Portland State Magazine Fall 2009
CLOCKWISE FROM TOP LEFT: This service station window sign says that hop pickers are wanted for four big growers in Josephine County. Migratory boy, age 11, and his grand– mother work side by side picki ng hops in Polk County near Independence. Photograph taken at noon. Temperature 105 degrees. The Fairbanks fami ly, seen here in the Willow Creek area in Malheur County, has moved their tent home three times in one year. Th is unemployed lumber worker, whose Social Security number is tattooed on his arm, will pick beans with hiswife. Twenty-five-year-old itinerant, originally from Oregon, says, "On the road eight years, all over the country." He is seen here near a pea packing plant in Impe– rial Valley, California. Children at large bean pickers' camp near West Stayton in Marion County. Pickers came from as far away as Okla– homa and North Dakota. Mr. Wardlow, drought area farmer, adjusts to aWestern farm in Dead Ox Flat, Malheur County. DOROTH EA LANG E' S photographs tell stories. Sometimes uneasy tales of hard work, poor living conditions, and the resulting despair. But most capture the inner strength and pride of Lange's subjects despite their impoverished surroundings. An exhibit of some 40 of Lange's photographs from 1939 rural Oregon during the Great Depression will be on display in Portland State's Littman Gallery October 1 through November 26 before traveling to other points in Oregon. Lange (1895-1965) is perhaps best known for M igrant Mother, a photographic icon of the Great Depression. Taken in California, it shows a young mother staring stoically into the distance, her children huddling close in their tent home. "Lange's portraits capture the spiritual essence of people caught up in something far greater than they can control," says exhibit coordinator David A. Horowitz, PSU professor of history. "She gets right down into the heart of people and their experi– ences. Thar's her strength." IN THE 1930S, Lange was one of a dozen photographers hired by Franklin Delano Roosevelt's New Deal administration to photograph rural America. The government's goal was to use the photographs to build support for the Farm Security Administration. In all, the photographers produced 270,000 images ofAmerican life-creating a superlative visual record ofAmerica during the Great Depression. While on assignment, Lange turned her eye to Oregon in 1939. She traveled the state, not just photographing her subjects but raking notes and writing thoughtful captions. For example, accompanying her photo of the hopeful young mother, which appears on the cover of Portftmd State Magazine, Lange quotes the woman as saying, "Next year we'll be painted and have a lawn and flowers ." Horowitz and members of the Oregon Cultural Heritage Commission will give a dramatized reading of Lange's captions and field notes, accompanied by a visual display of her work, during PSU Weekend on October 10. The group will be joined by Lange expert Linda Gordon, an Oregon native and New York University social history professor. Gordon will also talk about Lange on October 8. The Lange events are made possible by the Cultural Commission and the PSU Friends of History. During the Great Depression, many rural Oregon families and migrant workers lived in tents, shacks, and dugouts as they eked out a living harvesting crops. Times were hard, but stories of small joy can be seen in Lange's photos along with the essential human spirit of the American West. ■ Melissa Steineger, a Portlandfreelance writer, wrote the articles "lhe Sky's the Limit" and "Giving It Her All" in the spring 2009 Portland State Magazine. Dorothea Lange in Oregon Historic Photograph Exhibit at Littman Gallery October 1 - November 26 Opening reception October 1, 5 to 7 p.m. 250 Smith Memorial Student Union Weekdays noon to 4 p.m. and Saturdays 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Lecture by Linda Gordon, NYU Professor of History October 8, 1 p.m., 238 Smith Union Multimedia Presentation Linda Gordon; David Horowitz, PSU Professor of History; and members of the Oregon Cultural Heritage Commission October 10, 10 a.m ., 238 Smith Memorial Student Union; register online at www.alumni.pdx.edu or call 503-725-4948 All events are free FALL 2009 PO RTLAND STATE MAGAZ INE 17
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