Photography: Picturing People
- Lesson One: Posed
- Lesson Two: Unposed
- Lesson Three: Politicians
- Lesson Four: Constructing Stories
- Lesson Five: The Photographic Record
- Photography: For Further Consideration
Setting the Scene
Pictoralism and Propaganda
"Photography appears to be an easy activity," photographer Henri Cartier-Bresson observed. "In fact it is a varied and ambiguous process in which the only common denominator among its practitioners is their instrument." [Henri Cartier-Bresson, "The Mind’s Eye," in The Mind’s Eye: Writing on Photography and Photographers, ed. Michael L. Sand (New York: Aperture, 1976), 15.] Since the medium’s inception in 1839, photographs have been made for myriad purposes and in many disciplines, including anthropology, astronomy, biology, forensics, journalism, travel, pornography, propaganda, psychology, and, last but not least, art. While pursuing these varied disciplines and interests, photographers have also experimented with new techniques afforded by technological advances in photographic equipment and processing.
Focusing on photographs of people, the five lessons that compose this guide invite students to explore topics such as portraiture, identity, and memory. Illuminating the reasons why the two selected photographs were made, the following comparison reveals critical differences in the photographers’ intentions and processes and the reception of the works.
Julia Margaret Cameron: Madonna with Children, albumen silver print, 267×222 mm, 1864 (New York, Museum of Modern Art); courtesy of The Museum of Modern Art, New York
- Invite your students to look at the image of Madonna with Children, by Julia Margaret Cameron. Ask your students who they think is pictured in the photograph. Is it evident where this photograph was taken? Why or why not?
Cameron, a middle-aged mother of a large family, was given a camera in 1864, and she enthusiastically took up photography. Apart from taking portraits of some of the most notable men of the day (many of whom were friends and neighbors), including Charles Darwin, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, and Alfred Tennyson, Cameron produced photographs such as Madonna with Children, based on artistic, biblical, literary, and romantic themes. Cameron cast friends, family members, and her servants in these allegorical roles, irrespective of their social standing in the rigid Victorian class system. Cameron often draped her subjects in dark cloaks and used anonymous backgrounds, which lent a timeless quality to her portraits.
Experimenting with the wet-collodion process, Cameron embraced the challenges presented by early methods of photography. A plate wet with collodion emulsion (a syrupy solution of nitrocellulose in a mixture of alcohol and ether), is especially vulnerable to streaking, smudges, and spotting from dust. Cameron often allowed such imperfections to emerge, adding a handmade, painterly character to her prints. Cameron also made reference to painting by softening the focus of her lens. "When focusing and coming to something which, to my eye, was very beautiful," she said, "I stopped there instead of screwing the lens to the more definitive focus which all other photographers insist upon." [Julia Margaret Cameron, quoted in Sylvia Wolf, Julia Margaret Cameron’s "Women" (Chicago: The Art Institute of Chicago, 1988), 15.] Ultimately, by pursuing painterly compositions, subjects, and qualities, Cameron hoped to redefine photography. A product of chemical and mechanical means, photography was considered a valuable artistic aid, but not necessarily an art in its own right. This view of photography was especially evident at the 1862 Great Exhibition in London, which Cameron visited, where photographs were exhibited alongside scientific instruments. [Michael Frizot, A New History of Photography (New York: Konemann,1998), 185.] Opposed to this classification, Cameron and her Pictoralist contemporaries believed that, like painting, photography should be granted the status of high art.
Dorothea Lange: Migrant Mother, Nipomo, California, gelatin silver print, 326×258 mm, 1936 (New York, Museum of Modern Art); courtesy of The Museum of Modern Art, New York
- Ask your students to compare Cameron’s Madonna with Children with the image of Dorothea Lange’s Migrant Mother, Nipomo, California. How are the two photographs similar to one another? Ask your students to compare the body language, facial expressions, clothing, and settings in the two photographs. What similarities and differences do they see in how the photographs are composed and framed? How did Lange’s approach differ from the soft focus favored by Cameron?
