Seller:memorabilia111✉️(808)100%,
Location:Ann Arbor, Michigan, US,
Ships to: US,
Item:176299960715MARGARET BOURKE-WHITE NEGATIVES 1940'S RARE UNIQUE FAMOUS PHOTOGRAPHER RARE. 2 ORIGINAL NEGATIVES 3 1/8 X 4 1/4 INCHES BY MARGARET BOURKE-WHITE AS WELL AS ORIGINAL NEGATIVE ENVELKOPE SIGNED BY HER WITH HANDWRITING BY HER AS WELL PM was a liberal-leaning daily newspaper published in New York City by Ralph Ingersoll from June 1940 to June 1948 and financed by Chicago millionaire Marshall Field III. The paper borrowed many elements from weekly news magazines, such as many large photos and at first was bound with staples. In an attempt to be free of pressure from business interests, it did not accept advertising. These departures from the norms of newspaper publishing created excitement in the industry. Some 11,000 people applied for the 150 jobs available when the publication first hired staff. Contributors: Theodor Geisel, better known as Dr. Seuss, published more than 400 cartoons on PM's editorial page.[7][8] Crockett Johnson's comic strip Barnaby debuted in the paper in 1942. Other artists who worked at PM included Ad Reinhardt, one of the founders of Abstract Expressionism, and Joseph LeBoit, who both contributed margin cartoons and drawings. Noted artist Jack Coggins contributed wartime artwork for at least 9 issues between 1940 and 1942.[9] Coulton Waugh created his short-lived strip, Hank, which began April 30, 1945 in PM. The story of a disabled G.I. returning to civilian life, Hank had a unique look due to Waugh's decorative art style, combined with dialogue lettered in upper and lower case rather than the accepted convention of all uppercase lettering in balloons and captions. Some dialogue was displayed with white lettering reversed into black balloons. Hank sought to raise questions about the reasons for war, and how it might be prevented by the next generation. Waugh discontinued it at the very end of 1945 because of eyestrain. Cartoonist Jack Sparling created the short-lived comic strip Claire Voyant, which ran from 1943 to 1948 in PM, and which was subsequently syndicated by the Chicago Sun-Times. Journalist I. F. Stone was the paper's Washington correspondent. He published an award-winning series on European Jewish refugees attempting to run the British blockade to reach Palestine, later collected and published as Underground to Palestine. Staffers included theater critic Louis Kronenberger and film critic Cecelia Ager. Weegee, Margaret Bourke-White, Ray Platnick and Arthur Leipzig were the photographers. The sports writers were Tom Meany, Tom O’Reilly and George F. T. Ryall, who covered horse racing. Sophie Smoliar was the New York City reporter working frequently with photographer Arthur Felig (Weegie) (submitted by her son and a collection of her original articles). Elizabeth Hawes wrote about fashion, and her sister Charlotte Adams covered food. Other writers who contributed articles included Erskine Caldwell, Myril Axlerod, McGeorge Bundy, Saul K. Padover, James Wechsler, eventually the paper's editorial writer, Penn Kimball, later a professor at the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism, Heywood Hale Broun, James Thurber, Dorothy Parker, Ernest Hemingway, Eugene Lyons, Earl Conrad, Benjamin Stolberg, Louis Adamic, Malcolm Cowley,Tip O'Neill (later Speaker of the House; and Ben Hecht. Born in Bronx (New York) on June 14, 1904, she was the daughter of Joseph White and Minnie Bourke. Her father was a naturalist, engineer and inventor; her mother, a resourceful homemaker. She learned from her father perfection; from her mother, the unabashed desire for self-improvement. Married in 1924 to Everett Chapman. Divorced in 1926, she escaped to the security of Cornell University to complete her education and find...and define...herself as the Margaret Bourke-White the world came to know through her pioneering photojournalism. She first gained recognition as an industrial photographer based in Cleveland, Ohio. Arriving in the Lake Erie city by boat in 1927 she said, "I stood on the deck to watch the city come into view. As the skyline took form in the morning mist, I felt I was coming to my promised land...columns of machinery gaining height as we drew toward the pier, derricks swinging like living creatures. Deep inside I knew these were my subjects." Her pioneering photographs of steel mill interiors came to the attention of Henry Luce. He brought her to New York to work on Fortune, a magazine drenched in the romance of industry. Then as a photojournalist who emphasized the human side of the news as seen in the pages of LIFE, another Henry Luce production. As a founding mother of LIFE (she shot the first cover ), she became a world-famous symbol of swashbuckling photography. And that she did it in a male world made her success even more spectacular. During her unique career, Bourke-White was torpedoed in the Mediterranean, strafed by the Luftwaffe, stranded on an Arctic island, bombarded in Moscow, and pulled out of the Chesapeake when her chopper crashed. She was the first Western photographer to document Soviet industry after the revolution, to create a travelog of Czechoslovakia and other Balkan states just before Hitler moved in to ignite World War II, and to be stationed in Moscow just before Germany bombed its former ally. Aggressive and relentless in pursuit of pictures, Bourke-White had the knack of being at the right place at the right time. For example, she interviewed and photographed Mohandas K. Gandhi a few hours before his assassination in India. And she was the only American photographer in the Soviet Union in 1941 while the battle for Moscow raged. Alfred Eisenstaedt, her friend and colleague, said she was great because there was no assignment, no picture that was unimportant to her. She was also credited for starting the first photo lab at LIFE. Bourke-White's second marriage was to Erskine Caldwell, the novelist, in 1939. This marriage ended in divorce in 1942. She had no children. Thus LIFE became her family. And when Parkinson's Disease started to sap her strength her associates at LIFE supported her. She said, "The camera is a remarkable instrument. Saturate yourself with your subject and the camera will all but take you by the hand." Her photographs are in a number of museums, including the Brooklyn Museum, the Cleveland Museum of Art and the Museum of Modern Art in New York. She is also represented in the collection of the Library of Congress. Margaret Bourke-White had mastered her medium. But, she also had the daring, cunning, and intuition to be where news was happening. Margaret Bourke-White is exclusively represented in the Rocky Mountain Region by GALLERY M. View and collect from her vintage and modern collections here. Margaret Bourke-White Biography Born: June 14, 1904 New York, New York Died: August 27, 1971 Darien, Connecticut American photographer and journalist American photographer Margaret Bourke-White was a leader in the new field of photo-journalism. As a staff photographer for Fortune and Life magazines, she covered the major political and social issues of the 1930s and 1940s. Discovering photography Born in New York City on June 14, 1904, Margaret Bourke-White was the daughter of Joseph and Minnie White. (She Margaret Bourke-White. Courtesy of the Library of Congress. Margaret Bourke-White. Courtesy of the Library of Congress . added "Bourke," her mother's name, after her first marriage ended.) Raised in a