Dorothea Lange
American
1895, Hoboken, New Jersey
1965, San Francisco, Bay Area
Dorothea Lange was a successful portrait photographer in San Francisco when the stock market crashed in 1929. As her business diminished with the Depression, she began photographing the world around her, including labor strikes and protests. Then married to renowned California landscape painter Maynard Dixon, Lange became increasingly politicized.
She found work with a series of relief organizations, most significantly the Resettlement Agency, later called the Farm Security Administration. On one of her early government jobs she met the economist Paul Taylor, whom she would later marry and with whom she would collaborate on several projects, including the book An American Exodus. Her 1936 photograph Migrant Mother has become an icon of the Depression era, embodying the human toll exacted during those bleak years.
Audio Stories
Why Lange portrayed the nation’s most vulnerable citizens
transcripts
Works in the Collection
-
Dorothea LangeThe Road West, U.S. 54 in Southern New Mexico1938 -
Dorothea LangeJapanese Agricultural Workers Packing Broccoli Near Guadalupe, CA1937 -
Dorothea LangeUntitled1951 -
Dorothea LangeDitched, Stalled and Stranded, San Joaquin Valley, California, 19351935; printed 1970 -
Dorothea LangeArkansas Mother Come to California with Husband and 11 Children, Rural Rehab...1938; printed 1971
-
Dorothea LangeTexas Farmer to Migratory Worker in California (Kern County)1938, printed 1971
-
Dorothea LangePower Farming Displaces Tenants in This Dry Cotton Area, Texas Pandhandle1938, printed 1971 -
Dorothea LangeMigrant Mother of 6, Age 32, Now Living in California1936; printed 1971 -
Dorothea LangeWhite Angel Breadline, San Francisco1933 -
Dorothea LangeSan Francisco Waterfront Strike1934 -
Dorothea LangeChildren of Oklahoma drought refugee in migratory camp in California1936
-
Dorothea LangePlantation Overseer, Mississippi Delta, near Clarksdale, Mississippi1936; printed 1971
-
Dorothea LangeSan Miguel Mission, Erected 1797 by the Franciscan Fathers. California1936; printed 1971
-
Dorothea LangeDrought Refugees, from Oklahoma Camping by Roadside, Waiting for Cotton Picking1936; printed 1971 -
Dorothea LangeHoe Culture, Alabama Tenant Farmer near Anniston1936; printed 1971 -
Dorothea LangeWhite Angel Breadline, San Francisco1933 -
Dorothea LangeCafe Near Pinole, California1956, printed 1965 -
Dorothea LangeMain Street, St. George, Utah1953, printed 1994
-
Dorothea LangeFive Workers Against Concrete Wall, Industrial District, San Francisco1934
-
Dorothea LangeAnita Reiners Bohling1921
Please note that artwork locations are subject to change, and not all works are on view at all times.
Only a portion of SFMOMA's collection is currently online, and the information presented here is subject to revision. Please contact us at collections@sfmoma.org to verify collection holdings and artwork information. If you are interested in receiving a high resolution image of an artwork for educational, scholarly, or publication purposes, please contact us at copyright@sfmoma.org.
This resource is for educational use and its contents may not be reproduced without permission. Please review our Terms of Use for more information.