Dorothea Lange Birthday: 'Migrant Mother' Photographer Turns 118 (PHOTOS) | HuffPost - Action News
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Posted: 2013-05-26T11:56:02Z | Updated: 2017-12-07T03:08:03Z Dorothea Lange Birthday: 'Migrant Mother' Photographer Turns 118 (PHOTOS) | HuffPost

Dorothea Lange Birthday: 'Migrant Mother' Photographer Turns 118 (PHOTOS)

Happy Birthday Dorothea Lange!
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In honor of Dorothea Lange's birthday, we are revisiting a post originally published last year honoring the late artist's life and work.

Dorothea Lange was an iconic American photographer, most famous for capturing the human strife and resilience during the Great Depression. Her photographs for the Farm Security Administration helped shape documentary photography as an artistic genre. Today, we are proud to wish her a happy 118th birthday.


Dorothea Lange's famous photograph of a destitute mother with her children was taken in depression-era California. The woman has been identified as Florence Thompson, who at the time was working as a pea picker. She was 32. Courtesy Library of Congress.

Lange was married to an economist, and when the Depression era began the two began interviewing and researching exploited, poor and forgotten American laborers. Lange started taking their pictures, and her photographs of the plight of families who fled the Mid West and South during the Dust Bowl made many people visible for the first time in their lives.

Her most famous photograph, "Migrant Mother," depicts a young mother, forehead wrinkled with worry, gazing out into the distance. Two young boys bury their faces into her back. Everyone's body is covered in dust. The image remains an emblem of hope in the face of struggle to this day.

Later Lange spoke about her encounter with the mother:

"I did not ask her name or her history. She told me her age, that she was thirty-two. She said that they had been living on frozen vegetables from the surrounding fields, and birds that the children killed. She had just sold the tires from her car to buy food. There she sat in that lean-to tent with her children huddled around her, and seemed to know that my pictures might help her, and so she helped me. There was a sort of equality about it."


Portrait of American photographer Dorothea Lange (1895 - 1965), mid twentieth century. (Photo by Larry Colwell/Anthony Barboza/Getty Images)

Lange also took on the role of American eyewitness in documenting the Japanese internment camps in 1942. Again her sharp eye and human compassion helped millions of people all over the nation connect and empathize with strangers in need. Her photos, quiet depictions of sadness and strength, illustrate the history of our country.

A critic once commented that after seeing a Lange photograph "You will find it hard to forget this material of human erosion," quoted in her "New York Times " obituary. We would like to honor Lange today, an artist and humanist who herself will never be forgotten.

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