A Life Less Ordinary
One of Life magazine's original four photographers, Margaret Bourke-White snapped shots around the world
- By Dina Modianot-Fox
- Smithsonian.com, March 01, 2007, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 3)
She started taking pictures in college (she attended several) using a second-hand camera with a broken lens that her mother bought for her for $20. "After I found a camera," she explained, "I never really felt a whole person again unless I was planning pictures or taking them."
In 1927, after shedding a short-lived marriage and graduating from Cornell University with a degree in biology, she moved to Cleveland, Ohio, an emerging industrial powerhouse, to photograph the new gods of the machine age: factories, steel mills, dams, buildings. She signaled her uniqueness by adding her mother's maiden name to her own.
Soon, her perfectly composed, highly contrasted and dynamic photographs had giant corporate clients clamoring for her services.
"When she began courting corporations, she was one of the few women who were actively competing in a man's world and a lot of the men photographers were very jealous of her," says Phillips. "The rumor got around that it wasn't a woman who was taking the photographs—that it wasn't really her."
Neither her gender nor her age posed a problem for Henry Luce, publisher of Time. In what became a lasting partnership, he hired the 25-year-old Bourke-White for his new magazine, Fortune and gave her almost a free hand. She went to Germany, made three trips to the Soviet Union—the first Western photojournalist to be given access—and traveled all around the United States, including the Midwest, which was experiencing the severest drought in the country's history.
When Luce decided to start a new magazine, he again turned to Bourke-White. One of Life's original four photographers, her picture of Fort Peck Dam in Montana made the first cover on November 23, 1936, when she was 32. Her accompanying cover story is regarded as the first photo essay—a genre, says Phillips, "that would become an integral part of the magazine for the next 20 years."
With the United States in the grips of the Great Depression, Bourke-White undertook a trip through the South with Erskine Caldwell, the famed author of Tobacco Road and God's Little Acre. Their collaboration resulted in a book on Southern poverty, You Have Seen Their Faces. The haggard images staring back at the camera confirmed her "increasing understanding of the human condition," says Phillips. "She became skilled at capturing the human experience."
She and Caldwell moved in together (even though he was married at the time), wed, collaborated on three more books and, although both were passionate advocates of social justice, divorced in 1942. "Mine is a life into which marriage doesn't fit very well," she said.
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Comments (4)
i am amazed at your work, and hope to one day be at least half as talented in the photographic art.
Posted by Hennah on August 14,2008 | 07:22 PM
I am doing a Women in History Project on you and I was wondering what your middle life was like, like teenage years!!
Posted by Josslyn on February 28,2008 | 03:00 PM
how much megapixels did your camera have?:]
Posted by on November 27,2007 | 02:57 PM
im doing my history fair project on you:]
Posted by savanna on November 27,2007 | 02:56 PM