American Images, Part One


Every 4th of July, I like to consider the diversity of America.  We’re a nation of large cities but we’re also a nation of small towns and rural highways.  We are one nation but we are also fifty states, each with its own identity.  In honor of America’s 250th birthday, here are some photographs that capture America outside of the cities.

by Dorothea Lange

Photograph by Tim Richmond

Photograph by Tim Richmond

by Carol Highsmith

by Carol Highsmith

by Carol Highsmith

by Carol Highsmith

 by Scott Wishart

by Erin Nicole

By Erin Nicole

By Erin Nicole

By Erin Nicole

by Erin Nicole

 

Artist Profile: Dorothea Lange (1895 — 1965)


Dorothea Lange was a photographer who is best remembered for the pictures she took, for the Farm Security Administration, of American farm life during the Great Depression.  Her photography humanized the suffering that was occurring the dust bowl and she remains influential until this day.  Lange contracted polio when she was 12, leaving her with both a permanent limp and a sympathy for society’s outcasts.  In every picture that she took, that sympathy was present.

Below is just a small sampling of her powerful work.

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