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- B&W CARL MYDANS "MINER" SILVER GELATIN CUSTOM FRAMED
B&W CARL MYDANS "MINER" SILVER GELATIN CUSTOM FRAMED
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<></> Photo CARL MYDANS "MINER" This is a wonderful Silver Gelatin photgraph by Carl Mydans entitled "Miner" It was used int he LIFE magazine " the First Decade. Notations, photographer, title, page number etc are in pencil on the back. It had plexiglass on the back so you can see the notes. It is custom framed, under glass. It is in very good condition.
Carl Mydans-1907-2004 Born in <></>Massachusetts, near Boston, in 1907, Mydans keen sensitivity and honesty compelled him toward a lifetime of social and historical documentary photography. After working for the Boston Globe and the Boston Herald, he joined the photographic staff of the Farm Security Administration in 1936. The FSA, as it was familiarly known, was a New Deal agency established during the Great Depression by Franklin Roosevelt designed to combat rural poverty during a period when the agricultural climate and national economy were causing great dislocations in rural life. The photographers who worked under the name of the FSA were hired on for public relations; they were supposed to provide visual evidence that there was need, and that the FSA programs were meeting that need. Roy Stryker, who Mydans described as one of the most important influences in his life, headed the FSA. Stryker hired Mydans, along with several other photographers who were also later to become legendary, such as Walker Evans, Dorothea Lange, and Arthur Rothstein, to document the conditions of people and their surroundings most affected by the Depression. My very first period, when I was photographing with the FSA, I consider to be my most meaningful body of work. Before that, I didnt know what America really was. I learned who the people were, what they thought, what they did, what they read and what they cooked and ate. There are some things that come back to me, and when I see a farmer tilling his rice in Asia, theres something about that Asian farmer that carries me back to our own American farmers in 1936. In a word, that experience I had working with the FSA, in 1936 and 1937, gave me a greater feeling for America, and from that a greater feeling for the people of the world. Carl Mydans, 1997 After 16 months with the government, Mydans joined LIFE magazine as a staff photographer in 1936, just after the inaugural issue. Included in the exhibition are rare early vintage prints from the archives of LIFE magazine - the actual prints used for LIFE magazine stories, with important archive information inscribed and stamped on the back of each photograph. Together with the FSA photographs, they provide a humanist and emotional record of this turbulent time in American history, an integral element to their lasting appeal over 70 years later. Over four decades, Mydans carried out the full gamut of typical Life stories, from Hollywood celebrities to Texas cattle roundups, but his most important assignment, starting with the Soviet invasion of Finland in 1939, was as a war photographer. Resourceful, determined and unruffled, Mr. Mydans managed to send back pictures of combat that even now define how we remember World War II, Korea and other conflicts. He photographed major news and feature stories in the United States, Europe, and Asia. Mydans reported on the Russo-Finnish winter war, Italy under Mussolini, and the fall of France. When war erupted in Europe, Mydans and his wife, LIFE researcher Shelley Smith, became the magazines first husband and wife team to be sent overseas. Constantly traveling, Mydans assignments took him to Britain, Sweden, Finland, Italy, France, China, Malaya, and the Philippines, where he and his wife were captured by the Japanese. Released after being held prisoner of war for two years, Mydans was sent back into war in 1944, eventually covering the stoic figure of General MacArthur landing at Luzon. This famous image eloquently captures the pride and determination of the great commander and stands in dramatic contrast to the sense of shame and resignation expressed in the photographs he made of the Japanese surrender aboard the U.S.S. Missouri from the same year. Not all of Mydans most memorable photographs are from the field of battle. Equally a master of portraiture and landscape photography, Mydans compelling photographs provide a picture odyssey of all kinds of events from around the world. Mydans received many important awards and citations, including the annual Infinity Award for Lifetime Achievement from the International Center of Photography and the 1991 Guest of Honor award at the prestigious International Festival of Photojournalism in Perpignan, France. In January, 2001, Vanity Fair named Mydans one of photographys most enduring masters. The New York Times, in its August 14, 2004 obituary for Mydans, hailed him as a photographer who told his stories with a single picture. As a storyteller in pictures, the photojournalist is looking not only for action but for substance. He is a historian and a sociologist. He has created humanitys first international language, a common imagery for all mankind. And in his pictures, people see themselves with a clarity they never knew before.--Carl Mydans *Coutesy Monroe Gallery of Photography
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