Walker Evans Famous Vew Alabama Grave Site 1936 - Dec 05, 2020 | Andrew Smith Gallery Photography Auctions Llc In Az
LiveAuctioneers Logo

lots of lots

WALKER EVANS Famous Vew Alabama Grave Site 1936

Related Photography

More Items from Walker Evans

View More

Recommended Art

View More
item-93536868=1
item-93536868=2
item-93536868=3
WALKER EVANS Famous Vew Alabama Grave Site 1936
WALKER EVANS Famous Vew Alabama Grave Site 1936
Item Details
Description
EVANS WALKER, Child's Grave Site, Hale County, Alabama, 1936, 7.125x9.25" Gelatin silver print, Printed 1971, Signed in pencil on mount recto below right of print.

Walker Evans FSA views of Alabama are his most celebrated as they showed the fortitude and loss of the Depression.

Walker Evans (1903-1975) was born in St. Louis, Missouri. He dabbled with painting as a child, collected picture postcards, and made snapshots of his family and friends with a small Kodak camera. After a year at Williams College, he quit school and moved to New York City, finding work in bookstores and at the New York Public Library. He also took up the camera and gradually redirected his aesthetic impulses into the medium of photography. His principal subject was the vernacular - the indigenous expressions of a people found in roadside stands, cheap cafes, advertisements, simple bedrooms, and small-town main streets. For fifty years, from the late 1920s to the early 1970s, Evans recorded the American scene with the nuance of a poet and the precision of a surgeon, creating an encyclopedic visual catalogue of modern America in the making. 

In 1935, Evans accepted a job from the U.S. Department of the Interior to photograph a government-built resettlement community of unemployed coal miners in West Virginia. He quickly parlayed this temporary employment into a full-time position as an "information specialist" in the Resettlement (later Farm Security) Administration, a New Deal agency in the Department of Agriculture. Under the direction of Roy Stryker, the RA/FSA photographers (Dorothea Lange, Arthur Rothstein, and Russell Lee, among others) were assigned to document small-town life and to demonstrate how the federal government was attempting to improve the lot of rural communities during the Depression. Evans, however, worked with little concern for the ideological agenda or the suggested itineraries and instead answered a personal need to distill the essence of American life from the simple and the ordinary.  

In September 1938, the Museum of Modern Art opened "American Photographs," a retrospective of Evans' first decade of photography. The museum simultaneously published  American Photographs , still for many artists the benchmark against which all photographic monographs are judged. Between 1938 and 1941, Evans produced a remarkable series of portraits in the New York City subway. In 1941, he also published Let Us Now Praise Famous Men, his collaborative book with his friend, the writer James Agee.  

Between 1934 and 1965, Evans contributed more than 400 photographs to 45 articles published in Fortune  magazine. In 1973, Evans began to work with the innovative Polaroid SX-70 camera and an unlimited supply of film from its manufacturer. With the new camera, Evans returned to several of his enduring themes - among the most important of which are signs, posters, and their ultimate reduction, the letter forms themselves.  

CREDIT: Howard Greenberg Gallery
http://www.howardgreenberg.com/artists/walker-evans
Condition
Very good. Moderate abrasions.
Buyer's Premium
  • 26% up to $100,000.00
  • 20% up to $1,000,000.00
  • 18% above $1,000,000.00

WALKER EVANS Famous Vew Alabama Grave Site 1936

Estimate $400 - $600
See Sold Price
Starting Price $300
15 bidders are watching this item.

Shipping & Pickup Options
Item located in Tucson, AZ, us
$60 shipping in the US
Local Pickup Available

Payment
Accepts seamless payments through LiveAuctioneers

Andrew Smith Gallery Photography Auctions LLC

Andrew Smith Gallery Photography Auctions LLC

badge TOP RATED
Tucson, AZ, United States384 Followers
TOP