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This picture, Migrant Mother, is one of
the best known images in photography. It is great. But you don't need me to
tell you that.
The un-named subject, a victim of the 1930's
depression, is just 32 years old. She and her children were living in a tent,
and barely surviving on whatever food - vegetables, wild birds - they could
find in the frozen fields.
Lange was born in 1885 in New Jersey, and was
studying to become a teacher when she discovered photography. She studied with
Clarence White at Columbia then opened her own portrait studio in San
Francisco. In the 1930's she started to use her camera to record the plight of
San Franscisco's poor in the depression. Her photographs were noticed by Paul
Taylor, an Economics professor and social activist, and she started to work
with him.
In 1935 she was recruited to Roy Stryker's
team of photographers in the Resettlement Administration, later renamed the
Farm Security Administration or FSA. Along with Walker Evans, Ben Shahn, Arthur
Rothstein, Russel Lee, and Carl Mydans she produced some of the finest ever
social documentary, including this picture.
Lange left full time work with the unit in
1937, though she continued to do occasional work for it until it was disbanded
in 1942. She continued to work and exhibit right up to her death in
1965.
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