Review: Dorothea Lange: Politics of Seeing, Barbican Centre, London ★★★★★

Poignant, moving and utterly transfixing: this long overdue Barbican photography exhibition brings the penetrating portraits of Dorothea Lange into sharp focus

Dorothea Lange, Detail: Migrant Mother, Nipomo, California, 1936© The Dorothea Lange Collection, the Oakland Museum of California
In just one image, social documentarian Dorothea Lange changed the course of twentieth-century photography. The image? A harrowing yet poignant portrait of human suffering, poverty, hope and defiance. Known today as Migrant Mother, the image, one of seven original frames, depicts two cowering children, a baby swaddled in dirty rags and their defiant mother (of seven further children) gazing absently into the distance.

Taken in a pea pickers' farm in central California in 1936, this striking portrait of vulnerability poignantly documented, as fact, the devastating plight of Dust-Bowl refugees in 1930's America. Circulated widely following its release, Migrant Mother soon became symbolic of human dignity and defiance in the face of adversity. It's since become one of the most celebrated portraits of the twentieth century.

But this image largely overshadowed Lange's prolific and formidable career spanning almost half a century. Now the Barbican Centre seeks to redress this imbalance with a chronological retrospective of her rarely-seen body of work. In this much-anticipated and long-overdue exhibition — indeed, the first UK survey of work — the Barbican daringly positions Lange both as a founder of the documentary practice and a critical voice in twentieth-century photography. It's a triumphant success.



Dorothea Lange, Family walking on highway - five children. Started from Idabel,Oklahoma, bound, for Krebs, Oklahoma, June 1938. Library of Congress

What strikes us about Lange's oeuvre is its modernity. A pioneering advocate of the power of photography to effect social, political and economic change, Lange used her camera to document the world around her. But what concerned Lange half a century ago still concerns us today: poverty, migration, urbanisation and agricultural ruin. As a result, her work feels timely, relevant and immensely powerful.

Her subjects maybe from a bygone era: toiling cotton labourers, Dust-Bowl refugees, displaced tenant farmers and impounded Japanese-Americans during the Second World War. But her message resonates today loud and clear. Lange's poetic gaze tells the universal story of human suffering.



Vanessa Winship, Untitled from the series she dances on Jackson, 2011-2012

Winner of the Henri Cartier-Bresson Award in 2011, Winship is best known for her poetic images exploring memory, identity and the symbiotic relationship between landscape and society. Her startling portraits situate her sitters in the political, social and economical contexts of their time.

Bringing together more than 150 works, many of which have never been seen before, Jane Alison, Head of Visual Arts at the Barbican, sees this much overdue exhibition as 'a wonderful opportunity to introduce Winship’s photography to a wider public, as well as to showcase a great body of her powerful, and also deeply poetic work, from early prints to more recent projects completed for the exhibition'.
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What Review: Dorothea Lange: Politics of Seeing, Barbican Centre, London
Where Barbican Centre, Silk Street, London, EC2Y 8DS | MAP
Nearest tube Barbican (underground)
When 22 Jun 18 – 02 Sep 18, 10:00 AM – 6:00 PM
Price £13.50
Website Click here for more information




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