strict household, Bourke-White attended local public schools in Bound Brook, New Jersey, after her family moved there. In high school Bourke-White served as the yearbook editor and showed promise in her writing talents. Bourke-White attended several different universities during her moves back and forth from the Midwest and the East. She first revealed her talent for photography while a student at Cornell University in upstate New York, where she also completed her bachelor's degree in 1927. Using a secondhand Ica Reflex camera with a broken lens, she sold pictures of the scenic campus to other students. After graduation Bourke-White opened a studio in Cleveland, Ohio, where she found the industrial landscape "a photographic paradise." Initially specializing in architectural photography, her prints of the Otis Steel factory came to the attention of Time magazine publisher Henry Luce, who was planning a new publication devoted to the glamour of business. Building a career In the spring of 1929 Bourke-White accepted Luce's offer to become the first staff photographer for Fortune magazine, which made its debut in February 1930. Her subjects included the Swift meatpacking company, shoemaking, watches, glass, paper mills, orchids, and banks. Excited by the drama of the machine, she made several trips to the Soviet Union (the former country made up of Russia and several smaller nations) and was the first photographer to seriously document its rapid industrial development. She published her work in the book Eyes on Russia (1931). Bourke-White, working out of a New York City studio in the new Chrysler Building, also handled profitable advertising accounts. In 1934, in the midst of the Depression (a decade-long period of severe economic hardship in the 1930s), she earned over $35,000. But a Fortune assignment to cover the drought (a severe shortage of water) in the Midwest states opened her eyes to human suffering and steered her away from advertising work. She began to view photography less as a purely artistic medium and more as a powerful tool for informing the public. In 1936 she worked with Erskine Caldwell (1903–1987), the author of Tobacco Road, on a photo-essay revealing social conditions in the South. The results of their efforts became her best-known book, You Have Seen Their Faces (1937). In the fall of 1936 Bourke-White joined the staff of Life magazine, which popularized the photo-essay. Her picture of the Fort Peck dam in Montana adorned the cover of Life magazine's first issue, November 11, 1936. On one of her first assignments she flew to the Arctic circle. While covering the Louisville flood in 1937 she composed her most famous single photograph: a contrast between a line of African Americans waiting for emergency relief and a billboard with a picture of an untroubled white family in a car and a caption celebrating the American way of life. Later years During World War II (1939-45; a war in which the Allies—Great Britain, France, the Soviet Union, and the United States—fought against the Axis—Germany, Italy, and Japan), Bourke-White served as a war correspondent affiliated with both Life and the U.S. Air Force. She survived a torpedo attack on a ship she was taking to North Africa and accompanied the bombing mission that destroyed the German airfield of El Aouina near Tunis. She later covered the Italian campaign (recorded in the book They Called It "Purple Heart Valley" ) and was with General George Patton (1885–1945) in the spring of 1945 when his troops opened the gates at Buchenwald, Germany, a concentration camp (a camp for prisoners of war). Her photos revealed the horrors to the world. In December of 1949 she went to South Africa for five months where she recorded the cruelty of apartheid, the unfair social and political treatment of black people in South Africa. In 1952 she went to Korea, where her pictures focused on family sorrows arising from war. Shortly after her return from Korea she noticed signs of Parkinson's disease, the nerve disorder which she battled for the remainder of her life. Her autobiography (the story of a person's own life), Portrait of Myself, was started in 1955 and completed in 1963. On August 27, 1971, Margaret Bourke-White died at her home in Darien, Connecticut. She left behind a legacy as a determined woman, an innovative visual artist, and a compassionate human observer. Bourke-White Timeline 1924 Attends Purdue University 1927 Graduates from Cornell University Richard H. Parke, "The Camera Queen" 1927-1929 Photographs industrial sites in Cleveland, including Otis Steel 1929 Begins working for Fortune magazine 1930 Moves studio to New York City 1930-1932 Travels three times to Soviet Union to document industrial life during the first Five Year Plan 1931 Travels to southern Indiana to photograph Empire limestone quarries 1931 Photographs underground in a coal mine 1934 Covers the Dust Bowl catastrophe for Fortune 1935 Begins aviation photography for Pan Am, TWA and Eastern airlines 1936 Produces photograph for cover of first issue of Life magazine; hired as one of four staff photographers for Life 1936 Travels to rural U.S. South with Erskine Caldwell for work on You Have Seen Their Faces (1937) 1936 Exhibits five photographs in Museum of Modern Art photography show 1937 Photographs refugees from Ohio River flood in Louisville 1938 Travels to Czechoslovakia after German annexation of Sudetenland Margaret-Bourke-White visiting Indiana University, 1943. Courtesy of IU University Office of Archives & Record Management Margaret Bourke-White visiting Indiana University, 1943. Courtesy IU Archives, P0031274. 1941 Visits Moscow during initial German bombardment of USSR during WWII 1942 Accredited as first woman war correspondent to US Air Force 1943 Flies as first woman photographer on bombing mission 1943-44 Photographs the invasion of Italy by Allied troops 1945 Accompanies Patton’s Army in Germany; observes and photographs liberation of Buchenwald 1946-1948 Travels twice to India for Life; documents independence, partition, communal riots, Gandhi’s funeral 1949 Publishes Halfway to Freedom, her book on Indian independence Dec. 1949 Arrives in South Africa Dec. 16, 1949 Photographs inauguration of Voortrekker Monument, Pretoria April 14, 1950 Departs South Africa Nov. 4, 1950 Discusses South African trip at symposium on “Modern Photography” at Museum of Modern Art 1955 Displays one of her South African photographs in “Family of Man” exhibit at MOMA Margaret Bourke-White was a pioneering photojournalist whose insightful pictures of 1930s Russia, German industry, and the impact of the Depression and drought in the American midwest established her reputation. She took some of the first photographs inside German concentration camps at Erla and Buchenwald following the end of World War II and captured the last pictures of Mahatma Gandhi, in India. Bourke-White entered Columbia University in 1921 to study herpetology; however, the following year a photography course taught by Clarence H. White at the Clarence H. White School of Photography left a lasting impression. For the course Bourke-White received her first camera, a secondhand 3 ¼ x 4 ¼ inch ICA Reflex with a cracked lens, taking her first photographs on glass plates. Though she continued to study zoology at the University of Michigan, from then on she never left the darkroom. In 1927 she graduated from Cornell University with a degree in biology, but she spent most of her time establishing herself as a professional photographer. Bourke-White opened her first studio in her apartment in Cleveland, Ohio. With photographs of architecture and industry, she earned commissions and caught the eye of Henry Luce, founder of Time and Fortune magazines, who, in 1929, invited her to become Fortune’s first staff photographer. She returned to New York and, in 1930, established a photographic studio in the Chrysler Building. When Luce launched Life magazine in 1936, Bourke-White joined the staff, and her picture Fort Peck Dam, Montana appeared on the first cover. 