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Summary
Summary
Dorothea Lange chose to work as a photographer during a time when family was supposed to come first for a woman. Like so many women, she had a husband and children to take care of'but no matter how hard she tried, family life could not substitute for the work she loved. Her passion was photographing people. During her career, Dorothea Lange captured some of the most desperate and beautiful faces America has seen in photographs. Restless Spirit: The Life and Work of Dorothea Lange includes over sixty of Lange's extraordinary photographs printed in high quality duotones, and chronicles Lange's life from her childhood on the Lower East Side of New York, through her early years as a portrait photographer in San Francisco, to her famous work for the government photographing starving migrant workers in California. Also included are her heart-breaking photographs of Japanese Americans interned on the West Coast during World War II.Author Elizabeth Partridge has woven Lange's own words into her book, creating not just another biography, but an intimate portrait of the artist who put faces on some of the darkest episodes in America's history. Restless Spirit presents a magnificent showcase of work that will not soon be forgotten.Dorothea Lange was Elizabeth Partridge's godmother and her father was Lange's photographic assistant in the 1930s.
Reviews (4)
School Library Journal Review
Gr 6 Up-As a photographer, Lange specialized in documentary-type portraits, seeking to capture in people's faces the stories of their lives. Through the years of the Great Depression and the Second World War, she recorded the down-and-out, the oppressed, the needy. Her portrait "Migrant Mother" has become a familiar icon of hardship, a symbol of the dislocation and poverty caused by the dust bowl in the 1930s. Her camera recorded the Japanese Americans sent to internment camps in the 1940s, and in later travels she preserved the images of children around the world. As a young girl the author knew Lange and was, through her photographer father, connected with the intimate circle of Lange's family and friends. She uses personal memories; her subject's own written words in diaries, interviews, and letters; and especially a liberal selection of dramatic photographs to show the talent and the complex personality of this extraordinary woman. It was hard for Lange, in the decades in which she lived, to pursue her career while balancing family responsibilities and personal crises. She was independent, even radical, in her political thinking and social philosophy. Her story resonates with issues of gender, social policies, artistic merit, and human interest. This well-constructed, sympathetic biography deserves many readers and is a must for every library.-Shirley Wilton, Ocean County College, Toms River, NJ (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Horn Book Review
(Intermediate, Older) Dorothea Lange was an artist with the camera, a social historian, a precursor of the women's movement, and-as this biography demonstrates-a free spirit, conscious of her own destiny and willing to sacrifice an ordinary life to become extraordinary. There are two other fine biographies of Lange: Robyn Montana Turner's Dorothea Lange (Little), a picture book biography for younger readers, and Milton Meltzer's Dorothea Lange: Life through the Camera (Viking) for a slightly older audience. Excellent as these are in translating the life and work of a complicated individual into a form accessible to their respective audiences, neither can quite match the impact of Partridge's book, with its lavish display of Lange's photographs. Some, such as ""Migrant Mother,"" are familiar images; others are less well known. Supplementing these are numerous photographs of Lange herself with members of her family, on location, or celebrating holidays. That the author is the daugh-ter of Lange's photographic assistant, Ron Partridge, adds depth and credibility, particularly to the description of a ritual-filled Thanksgiving family gathering. The facts of Lange's life are cogently recorded: her uncomfortable childhood growing up as a polio victim in Hoboken, New Jersey, and commuting each day with her librarian mother to New York City's Lower East Side; her desire to become a photographer; her diffi-culty assuming the conventional roles of wife and mother; her passionate determination to maintain her individuality. This latter point, the theme of the book, is captured in one of the many quotations from Lange herself: ""I have a very great instinct for freedom. Anybody cuts into that and I churn."" The oversized format and glossy stock add a classy look to a thoughtful presentation that will engage the attention of many readers, including adults. With a bibliography and index. m.m.b. (c) Copyright 2010. The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Kirkus Review
A fascinating biography of the world-famous photographer, written by the daughter of Lange's assistant in the 1930s. Born Dorothea Margaretta Nutzhorn in 1895 in New Jersey, she was stricken with polio at age seven, and later spoke of it as ""the most important thing that happened to me. It formed me, guided me, instructed me, helped me, and humiliated me."" Taking her mother's maiden name when she began her professional photography career, Lange went from portraits to documenting the ""disastrous human consequences"" of the Great Depression. ""I had to get my camera to register things that were more important than how poor they were--their pride, their strength, their spirit,"" she wrote about photographing migrant workers in California. She also photographed sharecroppers in the South and Japanese-American internment camps during WWII. Lange's life has been well-documented, but Partridge's conversational tone and intimate details of the Lange household will draw readers in. She also makes vivid Lange's lasting contributions; her photographs--many of which have been reproduced in these pages--captured some of the darkest episodes in American history and continue to touch all who ponder them. Copyright ©Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Booklist Review
Gr. 6^-12. Lange's stirring black-and-white photographs, more than 60 of them, exquisitely reproduced, provide the drama in this biography of the famous camera artist. Here are the famous pictures that brought the nation up close to the man on the bread line during the Depression, a migrant mother unable to feed her children, a sharecropper in the South, a homeless child on the road, a Japanese American family interned during World War II. The beautiful, spacious design of this photo-essay, with thick quality paper, clear type, and brief quotes from Lange at the head of each chapter, invites you to come back and look and look at her work. The pictures show how Lang got close to people and that she caught her subjects in relation to harsh, powerful events and to one another. Partridge draws on letters, journals, and oral history to give a strong sense of Lange's personal struggles as a child, a wife, and a mother; her lasting pain at her father's desertion; her shame over the disability caused by a childhood bout with polio; and her awareness as an adult that that vulnerability helped her in her work. The author also provides an insider's viewpoint: as a child, she knew Lange. Partridge's father became Lange's assistant at the age of 17, and he worked with her for years in the field and in the darkroom. Many of the photos of Lange in the book are by him, including some of Lange with the child Elizabeth. Like Freedman's, Martha Graham [BKL Ap 1 98], this fine photo-essay will interest adults as much as teens. A Junior Library Guild Selection. --Hazel Rochman