New Deal Photographers
The field of photography benefitted hugely from the New Deal. In the mid-1930s, the Farm Security Administration’s Resettlement Administration hired photographers to document the work done by the agency, which launched the careers of many major photojournalists.
From 1937 to 1942 this army of photographers created iconic images defining the New Deal era. From 1942 to 1944 the Office of War Information directed photographers’ work, which now focused on patriotic images and propaganda.
The images were typically black and white, but participating photographers could take advantage of Kodak’s new color film. Each photographer was assigned a region to cover. Their general mission was to capture the life of the common person in the United States, with a particular focus on people meeting the challenges of the Great Depression.
Walker Evans
While Arthur Rothstein covered the Great Plains and documented the horror of Dust Bowl storms, Walker Evans photographed small towns and tenant farmers in West Virginia and Pennsylvania and followed the lives of three families in Hale County, Alabama.
Evans’ work for the FSA made him one of the most celebrated American photographers, and his work in Alabama was published in the seminal book Let Us Now Praise Famous Men, with text by writer James Agee.
John Collier Jr. promoted photography as a tool in anthropology. His FSA work centered on Amish and Latino populations. Russell Lee also focused on the Latino population specifically in New Mexico. Jack Delano traveled to Puerto Rico and then along the American rail system.
Under the financing of the FAP, photographer Berenice Abbott documented how New York City was changing, particularly with an eye on how infrastructure affected human life.