Available Formats
Dorothea Lange: Migrant Mother, Nipomo, California
By (Author) Sarah Hermanson Meister
Museum of Modern Art
Museum of Modern Art
1st May 2019
28th February 2019
United States
General
Non Fiction
779.092
Paperback
48
Width 184mm
200g
The United States was in the midst of the Depression when photographer Dorothea Lange, a portrait-studio owner, began documenting the country's rampant poverty. Her depictions of unemployed men wandering the streets of San Francisco gained the attention of one of President Franklin D. Roosevelt's New Deal agencies, the Resettlement Administration (later the Farm Security Administration), and she started photographing the rural poor under its auspices. Her images triggered a pivotal public recognition of the lives of sharecroppers, displaced families, and migrant workers. One day in Nipomo, California, Lange recalled, she 'saw and approached [a] hungry and desperate mother, as if drawn by a magnet.' The woman's name was Frances Owens Thompson, and the result of their encounter was five exposures, including Migrant Mother , which would become an iconic piece of documentary photography.
The history behind Ms. Lange's photograph of Florence Owens Thompson has intrigued academics and photographers for decades. But a new book sheds fresh light on the portrait's little-explored details.--James Estrin "The New York Times"
Sarah Hermanson Meister is a Curator in the Department of Photography at the Museum of Modern Art, New York.