1904 - 1971 Born in the Bronx, New York in 1904, Margaret Bourke-White was the first female photojournalist. Getting her start around 1927 in Cleveland, Ohio, at the Otis Steel Company where she worked as a female industrial photographer, Bourke-White went on to capture many iconic moments in history. She became a staff photographer for Fortune magazine in 1929 and it was with Fortune magazine that she captured her famous portrayals of the Dust Bowl victims in the mid-1930s. She was the first Western photographer allowed into the Soviet Union and traveled there multiple times to photograph the industrial life during the First Five Year plan. In 1936, Bourke-White accepted a position at LIFE Magazine as the first female photojournalist. Her photograph of the Fort Peck Dam is recognized worldwide as being the first cover photo for LIFE Magazine. During WWII Bourke-White was also the first female to be a war correspondent; She traveled with the US Army Air Force through North Africa and later with the US Army in Italy and Germany, capturing the horrors of combat zones. She was one of the first on the scene with General George S. Patton at the freeing of the Nazi concentration camp in Buchenwald. Bourke-White traveled to India twice during the mid-1940s where she chronicled the Indian independence movement, partition, and Gandhi during his last moments of peace prior to his assassination as well as his funeral. Margaret Bourke-White developed her first symptoms of Parkinson’s disease in 1953, eventually dying of it at the age of 67 in Stamford, Connecticut. Margaret Bourke-White Margaret Bourke-White 1955.jpg Bourke-White interviewed on Person to Person, 1955 Born Margaret White June 14, 1904 The Bronx, New York, US Died August 27, 1971 (aged 67) Stamford, Connecticut, US Nationality American Alma mater Columbia University University of Michigan Purdue University Western Reserve University Cornell University Occupation Photographer, photojournalist Spouse(s) Everett Chapman (m. 1924; div. 1926) Erskine Caldwell (m. 1939; div. 1942) Signature Margaret Bourke-White's signature.jpeg Margaret Bourke-White (/ˈbɜːrk/; June 14, 1904 – August 27, 1971) was an American photographer and documentary photographer.[1] She is best known as the first foreign photographer permitted to take pictures of the Soviet five-year plan,[2] the first American female war photojournalist, and having one of her photographs (the construction of Fort Peck Dam) on the cover of the first issue of Life magazine.[3] She died of Parkinson's disease about eighteen years after developing symptoms. Contents 1 Early life 2 Architectural and commercial photography 3 Photojournalism 4 World War II 5 Recording the India–Pakistan partition violence 6 Later years and death 7 Legacy 7.1 Principal Exhibitions 7.2 Public collections 8 Portrayals in popular culture 9 Awards 10 Publications 11 Biographies and collections of Bourke-White's photographs 12 References 13 External links Early life Margaret Bourke-White,[4] born Margaret White[5] in the Bronx, New York,[6] was the daughter of Joseph White, a non-practicing Jew whose father came from Poland, and Minnie Bourke, who was of Irish Catholic descent.[7] She grew up in Bound Brook, New Jersey (in a neighborhood now part of Middlesex), and graduated from Plainfield High School in Union County.[6][8] From her naturalist father, an engineer and inventor, she claimed to have learned perfectionism; from her "resourceful homemaker" mother, she claimed to have developed an unapologetic desire for self-improvement."[9] Her younger brother, Roger Bourke White, became a prominent Cleveland businessman and high-tech industry founder, and her older sister, Ruth White, became well known for her work at the American Bar Association in Chicago, Ill.[7] Roger Bourke White described their parents as "Free thinkers who were intensely interested in advancing themselves and humanity through personal achievement," attributing this quality in part to the success of their children. He was not surprised at his sister Margaret's success, saying "[she] was not unfriendly or aloof". Margaret's interest in photography began as a young woman's hobby, supported by her father's enthusiasm for cameras.[6] Despite her interest, in 1922, she began studying herpetology at Columbia University, only to have her interest in photography strengthened after studying under Clarence White (no relation).[6] She left after one semester, following the death of her father.[5] She transferred colleges several times, attending the University of Michigan (where she became a member of Alpha Omicron Pi sorority),[10] Purdue University in Indiana, and Western Reserve University in Cleveland, Ohio.[5] Bourke-White ultimately graduated from Cornell University with a Bachelor of Arts degree in 1927, leaving behind a photographic study of the rural campus for the school's newspaper, including photographs of her famed dormitory, Risley Hall.[5][6][11] A year later, she moved from Ithaca, New York, to Cleveland, Ohio, where she started a commercial photography studio and began concentrating on architectural and industrial photography. In 1924, during her studies, she married Everett Chapman, but the couple divorced two years later.[9] Margaret White added her mother's surname, "Bourke" to her name in 1927 and hyphenated it.[5] Architectural and commercial photography One of Bourke-White's clients was Otis Steel Company. Her success was due to her skills with both people and her technique. Her experience at Otis is a good example. As she explains in Portrait of Myself, the Otis security people were reluctant to let her shoot for many reasons. Firstly, steel making was a defense industry, so they wanted to be sure national security was not endangered. Second, she was a woman, and in those days, people wondered if a woman and her delicate cameras could stand up to the intense heat, hazard, and generally dirty and gritty conditions inside a steel mill. When she finally got permission, technical problems began. Black-and-white film in that era was sensitive to blue light, not the reds and oranges of hot steel, so she could see the beauty, but the photographs were coming out all black. She solved this problem by bringing along a new style of magnesium flare, which produces white light, and having assistants hold them to light her scenes. Her abilities resulted in some of the best steel factory photographs of that era, which earned her national attention. "To me... industrial forms were all the more beautiful because they were never designed to be beautiful. They had a simplicity of line that came from their direct application of purpose. Industry... had evolved an unconscious beauty - often a hidden beauty that was waiting to be discovered" Margaret Burke-White, Portrait of Myself (New York: Simon and Shuster, 1963), 49. Photojournalism "Kentucky Flood", February 1937 In 1929, Bourke-White accepted a job as associate editor and staff photographer of Fortune magazine, a position she held until 1935.