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How the Migrants Live, Kern County, California
How the Migrants Live, Kern County, California
How the Migrants Live, Kern County, California

How the Migrants Live, Kern County, California

Artist (American, 1895 - 1965)
DateMarch 1936 (printed 1930s)
MediumGelatin silver print
DimensionsImage: 10 9/16 × 13 3/4 in. (26.8 × 34.9 cm)
Support: 11 × 14 1/8 in. (27.9 × 35.9 cm)
Mat: 16 3/8 × 20 3/8 in. (41.6 × 51.8 cm)
ClassificationsPhotograph
Credit LineGift of William H. Redd and James T. Redd III, in memory of their father, James T. Redd Jr., 2021
Object number2021.3.5
DescriptionHorizontal landscape composition with a muddy ditch and metal barrel in foreground. Middle ground is delineated by a barbed wire fence attached to wooden fence posts. Behind the fence is a large tent with closed flaps, surrounded with evidence of an encampment such as buckets and laundry hanging to dry. A woman doing some kind of work, possibly washing, kneels in front of the tent.
eMuseum Notes
Dorothea Lange worked as a photographer for the federal government’s  Resettlement Administration, a New Deal agency created in May 1935 that later became the Farm Security Administration. Its initial goals were to relocate low-income families to planned communities where they could own a home, get a job, and grow their own food. Lange often  focused her camera on the deplorable living conditions of migrant workers in California, a place where many had traveled to escape the Dust Bowl and look for jobs. This image of a woman doing her housekeeping at a tent surrounded by mud speaks volumes about the depth of the country’s economic crisis and the human spirit of endurance.
On View
Not on view
Terms
  • camps (temporary settlements)
  • poverty
  • tents
  • natural landscapes