Each month, I gather images from the holdings of the Prints & Photographs Division for a Flickr album. The albums have a theme, the most recent one being Women Photographers of the Farm Security Administration/Office of War Information (FSA/OWI). It features the work of Esther Bubley, Marjory Collins, Dorothea Lange, And Marion Post Wolcott.
As I was looking through photos in the Prints and Photographs Online Catalog (PPOC) taken by Dorothea Lange, I spotted a photo, which at thumbnail size on my laptop, showed a car’s hubcap. When I enlarged the image, I got very excited when I saw reflections both on the car’s fender and in the hubcap!
Looking a little deeper, I saw four more hubcap photos. This is the one that provided me with the clearest reflection and that I included in the Flickr album:
Here is a detail:
These untitled photos would have been difficult to associate with Dorothea Lange’s work were it not for an ongoing project that is enhancing photo descriptions for FSA/OWI images. Originally, the online catalog caption information for the hubcap photo included a title of “Untitled” and listed no photographer name.
These photos will eventually all be titled “Untitled photo, possibly related to: Close-up view of abandoned dry land farmhouse in Columbia Basin. Washington, Grant County, one mile east of Quincy. See general caption number 35” and be attributed to Lange.
In the summer of 1939, Lange was working in Grant County, Washington, where she took these photos .
I can say with some certainty that the figure on the left in the reflection is Dorothea Lange. Lange holds her camera at waist level as she looks down through the viewfinder. I’m not certain of the identity of the man standing next to her. My guess would be that it is her husband Paul Taylor, who often travelled with her when she was on assignment for the FSA.
Look closely and you will see that this is the farmhouse in the reflection:
Here is a closer view of the farmhouse:
You can always see new things in the collections of the Prints & Photographs Division if you take the time to look closely.
Learn More:
- View the Flickr album of Women Photographers of the FSA/OWI.
- See Lange’s FSA work around the abandoned farmhouse in Grant County, Washington.
- Read previous Picture This blog posts about captioning untitled FSA/OWI photos:
Comments (4)
Thanks as always; it’s wonderful to see some of these shots in the LC collection.
Looking closely a second time I noticed the “Burma Shave” advertising sign, like the ones I saw in Michigan growing up there in the 50s.
Thanks as always.
I noted the “BurmaShave” advertising sign like those still prevalent when I traveled with adult relatives on the Michigan highways of the Fifties.
Good eye, spotting these! and extra points for the clever title on this one
Why, it’s a Ford. Great pic