[5] In 1930, she became the first Western photographer allowed to take photographs of Soviet industry.[5] She was hired by Henry Luce as the first female photojournalist for Life magazine in 1936.[5] She held the title of staff photographer until 1940, but returned from 1941 to 1942,[5] and again in 1945, after which she stayed through her semi-retirement in 1957 (which ended her photography for the magazine)[3] and her full retirement in 1969.[5] Her photographs of the construction of the Fort Peck Dam were featured in Life's first issue, dated November 23, 1936, including the cover.[12] This cover photograph became such a favorite (see [13]) that it was the 1930s' representative in the United States Postal Service's Celebrate the Century series of commemorative postage stamps. "Although Bourke-White titled the photo, New Deal, Montana: Fort Peck Dam, it is actually a photo of the spillway located three miles east of the dam," according to a United States Army Corps of Engineers web page.[14] During the mid-1930s, Bourke-White, like Dorothea Lange, photographed drought victims of the Dust Bowl. In the February 15, 1937 issue of Life magazine, her famous photograph of black flood victims standing in front of a sign which declared, "World's Highest Standard of Living", showing a white family, was published. The photograph later would become the basis for the artwork of Curtis Mayfield's 1975 album, There's No Place Like America Today. Bourke-White and novelist Erskine Caldwell were married from 1939 to their divorce in 1942,[5] and collaborated on You Have Seen Their Faces (1937), a book about conditions in the South during the Great Depression. She also traveled to Europe to record how Germany, Austria, and Czechoslovakia were faring under Nazism and how Russia was faring under Communism. While in Russia, she photographed a rare occurrence, Joseph Stalin with a smile, as well as portraits of Stalin's mother and great-aunt when visiting Georgia. World War II Bourke-White was the first female war correspondent[5] and the first woman to be allowed to work in combat zones during World War II. In 1941, she traveled to the Soviet Union just as Germany broke its pact of non-aggression. She was the only foreign photographer in Moscow when German forces invaded. Taking refuge in the U.S. Embassy, she then captured the ensuing firestorms on camera. As the war progressed, she was attached to the U.S. Army Air Force in North Africa, then to the U.S. Army in Italy and later in Germany. She repeatedly came under fire in Italy in areas of fierce fighting. "The woman who had been torpedoed in the Mediterranean, strafed by the Luftwaffe, stranded on an Arctic island, bombarded in Moscow, and pulled out of the Chesapeake when her chopper crashed, was known to the Life staff as 'Maggie the Indestructible.'"[3] This incident in the Mediterranean refers to the sinking of the England-Africa bound British troopship SS Strathallan that she recorded in an article, "Women in Lifeboats", in Life, February 22, 1943. She was disliked by General Dwight D Eisenhower but was friendly with his chauffeur/secretary, Irishwoman Kay Summersby, with whom she shared the lifeboat. In the spring of 1945, she traveled throughout a collapsing Germany with Gen. George S. Patton. She arrived at Buchenwald, the notorious concentration camp, and later said, "Using a camera was almost a relief. It interposed a slight barrier between myself and the horror in front of me." After the war, she produced a book entitled Dear Fatherland, Rest Quietly, a project that helped her come to grips with the brutality she had witnessed during and after the war. "To many who got in the way of a Bourke-White photograph—and that included not just bureaucrats and functionaries but professional colleagues like assistants, reporters, and other photographers—she was regarded as imperious, calculating, and insensitive."[3] Recording the India–Pakistan partition violence An iconic photograph that Margaret Bourke-White took of Mohandas K. Gandhi in 1946 Bourke-White is known equally well in both India and Pakistan for her photographs of Dr. Bhimrao Ramji Ambedkar at his home Rajgriha, Dadar in Mumbai on the occasion of a third impression of his book which was published in December 1940 as Thoughts on Pakistan (the book was republished in 1946 under the title India's Political What's What: Pakistan or Partition of India). These photographs were published on LIFE magazine cover. She also photographed M. K. Gandhi at his spinning wheel and Pakistan's founder, Mohammed Ali Jinnah, upright in a chair.[15][16] She also was "one of the most effective chroniclers" of the violence that erupted at the independence and partition of India and Pakistan, according to Somini Sengupta, who calls her photographs of the episode "gut-wrenching, and staring at them, you glimpse the photographer's undaunted desire to stare down horror." She recorded streets littered with corpses, dead victims with open eyes, and refugees with vacant eyes. "Bourke-White's photographs seem to scream on the page," Sengupta wrote. The photographs were taken just two years after those Bourke-White took of the newly captured Buchenwald.[15] Sixty-six of Bourke-White's photographs of the partition violence were included in a 2006 reissue of Khushwant Singh's 1956 novel about the disruption, Train to Pakistan. In connection with the reissue, many of the photographs in the book were displayed at "the posh shopping center Khan Market" in Delhi, India. "More astonishing than the images blown up large as life was the number of shoppers who seemed not to register them," Sengupta wrote. No memorial to the partition victims exists in India, according to Pramod Kapoor, head of Roli, the Indian publishing house coming out with the new book.[15] She had a knack for being at the right place at the right time: she interviewed and photographed Mohandas K. Gandhi just a few hours before his assassination in 1948.[17] Alfred Eisenstaedt, her friend and colleague, said one of her strengths was that there was no assignment and no picture that was unimportant to her. She also started the first photography laboratory at Life magazine.[9] Later years and death In 1953, Bourke-White developed her first symptoms of Parkinson's disease.[5] She was forced to slow her career to fight encroaching paralysis.[3] In 1959 and 1961, she underwent several operations to treat her condition,[5] which effectively ended her tremors but affected her speech.[3] In 1971, she died at Stamford Hospital in Stamford, Connecticut, aged 67, from Parkinson's disease.[4][5][18] Bourke-White wrote an autobiography, Portrait of Myself, which was published in 1963 and became a bestseller, but she grew increasingly infirm and isolated in her home in Darien, Connecticut. In her living room, there "was wallpapered in one huge, floor-to-ceiling, perfectly-stitched-together black-and-white photograph of an evergreen forest that she had shot in Czechoslovakia in 1938". A pension plan set up in the 1950s, "though generous for that time", no longer covered her health-care costs. She also suffered financially from her personal generosity and "less-than-responsible attendant care."[3] Legacy Bourke-White's photographs are in the Brooklyn Museum, the Cleveland Museum of Art, the New Mexico Museum of Art[19] and the Museum of Modern Art in New York as well as in the collection of the Library of Congress.