Following the attack on Pearl Harbor, the US instated relocation camps for all Americans of Japanese descent. Photographer Dorothea Lange was hired by the government to document the camps, but her ...
Dorothea Lange was driving by a pea pickers' camp on the California coast when she stumbled across a weary mother and her many children huddled in a lean-to. Advertisement Article continues below this ...
Hardship and despair poured from the photograph. A woman, her face burdened and beset by worry, stares off into the distance. On either side of her, children bury their faces into her shoulder.
When: June 21-Aug 12. Where: Loveland Museum/Gallery main gallery, 503 N. Lincoln Ave., Loveland. Admission: $5, free for museum members. Exhibit free days: Saturdays ...
Take Two translates the day’s headlines for Southern California, making sense of the news and cultural events that affect our lives. Produced by Southern California Public Radio and broadcast from ...
Photographer Dorothea Lange’s dedication to a “visual life” began long before she owned a camera, which she insightfully called, “… a tool for learning how to see without a camera.” As a young girl, ...
In the last years of her life, the celebrated Depression-era photographer Dorothea Lange would cross the bay from her home in Berkeley to spend carefree days with her family in a cabin at Steep Ravine ...
Dorothea Lange's Migrant Mother photo was shot during the Great Depression while Lange was working for the FSA. Dorothea Lange SHARE Dorothea Lange’s Migrant Mother image is an image that has come to ...
In the summer of 1939, noted photographer Dorothea Lange traveled through the state of Oregon documenting the lives of migrant farm workers for the National Farm Security Administration. The more than ...
When she was in her early twenties, Dorothea Lange decided to leave New York City and travel the world with a friend. They only made it as far as San Francisco, where a pickpocket stole all their ...
We all struggle to see other people. Distraction, fear, prejudice and apathy blind us. But every so often, someone brings strangers into sharper focus, and we are able to really see them. In her new ...
One of the most iconic images of the twentieth century is a photograph of a 32-year-old woman, Florence Owens Thompson, looking beaten down but not defeated. Two of her children crowd close to her as ...