Five things to know: August Sander | Tate https://www.tate.org.uk/art/artists/august-sander-5319/five-things-know-august-sander
such as Walker Evans and Dorothea Lange (whose works became iconic symbols of the depression
such as Walker Evans and Dorothea Lange (whose works became iconic symbols of the depression
Tate glossary definition for documentary photography: A style of photography that provides a straightforward and accurate representation of people, places, objects and events, and is often used in reportage
photography refers to photographs that documented rural poverty during America’s Great Depression
This Audio Arts issue, originally published as an audio cassette magazine in 2002, includes Marlene Dumas, Mike Nelson, Pamela Golden, Mark Fairnington, John Warhola, Abigail Lane and Kenneth Noland
gives an insight into their childhoods, the sense of America coming out of the depression
Tate glossary definition for photography: The process or practice of creating a photograph – an image produced by the action of light on a light-sensitive material
photography refers to photographs that documented rural poverty during America’s Great Depression
Paul Nash was preoccupied with his own mortality from childhood. But being posted as official artist to both world wars inspired him to some of his greatest work, now exhibited at Tate Liverpool. By Simon Grant
His mother suffered from depression, and before he was ten she was spending long
A-Z of modernist photography. Discover 26 things you need to know about this period of photography
depictions of rural and small-town life not only chronicled the realities of the Great Depression
Explore the creativity, achievements and important legacy of the Bloomsbury circle with this Tate Look Closer resource
Virginia Woolf suffered from bouts of depression throughout her life and committed
made to losses in the paint and ground without filling and levelling, resulting in depressions