[9] A 160-foot long photomural she created for NBC in 1933, for the Rotunda in the broadcaster's Rockefeller Center headquarters, was destroyed in the 1950s. In 2014, when the Rotunda and Grand Staircase leading up to it were rebuilt, the photomural was faithfully recreated in digital form on the 360-degree LED screens on the Rotunda's walls. It forms one of the stops on the NBC Studio Tour. Many of her manuscripts, memorabilia, photographs, and negatives are housed in Syracuse University's Bird Library Special Collections section. Principal Exhibitions Group John Becker Gallery, New York: 1931 (Photographs by Three Americans, with Ralph Steiner and Walker Evans) Museum of Modern Art, New York:1949 (Six Women Photographers, 1951 (Memorable Life Photographs))[20] Individual Annual Exhibition of Advertising Art, New York: 1931 (with Anton Bruehl; art works by others) Little Carnegie Playhouse, New York: 1932 Rockefeller Center, New York: 1932 Art Institute of Chicago: 1956 Syracuse University, NY: 1966 Carl Siembab Gallery, Boston: 1971 Witkin Gallery, New York: 1971 Andrew Dickson White Museum of Art, Cornell University, Ithaca: 1972 (retrospective)[20] Public collections Brooklyn Museum Cleveland Museum of Art Library of Congress Museum of Modern Art, New York New Mexico Museum of Art Rijksmuseum Amsterdam[21] Portrayals in popular culture Bourke-White was portrayed by Farrah Fawcett in the television movie, Double Exposure: The Story of Margaret Bourke-White (1989) and by Candice Bergen in the 1982 film Gandhi. Let’s face it. People who have to read a newspaper, or, at the very least, hold one while they drink their breakfast coffee, choose their journals for different reasons. They take the New York Times because they respect it. Its reporters and editors, who they feel are at least as smart as they, have looked at the previous day’s events and dared to inscribe their significance in black on white forever. Devotees of New York Newsday would miss the Brooklyn and Queens news if they were forced to read anything else. New York Post readers require either its ample sports coverage or Eric Breindel’s editorials as other people need orange juice, and readers of the Daily News are watching with bated judgment to see if the new regime carries on as the last one did. Not one of these loyalties, however, approaches the dedication that was once lavished by readers on another New York newspaper, PM, an afternoon tabloid published between 1940 and 1948 by a magazine genius named Ralph Ingersoll. A unique effort to revise what people had come to expect from a newspaper, PM took a fresh approach from first to last. Ingersoll had conceived the idea for PM while managing editor of Time-Life publications, where he had come up with the editorial formula that was responsible for Fortune magazine’s success. Approaching his fortieth birthday with the feeling that everything he was doing he had done before, Ingersoll began to ponder the functions of a daily newspaper in a world where radio (and eventually television) could deliver the facts faster. From these ruminations came PM. Ingersoll, as he would explain to anyone who would listen, wanted to create a newspaper that would be free of all the clichés newspapers had embodied for several centuries. He would show that to be serious, a newspaper did not have to be solemn. Nor did it have to be an ungainly mass of large folded sheets of unbound paper that made reading it impossible while standing in a subway train and that separated family members when read at the breakfast table. Instead of reporters who were simply trained to cast the main facts of a story in the first paragraph, Ingersoll wanted writers who could tell a story dramatically. And unlike the standard news story that aspired to a neutral tone, PM’s stories would make it clear where the writer’s sympathies lay. Moreover, Ingersoll would give space to writers with whom he did not agree, as long as they came to their position honorably. Lest a single reader feel that advertisers’ money was influencing PM’s choice of news coverage and tinting its editorial policies, the newspaper would carry no advertising. Countless conferences preceded the paper’s final format. It was smaller and squarer than the News and Mirror tabloids already on the street, its 32 pages stapled together along the spine to make it easier to handle. PM relied more heavily on photographs than existing papers—its initials stood for “photographic material” as well as for its afternoon appearance on newsstands. And its new format, which separated the news into different departments, made it easy for readers to find the news they cared about. The front page used color and featured only one story. The PM logo appeared in the top left hand corner; headlines of two or three relatively minor stories might appear beneath it, but the rest of the page—at least three-quarters of it—remained available for the big story. Sometimes the front page was given over to an editorial—though these did not appear in every issue, and no more than one appeared in any issue. Signed by Ralph Ingersoll and addressed to the reader, PM’s editorials made no attempt at achieving a judicious tone: “The Fascists Are Winning,” declared one of PM’s front pages. “What Are You Going to Do About It?” The war in Europe was not a serious consideration in the plans for PM’s publication, but by the time the paper emerged, the war had become America’s crucial issue. Ingersoll had no hesitation in staking out PM’s position: “We are against people who push other people around,” he wrote in his first editorial. He went on to say that America was in peril unless British forces could defeat Germany, and was altogether doomed if it did not supply the nations fighting Germany and Italy. No other paper stated the case so unequivocally. During that same period, for instance, cartoons in the Daily News showed a sinister vamp, representing war, seducing young American men with the false promise of excitement and adventure. Although every member of PM’s staff was profoundly anti-Hitler, the staff was divided into two cliques: the liberals who regarded the Soviet Union as a slave state, devoid of individual rights, and the liberals who regarded the Soviet Union as a living demonstration of a truly humane society. PM’s readers could usually distinguish the news written by either of the two sides. The late 1930s and the early 1940s were the years when American labor was just beginning to win the right to unionize and bargain collectively, and PM devoted almost six pages every day to news of the American labor front. Leo Huberman, a communist sympathizer, was editor of the labor news, and for a year and a half the paper argued that American workers were entitled to more money and better terms without worrying over whether strikes would help the fascists. But after the German invasion of Russia in July 1941, the party and its sympathizers in the press put labor’s problems on the back shelf, and urged full production to give the Russians some relief. To make up for the lack of advertising and give its readers information about sales on everything from coats and underwear to string beans and porterhouse steak (33 cents a pound in 1941), at least four pages of each issue were devoted to consumer items. It was generally acknowledged that PM had the best radio listings in New York—two pages in every