, Dorothea
Power farming displaces tenants from the land in the western dry cotton area, Childress County, Texas
Lange, Dorothea
Formerly enslaved woman, Alabama
Lange, Dorothea
White Angel breadline, San Francisco, California
Lange, Dorothea
Nettie Featherston, wife of a migratory laborer with three children, near Childress, Texas
Lange, Dorothea
Sharecropper's cabin and sharecropper's wife, 10 miles south of Jackson, Mississippi
Lange, Dorothea
Springtime in Berkeley, California
Lange, Dorothea
End of shift, 3:30, shipyard construction workers, Richmond, California
Lange, Dorothea
Filipinos cutting lettuce, Salinas Valley, California
Lange, Dorothea
Grayson, San Joaquin Valley, California
Lange, Dorothea
General Strike, San Francisco
Lange, Dorothea
Filipinos cutting lettuce, Salinas Valley, California
Lange, Dorothea