Arthur Rothstein, Dust Storm, Cimarron County, Ok, 1936 - Nov 04, 2023 | Etherton Gallery In Az
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ARTHUR ROTHSTEIN, DUST STORM, CIMARRON COUNTY, OK, 1936

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ARTHUR ROTHSTEIN, DUST STORM, CIMARRON COUNTY, OK, 1936
ARTHUR ROTHSTEIN, DUST STORM, CIMARRON COUNTY, OK, 1936
Item Details
Description
ARTHUR ROTHSTEIN (1915-1985), DUST STORM CIMARRON COUNTY, OKLAHOMA, 1936 gelatin silver print, printed c. 1960s, 10 1/2 x 10 1/2 in. (sheet), 16 x 20 in. (matted), signed mount recto in ink. Condition: Excellent. ARO-0002

CONDITION: For a condition report, please email info@ethertongallery.com.

Frames when illustrated, are for reference ONLY and are not included with the lot. Please note that the color and tonality of digital references may vary. Titles, dates, details and descriptions are for guidance only and are subject to change.

ARTHUR ROTHSTEIN

Arthur Rothstein was born in New York in 1915. While attending Columbia University in the 1930s, he studied photography and was greatly inspired by his mentors, Roy Stryker and Rex Tugwell. Stryker invited Rothstein to be the first photographer to join the federally sponsored Farm Security Administration (FSA) photojournalism project. The FSA employed a small group of photographers, including Mary Post Wolcott, Walker Evans, Dorothea Lange and Ben Shahn, to publicize the conditions of the impoverished rural areas of the United States. Praised for the directness and immediacy of his imagery, Rothstein produced notable photographic series on farming communities in the Midwestern Dust Bowl.

In 1936 Rothstein took an assignment documenting the Dust Bowl area of the Midwestern United States. In Cimarron County, Oklahoma, Rothstein took one of his most famous photographs that became emblematic of the Depression period. It was called “Fleeing a Dust Storm.” His photographs of this period displayed a gritty reality of life in America.

In 1940 Rothstein joined the staff of Look magazine. With the start of the Second World War, Rothstein once again completed photojournalistic assignments for the government in China, Burma, and India. After the war he returned to Look, and worked as the Director of Photography until the magazine closed in 1971. After Look closed, Rothstein joined Parade magazine, serving in various capacities until his death. During that period, he also taught photography and was a founding member of the American Society of Magazine Photographers, editing its in-house periodical for a year. Rothstein authored seven books about photojournalism that featured his images, and invented the X-O-Graph printing process.
, Rothstein once again completed photojournalistic assignments for the government in China, Burma, and India. After the war he returned to Look, and worked as the Director of Photography until the magazine closed in 1971. He then held the same position for Parade magazine. Rothstein was a multi-dimensioned photographer. As he continued his own work, he also taught at several schools, authored seven photography books, and invented the X-O-Graph printing process.
Condition
Excellent
Dimensions
10.5 x 10.5 in
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ARTHUR ROTHSTEIN, DUST STORM, CIMARRON COUNTY, OK, 1936

Estimate $2,500 - $3,500
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Starting Price $800
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Etherton Gallery

Etherton Gallery

Tucson, AZ, United States107 Followers
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