weekday issue. The double issue on Sunday (PM did not publish on Saturday) was replete with photographs, many by Weegee, a remarkable candid photographer with great feeling for the city and especially its people. PM’s maps, illustrating military movements, were extremely good. Its sports section headlined two of the city’s best sports writers, Tom Meany and Tom O’Reilly. George F. T. Ryall covered horse racing. Louis Kronenberger, whom many considered the best critic in the city, covered the theater. Elizabeth Hawes, a fashion designer, wrote on fashion; her sister, Charlotte Adams, covered food. Ingersoll tried very hard to put together a writing staff whose members had established reputations in the world of books. At one time or another articles appeared in PM by Erskine Caldwell; McGeorge Bundy, whose work appeared soon after his graduation from college; James Wechsler, who ultimately became the paper’s editorialist; Penn Kimball, later dean of the Columbia University School of Journalism; Heywood Hale Broun; James Thurber; Dorothy Parker; Ernest Hemingway; I. F. Stone; Eugene Lyons, a onetime communist who devoted himself to exposing communists; Ben Stolberg; and Malcolm Cowley, who wrote a serious attack on the lack of class consciousness in Kronenberger’s reviews. Ben Hecht wrote a more or less regular column that purported to be about New York, but was mainly about the colorful and interesting personalities he encountered. PM’s weakest section was its New York City coverage. Ingersoll could not compete with newspapers like the Herald-Tribune and the Times that had much bigger staffs. PM had to rely mostly on United Press wire copy for its coverage of New York. As the foreign situation deteriorated, however, and the prospect of American participation in the war became clearer, local news became less important. The second anniversary of PM’s publication was probably the high point of its existence. Congratulatory messages poured in from those who supported its policies and coverage of the war. The newspaper printed two pages of messages from President Roosevelt and other eminent people. Unfortunately, Ingersoll also received a message from his draft board: despite his 41 years, he was being called up for service. Ingersoll strongly suspected that some of the people who did not like PM’s editorial positions were behind the draft board’s action. Nonetheless, finding himself in the awkward position of having urged other people to fight, he refused to ask for a deferment. He was drafted, and thus began a remarkable military career that formed the basis for several books he wrote after the war. If publishing PM without Ralph Ingersoll was difficult, it was no harder than publishing it without enough money. PM’s original financial plan had been disastrously inadequate. Initially, Ingersoll had calculated that he would need $10 million to keep PM going until it developed a readership large enough to sustain it. (Unfortunately, that never happened; circulation hovered between 100,000 and 200,000 throughout the paper’s existence.) But the investment bankers to whom he brought his prospectus told him that no one would put $10 million in an untried publication that carried no advertisements. Ingersoll reduced his capital requirement to $5 million, a concession that failed to impress the investment bankers. In fact, he had only managed to raise $1.5 million when he hired his first people and started looking for a printing plant and office space. The original investors included some of the outstanding figures in the small circle of wealthy Americans who supported liberal causes, and were sufficiently well-off to face with equanimity the prospect of losing sums of $10,000 to $200,000. As early as September 1940, barely three months after the publication of the first issue, it was clear that the paper had used up the entire $1.5 million in capital it had received from investors, newsstand purchasers, and subscribers. To make matters worse, more than 100,000 subscription cards that had been mailed in as a result of a pre-publication campaign were lost in the tangle of PM’s office; whether through carelessness or malevolence, no one ever found out. To keep PM going past September 1940, management had to defer all payments to the paper’s worried and impatient creditors. It was Marshall Field III, described at a younger age as “the world’s richest boy,” who stepped forward and volunteered to don the hair shirt of a guardian angel. For the next eight years, during most of which time the world was at war, Field continued to help PM survive, while hardly ever suggesting changes. At that time, very rich Americans tended to favor solid institutions: colleges and universities, long-established organizations that tried to assist the poor and disabled, or cultural institutions, such as museums and orchestras. Field, however, was determined to use his money in ways that would broaden his own life as well as give aid to people who were not admitted to the American mainstream. He established a Citizens Committee for Children in New York and the Field Foundation for helping the poor, especially blacks. But even for Field, financing as a silent partner a newspaper that consistently lost money seemed a peculiar choice. It was probably the very peculiarity of such a choice, which distinguished him from his peers, that appealed to him. When Ingersoll returned to New York after the war and had a chance to catch up on what his newspaper had been doing, he found himself extremely disappointed. The PM he read was not the PM he had imagined. It was not as lively and well-written as he had expected, and now that the war no longer provided a common enemy, the editorial split between the procommunist and anticommunist liberals was creating confusion. Meanwhile, Marshall Field had come to the end of his patience and insisted that PM accept advertising. Ingersoll realized that the days of running the paper his way were over, and severed his connection with the newspaper. Field continued to carry PM for another two years, although he had become more interested in publishing the Chicago Sun. He eventually turned the paper over to two experienced journalists who changed the name to the Star. But even with advertising, the paper continued to lose money and lasted only nine more months. The rest is silence. Though 45 years have passed since the end of the war, a dwindling band of PM’s faithful subscribers would surely be delighted to greet the start of a newspaper founded on Ralph Ingersoll’s initial resolutions: no advertising, a clear editorial policy forcefully expressed, hospitality toward an opposing point of view candidly revealed, columnists and occasional contributors noted for their knowledge and writing skill, great photographs, and staples to hold the newspaper together and make for easy reading on the subway or at the dining table. PM Type Daily Founder(s) Ralph Ingersoll Founded June 1940 Political alignment liberal Ceased publication June 1948 Headquarters New York City Circulation 165,000 PM was a liberal-leaning daily newspaper published in New York City by Ralph Ingersoll from June 1940 to June 1948 and financed by Chicago millionaire Marshall Field III. The paper borrowed many elements from weekly news magazines, such as many large photos and at first was bound with staples. In an attempt to be free of pressure from business interests, it did not accept advertising. These departures from the norms of newspaper publishing created excitement in the industry. Some 11,000 people applied for the 150 jobs available when the publication first hired staff. Contents 1 Publication history 2 Politics 3 Contributors 4 See also 5 Bibliography 6 References 7 External links Publication history The origin of the name is unknown, although Ingersoll recalled that it probably referred to the fact that the paper appeared in the afternoon;[1] The New Yorker reported that the name had been suggested by Lillian Hellman.