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WALKER EVANS
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| Walker Evens' portrait of a Soutern share cropper family from LET US NOW PRAISE FAMOUS MEN. |
The first of these appeared as AMERICAN PHOTOGRAPHS in 1938. In the collection selected from the larger body of photographs he produced for the F.S.A. report, Evans chronicles a society in the making. With his images of simple folk immersed in the rituals of American society and surrounded by the carefully composed clutter of objects, Evans' lens often operates with an unsparing irony as he presents not only the ideals to which America aspired but also the dichotomies between reality and those ideals.
The second project, a stirring literary-photography collaboration, began in 1936 when Evans, eager for a more ambitious challenge, accepted the offer from FORTUNE Magazine to accompany their reporter, his friend James Agee, to the Deep South. There they traveled the countryside and boarded for some time with three Appalachian families. The resulting reportage was a poetic, passionately argued verbal and visual study of hope and hopeless in a troubled democracy. FORTUNE declined to publish it, and it would be five more years before it would appear with an expanded text in 1941 as LET US NOW PRAISE FAMOUS MEN.
[Thirteen Online] [ PBS Online ] |