Lange photographed Migrant Mother, Nipomo, California, one of her most iconic photographs, in 1936, while she was employed by the Farm Security Administration (FSA), originally the Resettlement Administration (RA), to document camps of migratory farm laborers escaping dustbowl conditions and battling poverty in California during the Great Depression. Rexford Guy Tugwell, administrator of the RA and later the FSA, noted that their purpose was "not only to bring the resources of government to the assistance of those who were distressed or starved out but to make certain that never again should Americans be exposed to such cruelties…. It seemed important to record the incredible events of those years; and the best way was to photograph them." [Rexford Guy Tugwell, quoted in Dorothea Lange, Dorothea Lange Looks at the American Country Woman (Fort Worth: Amon Carter Museum of Western Art, 1967), 6.] It was a mission Lange closely identified with. Originally a portrait photographer in San Francisco, Lange was moved by the sight of poverty-stricken people standing in breadlines; she photographed them and exhibited the pictures. Lange struggled with the classification of her work as documentary because she felt the term did not reflect the passionate social motivations behind her photographs.
- After sharing this information with your students, ask them to consider how the mission of the FSA is evident in Lange’s photograph. What does the photograph communicate about the social and economic status of the mother and her children?
Over twenty-five years later, Lange recalled the experience of taking this photograph:
“I saw and approached the hungry and desperate mother, as if drawn by a magnet. I do not remember how I explained my presence or my camera to her, but I do remember she asked me no questions. I made five exposures, working closer and closer from the same direction.”
[Dorothea Lange, "The Assignment I’ll Never Forget," Popular Photography 46 (February, 1960). Reprinted in Photography, Essays and Images, ed. Beaumont Newhall (New York: The Museum of Modern Art), 262–65.]
- After sharing Lange’s statement with your students, ask them to consider some of her choices. How is the distance from which she took the photographs important? Even without seeing the other four photographs taken by Lange, ask your students to determine why this photograph taken at the closest distance became the most famous of the group. What is the angle from which this photo was taken? Why might this vantage point be important?
- Based on their observations and the information they learned about the photographs, ask your students to consider how the two photographers used the image of a mother with her children to evoke different responses. How are their diverging intentions apparent in these photographs?
Activities
Photo Swap
Ask your students to bring a photograph of a friend, family member, or even themselves into class. Divide your class into groups of two and ask your students to swap their photographs. Ask each student to come up with a list of at least five questions about their partner’s photograph, then have the partners take turns interviewing one another. As a class, discuss the different types of questions the photographs raised.
FSA Photography: Propaganda or Not?
Commissioned by the federal government, FSA photographs like Migrant Mother, Nipomo, California often present compelling and poignant images of poverty-stricken people and places. Created to help justify and document federal aid, the enormous archive has sometimes been viewed as propagandistic. About this issue Lange stated:
“Everything is propaganda for what you believe in, actually, isn’t it? I don’t see that it could be otherwise. The harder and the more deeply you believe in anything, the more in a sense you’re a propagandist. Conviction, propaganda, faith. I don’t know, I never have been able to come to the conclusion that that’s a bad word.”
[Dorothea Lange, Dorothea Lange: Farm Security Administration Photographs, 1935–1939 (Glencoe, Ill.: Text-Fiche Press, 1980), 31.]
- After discussing the meaning of propaganda with your students, ask them to write a response essay to Lange’s statement.
- Ask your students to research other examples of government-sponsored art projects in the 1930s, such as Soviet posters made under Stalin’s regime and murals commissioned by the Mexican government. How does the FSA project compare with these initiatives? In what forms does propaganda exist today?
Go to Lesson 1: Posed →
Grove Art Online: Suggested Reading
Below is a list of selected articles, which provide more information on the specific topics, discussed in this lesson.