[2] (There is no historical evidence for the suggestion that the name was an abbreviation of Picture Magazine.) The first year of the paper was a general success, though it was already in some financial trouble: its circulation of 100,000–200,000 was insufficient. Circulation averaged 165,000, but the paper never managed to sell the 225,000 copies a day it needed to break even. Marshall Field III had become the paper's funder; quite unusually, he was a "silent partner" in this continually money-losing undertaking.[3] According to a June 21, 1966, memo from Ingersoll: Before the end of the War it was actually operating in the black.... In my opinion at the time and these 20 years later−PM's death is most soundly attributable to a sustained and well-organized plot originating amongst Field's friends and associates in the business world who were alienated by Field's loyalty to PM and to me. The hostility was there from the beginning; the plot came together under the auspices of a man named Harry Cushing who was a retainer of Field's. The principal and successful offensive of this group was that it had as its objective Field's distraction from PM by persuading him to start the Sun in Chicago. Once they committed Field to the Sun venture, the end was inevitable. I can diagram it for you but merely put it on record here.[4] PM was sold in 1948 and published its final issue on June 22. The next day it was replaced by the New York Star, which folded on January 28, 1949. Politics There were accusations that the paper was Communist-dominated, but others have concluded that the paper frequently opposed the policies of the Communist Party (CP) and engaged into editorial battles with the CP's paper, the Daily Worker.[5] Contributors In 1945, Coulton Waugh employed a novel art approach on his PM strip Hank. According to Waugh, Hank was "a deliberate attempt to work in the field of social usefulness."[6] Theodor Geisel, better known as Dr. Seuss, published more than 400 cartoons on PM's editorial page.[7][8] Crockett Johnson's comic strip Barnaby debuted in the paper in 1942. Other artists who worked at PM included Ad Reinhardt, one of the founders of Abstract Expressionism, and Joseph LeBoit, who both contributed margin cartoons and drawings. Noted artist Jack Coggins contributed wartime artwork for at least 9 issues between 1940 and 1942.[9] Coulton Waugh created his short-lived strip, Hank, which began April 30, 1945 in PM. The story of a disabled G.I. returning to civilian life, Hank had a unique look due to Waugh's decorative art style, combined with dialogue lettered in upper and lower case rather than the accepted convention of all uppercase lettering in balloons and captions. Some dialogue was displayed with white lettering reversed into black balloons. Hank sought to raise questions about the reasons for war, and how it might be prevented by the next generation. Waugh discontinued it at the very end of 1945 because of eyestrain.[6] Cartoonist Jack Sparling created the short-lived comic strip Claire Voyant, which ran from 1943 to 1948 in PM, and which was subsequently syndicated by the Chicago Sun-Times. Journalist I. F. Stone was the paper's Washington correspondent. He published an award-winning series on European Jewish refugees attempting to run the British blockade to reach Palestine, later collected and published as Underground to Palestine. Staffers included theater critic Louis Kronenberger and film critic Cecelia Ager. Weegee, Margaret Bourke-White, Ray Platnick and Arthur Leipzig were the photographers. The sports writers were Tom Meany, Tom O’Reilly and George F. T. Ryall, who covered horse racing. Sophie Smoliar was the New York City reporter working frequently with photographer Arthur Felig (Weegie) (submitted by her son and a collection of her original articles). Elizabeth Hawes wrote about fashion, and her sister Charlotte Adams covered food.[3][7] Other writers who contributed articles included Erskine Caldwell, Myril Axlerod, McGeorge Bundy, Saul K. Padover, James Wechsler, eventually the paper's editorial writer, Penn Kimball, later a professor at the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism, Heywood Hale Broun, James Thurber, Dorothy Parker, Ernest Hemingway, Eugene Lyons, Earl Conrad, Benjamin Stolberg, Louis Adamic, Malcolm Cowley,[3] Tip O'Neill (later Speaker of the House;[7] and Ben Hecht.[3] See also Margaret Bourke-White In Print: An Exhibition
Exhibition at Archibald S. Alexander Library,
Rutgers University
New Brunswick, New Jersey
January-June 2006
Gary D. Saretzky, Guest Curator
In 1936, New Jersey-raised Margaret
Bourke-White was named one of the ten most
prominent women in America and, among the
general public, was probably the best known
photographer, male or female. At that time,
she had written and published only one book
illustrated with her photographs but her images had appeared in forty-five issues of Fortune magazine, as well as numerous other
magazines and books.1 As a result of the
substantial number of articles by and about
her, her name was used to market the publications in which her work appeared and she became the first photographer who had
sufficient celebrity status to earn money by endorsing non-photographic products in
print and on the radio: Maxwell House, the Victor Library of Recorded Music, Camel
cigarettes, and wine.2
Although few of her pictures had appeared on the walls of museums or art galleries, in the following year, 1937, she was included in the first major photography exhibit
at the Museum of Modern Art in New York.3 Unlike prominent photographers today,
who often become known through exhibitions and exhibition reviews by critics writing in
art magazines and metropolitan newspapers, Bourke-White became prominent through
her commercial success and because, as an attractive young woman in a maledominated profession, she was newsworthy: “Now at 26, her income is $50,000 per
year,” wrote Time on December 14, 1931, during the early years of the Great Depression.
By the time Margaret Bourke-White wrote and published her autobiography, Portrait of Myself, in 1963, her last and tenth book, nearly sixty major articles had been writ1 Theodore M. Brown, Margaret Bourke-White: Photojournalist (Cornell University: Ithaca, 1972). Bibliography on pages 109-119.
2 Vicki Goldberg, Margaret Bourke-White: A Biography (NY: Harper & Row, 1986),138, 194-195.
3 Beaumont Newhall, Photography, 1839-1937. NY: MOMA, 1937.
ten about her in magazines and newspapers.4 Since her death in August 1971 after a
protracted battle with Parkinson’s disease, her fame has continued to spread through
monographs, exhibitions, journal articles, and even a 1989 Hollywood movie: Double
Exposure, starring Farrah Fawcett and loosely based on Vicki Goldberg’s authoritative
biography published in 1986. More recently, the prestigious Phillips Gallery in Washington, D.C., premiered a major exhibition, Margaret Bourke-White: The Photography of
Design.
