Evans, Walker (1903-75)

Creator details

Name
Evans, Walker (1903-75)
Nationality
American
Biography
Born 3 November 1903; died 10 April 1975. In 1928, Evans worked as a freelance photographer in Boston, Massachusetts and New York City, New York. In 1930 Evans undertook a project to photograph popular housing and Victorian architecture in New England. In 1935, Evans travelled to New Orleans, Louisiana to photograph southern plantation architecture. From 1935 to 1937, Evans worked as a staff photographer for the Farm Security Administration. In 1935, he documented the coal mines and industrial towns in Pennsylvania and West Virginia as well as the effects of flooding in Arkansas and Tennessee in 1936-1937. In 1937, Evans undertook a project with James Agee to photograph the lives of tenent farm families in Hale County, Alabama. The project was turned into a book entitled 'Let Us Now Praise Famous Men'. In 1943, Evans joined the staff of Time Magazine. From 1945 to 1965, Evans acted as editor and photographer for Fortune Magazine. During the 1950s Evans began to focus on American industrial landscapes.

Assets (154 in total)

Unemployed men walking in search of jobs, during the Great Depression, California, 1938 (b/w photo)
Floyd Burroughs and Tengle children, Hale County, Alabama, Summer 1936 (b/w photo)
Roadside stand near Birmingham, Alabama, 1936 (b/w photo)
Young unemployed men 'hopping a freight train' for a ride to California to find work, 1936 (b/w photo)
African Americans in the lineup for food at mealtime in the flood refugee camp, Forrest City, Arkansas
Lucille Burroughs by Walker Evans, 1936 (silver print photograph)
Poverty-stricken American, Bud Fields, with his wife and daughter, Hale County, Alabama, 1938 (b/w photo)
View of the Arthurdale Project, West Virginia, 1935 (b/w photo)
Child's Grave, Hale County, Alabama, 1936 (gelatin silver print)
Hitchhikers, near Vicksburg, Mississippi, 1936 (b/w photo)
A Child's Grave, Hale County, Alabama, 1936 (gelatin silver print)
Crossroads General Store in Sprott, Alabama, 1935-36 (b/w photo)

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