Bibliographic Information

Walker Evans : the hungry eye

Gilles Mora and John T. Hill

Thames and Hudson, 1993

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. 362-364)

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Walker Evans ranks with Steiglitz, Steichen and Strand as an artist of the highest calibre. His images captured forever the harshness of the Depression, the beauty of 19th-century brownstone architecture, the very essence of American life. Evans began photographing regularly in 1927, and came to specialize in street life - views of buildings, of the roadside, and of the people of cities, towns and villages. His three years of work in the Depression-hit South produced his best-known series, the book "Let Us Now Praise Famous Men". While this was being prepared, Evans assembled his influential exhibition "American Photographs" at The Museum of Modern Art, New York, recreated here in its entirety. He continued to explore the rich potential of his medium and the American scene - Florida's swamps, Connecticut's munitions works, Faulkner's Mississippi, Chicago, California - even experimenting towards the end of his life with colour photographs - reproduced here for the first time in any book. This book has been assembled by John T. Hill, longtime friend of Evans and executor of his estate, and the distinguished French photographic writer Gilles Mora. All phases of Evans' creative career are presented, each section preceded by an explanatory essay, establishing a definitive canon of Evans' finest work. The pictures themselves have been printed from original negatives.

Table of Contents

  • Foreword
  • introduction
  • 1927-32
  • 1932-35
  • 1935-38
  • 1938-45
  • 1945-65
  • 1927-75
  • acknowledgments
  • text notes annotations.

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