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Looking at the New Deal: Official Photography of FDR's America


Article # : 13917 

Section : THE ARTS
Issue Date : 2 / 1988  2,036 Words
Author : Lloyd Eby
Lloyd Eby has worked in film and video since 1970 and has published articles on the interaction of film and religion. With René Berger, he coedited the book Art and Technology (New York: Paragon House Publishers, 1986). He is assistant senior editor in the Currents in Modern Thought section of The World & I.

       The Great Depression witnessed an enormous growth in the popularity of photography. These were the years when mass popular culture shifted its primary orientation from the written to the audiovisual. Famous picture magazines such as Life and Look were created, rapidly finding large audiences; and motion pictures as well expanded greatly. Despite the depressed economy, Americans embraced photography. So many people looked at pictures that James Agee declared that the camera is "the central instrument of our time."
       
        A vast and varied legacy of photographic images from that period is available to us. In fact, for most people this period is probably best remembered in images: President Franklin Roosevelt and members of his New Deal administrations, dust storms, breadlines, migrant farmers, and unemployed workers. These memorable pictures include the work of famous photographers from Life such as Margaret Bourke-White and Alfred Eisenstaedt, and of Farm Security Administration photographers such as Dorothea Lange, Walker Evans, Ben Shahn, and Arthur Rothstein.
       
        Photographic Records
       
        Although the photographic work of the Farm Security Administration is the most widely known and studied, many agencies of the federal government produced or sponsored documentary photography during the New Deal. When Life was being developed in New York, a picture researcher might report to her colleagues that nearly all government agencies were producing photographic records of their activities, many of a quality to rival Bourke-White's work.
       
        A charge often made, ... (1996 of 12735 Characters)
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