Walker
Evans (November 3, 1903 – April 10, 1975) was an American
photographer best known for his work for the Farm Security
Administration (FSA) documenting the effects of the Great
Depression. Much of Evans's work from the FSA period uses the
large-format, 8x10-inch camera. He said that his goal as a
photographer was to make pictures that are "literate,
authoritative, transcendent". Many of his works are in the
permanent collections of museums and have been the subject of
retrospectives at such institutions as The Metropolitan Museum
of Art or George Eastman House.
Early life
Born in St. Louis,
Missouri, to Jessie (née Crane) and Walker, Walker
Evans came from an affluent family. His father was an advertising
director. He spent his youth in Toledo,Chicago, and New
York City. He attended The Loomis Institute and Mercersburg
Academy[4] before graduating from Phillips Academy in
Andover, Massachusetts, in 1922. He studied French literature for a
year at Williams College, spending much of his time in the
school's library, before dropping out. After spending a year
in Paris in 1926, he returned to the United States to join
the edgy literary and art crowd in New York City. John
Cheever, Hart Crane, and Lincoln Kirstein were among
his friends. He was a clerk for a stockbroker firm in Wall street
from 1927 to 1929.
Evans
took up photography in 1928 around the time he was living
in Ossining, New York. His influences included Eugène
Atget and August Sander. In 1930, he published three
photographs (Brooklyn Bridge) in the poetry book The
Bridge by Hart Crane. In 1931, he took photo series of
Victorian houses in the Boston vicinity sponsored
by Lincoln Kirstein. In 1933, he photographed in Cuba on
assignment for the publisher of Carleton Beals' then-forthcoming
book, The Crime of Cuba, photographing the revolt against
the dictator Gerardo Machado. In Cuba, Evans briefly knew Ernest
Hemingway.
Depression-Era Photography
In
1935, Evans spent two months at first on a fixed-term photographic
campaign for the Resettlement Administration (RA) in West
Virginiaand Pennsylvania. From October on, he continued to do
photographic work for the RA and later the Farm Security
Administration (FSA), primarily in the Southern United
States.
In the
summer of 1936, while still working for the FSA, he and writer James
Agee were sent by Fortune magazine on assignment
to Hale County, Alabama, for a story the magazine subsequently
opted not to run. In 1941, Evans's photographs and Agee's text
detailing the duo's stay with three white tenant families in southern
Alabama during the Great Depression were published as the
groundbreaking bookLet Us Now Praise Famous Men. Its detailed
account of three farming families paints a deeply moving portrait of
rural poverty. Noting a similarity to the Beals' book, the
critic Janet Malcolm, in her 1980 book Diana & Nikon:
Essays on the Aesthetic of Photography, has pointed out the
contradiction between a kind of anguished dissonance in Agee's prose
and the quiet, magisterial beauty of Evans's photographs
of sharecroppers.
The
three families headed by Bud Fields, Floyd Burroughs and Frank
Tingle, lived in the Hale County town of Akron, Alabama, and the
owners of the land on which the families worked told them that Evans
and Agee were "Soviet agents," although Allie Mae
Burroughs, Floyd's wife, recalled during later interviews her
discounting that information. Evans's photographs of the families
made them icons of Depression-Era misery and poverty. In September
2005, Fortune revisited Hale County and the descendants of
the three families for its 75th anniversary issue. Charles
Burroughs, who was four years old when Evans and Agee visited the
family, was "still angry" at them for not even sending the
family a copy of the book; the son of Floyd Burroughs was also
reportedly angry because the family was "cast in a light that
they couldn't do any better, that they were doomed, ignorant".
Evans
continued to work for the FSA until 1938. That year, an
exhibition, Walker Evans: American Photographs, was held
at The Museum of Modern Art, New York. This was the first
exhibition in this museum devoted to the work of a single
photographer. The catalogue included an accompanying essay by Lincoln
Kirstein, whom Evans had befriended in his early days in New York.
In
1938, Evans also took his first photographs in the New York subway
with a camera hidden in his coat. These would be collected in book
form in 1966 under the title Many are Called. In 1938 and
1939, Evans worked with and mentored Helen Levitt.
Evans,
like such other photographers as Henri Cartier-Bresson, rarely
spent time in the darkroom making prints from his own negatives.
He only very loosely supervised the making of prints of most of his
photographs, sometimes only attaching handwritten notes to negatives
with instructions on some aspect of the printing procedure.
Later Work
Evans
was a passionate reader and writer, and in 1945 became a staff writer
at Time magazine. Shortly afterward he became an editor
atFortune magazine through 1965. That year, he became a
professor of photography on the faculty for Graphic Design at
the Yale University School of Art (formerly the Yale School
of Art and Architecture).
In one
of his last photographic projects, Evans completed a black and white
portfolio of Brown Brothers Harriman's offices and partners for
publication in "Partners in Banking," published in 1968 to
celebrate the private bank's 150th anniversary. In 1973 and
1974, he also shot a long series with the then-new Polaroid SX-70
camera, after age and poor health had made it difficult for him to
work with elaborate equipment.
In
1971, the Museum of Modern Art staged a further exhibition of his
work entitled simply Walker Evans.
Death and Legacy
Evans died at his home in New Haven, Connecticut, in 1975.
In
1994, The Estate of Walker Evans handed over its holdings to New
York City's The Metropolitan Museum of Art. The
Metropolitan Museum of Art is the sole copyright holder for all works
of art in all media by Walker Evans. The only exception is a group of
approximately 1,000 negatives in collection of the Library of
Congress which were produced for the Resettlement
Administration (RA) / Farm Security Administration (FSA).
Evans's RA / FSA works are in the public domain.
In
2000, Evans was inducted into the St. Louis Walk of Fame.





































































































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