5 Books for children have been written about her as a model for youth.6 People who hardly know her name have seen, and will always remember, her images of
Southern sharecroppers, World War II concentration camp victims, and Gandhi, among
many others.
The attention that continues to be given to Bourke-White is well deserved and it
arises from a confluence of several complementary factors. The first is, of course, the
continuing fascination with Bourke-White herself: a vivacious, determined, and skillful
photographer whose work ranged from innovative Machine Age abstractions to povertystricken unknowns to the most famous people of her time; a successful woman photographer in an era when most of her peers were men; a communicator who could express
herself in both image and word; one of the chief photographers of two very important
magazines of her era: Fortune and LIFE, the former read by policy makers, the latter by
just about everyone in America; and a celebrity in her own right by the time she married
Erskine Caldwell, who had written Tobacco Road, a bestseller which, when dramatized,
became a record-setting play on Broadway.
Even in her own time, Bourke-White grabbed the attention of the media for her
courage: she hung out of airplanes and skyscrapers to get photos; she photographed
the bombing of Moscow from her hotel room after everyone with any sense had gone to
the bomb shelters; her ship was sunk by a German torpedo in the Mediterranean; she
photographed from the air on a bombing run over Tunis. While those who got in her
way may have complained that she was a woman who couldn’t take “no” for an answer,7 there is no denying that Bourke-White was an irresistible force who was widely
admired and respected by her peers, as well as the public that saw and read her work in
print.
At the time of Bourke-White’s death in August 1971, there was barely a market
for original photographs; today, with auction houses regularly offering work by major
photographers, her photographs sell for prices she could not have imagined: at Christie’s NY on October 5, 1998, a 1930 photo she took of the gargoyle outside the window
4 Brown, op cit.
5 Catalog, Stephen Bennett Phillips, Margaret Bourke-White: The Photography of Design, 1927-1936 (NY:
Rizzoli, 2003). See exhibit items I and J.
6 For example, Genie Iverson, Margaret Bourke-White: News Photographer. Mankato, MN: Creative
Education, 1980.
7 Time, December 14, 1931, 49.
of her studio on the 61st floor of the Chrysler Building, sold for $96,000.8 Such prints
often end up on museum walls where they are seen by thousands but, in her own time,
aside from a few murals, notably the NBC mural at Rockefeller Center, Bourke-White’s
images became known mainly through publications.
The primary intent of the present exhibit is to present materials that illustrate how
Bourke-White’s images were “consumed” by her contemporaries through the display of
vintage books and magazines that contain her photographs and writings, or articles
about her. Only by seeing the context in which her work first appeared can we begin to
appreciate how she became the legend that she is today.
The exhibit also includes posthumous publications about Bourke-White that have
brought her work, including images never published in her lifetime, to new generations;
portrait photographs of Bourke-White; Bourke-White ephemera; and selected other
relevant items. It draws on materials from the Rutgers University Libraries, Syracuse
University (which holds Bourke-White’s vast archives), and my personal collection.
This exhibition would
not have been possible without the significant encouragement, cooperation and
assistance of Fernanda Perrone and Timothy Corlis of
Special Collections, Rutgers
University; and Christian Dupont, Carolyn Davis, Peter D.
Verheyen, and Nicolette A.
Schneider of Special Collections, Syracuse University.
The three 24x20 digital enlargements of photographs
of Margaret Bourke-White
were generously provided by
Alex Saretzky.
Gary D. Saretzky
Exhibition List
8 Prices realized for auction, The Image as Object: the Photographs from the Collection of Barry Friedman, Christie’s, New York, 5 October 1998, lot 6. For the value of Bourke-White prints, see the annuals
published by Stephen Perloff, ed., The Photographic Art Market: Auction Prices . Langhorne, PA: The
Photograph Collector.
Items in this exhibition credited to Rutgers University Libraries are from the Archibald S. Alexander Library except where noted differently. Unless otherwise stated,
exhibition items credited to Special Collections Research Center, Syracuse University
Library are from the Margaret Bourke-White Papers, Arents Research Library. If no
source is given, the item is from the curator’s collection.
This exhibition list is divided into three sections according to physical location of
the exhibit items:
A to J: Exhibit case in main lobby
1 to 70: Gallery 50, off main lobby
71 to 138: Downstairs gallery at entrance to Special Collections and University Archives
A
“Margaret Bourke-White”
Life, September 10, 1971
Facsimile
In recognition of Margaret Bourke White,
one of the original photographers for Life
magazine in 1936, the magazine honored
her passing on August 27, 1971, with a
three page tribute, of which the first is on
display here. The other pages reproduced
five of her best known photographs taken
of taxi dancers in Montana, Buchenwald
survivors, South African gold miners, India
(Gandhi with his spinning wheel), and a
chain gang in Georgia. Most of these
photographs are on view elsewhere in this
exhibit.
B
Rutgers University Summer Session Catalog
1922
Special Collections and University Archives, Rutgers
In 1921, after graduation from Plainfield High School, Margaret White, as she was then
still known, attended the Rutgers Summer School, taking classes in swimming and
“aesthetic” dance.9 Rutgers University Archives does not have a 1921 catalog but the
1922 catalog lists courses in “swimming for women” and a general physical training
course described as “advanced games and dances.” Unfortunately, no archival records
9 Vicki Goldberg, Margaret Bourke-White: A Biography (Harper & Row, 1986), 22.
of her attendance have been found. Rutgers was the first of six universities BourkeWhite attended before receiving her baccalaureate degree.
C
Rutgers University Commencement Brochure
June 13, 1948
Special Collections and University Archives, Rutgers
In 1948, Margaret Bourke-White was awarded an honorary Doctor of Letters by The
New Jersey College for Women, known today as Douglass College, Rutgers University.
Although the degree is mentioned in the Rutgers Commencement brochure dated June
13, the commencement at the women’s college actually took place on June 9. The brochure describes her as “Graduate of Cornell University in the Class of 1927; has taken
photographs in twenty-one countries including the Arctic region; associate editor of Fortune magazine, 1929-1933; Life magazine since 1936; accredited war correspondentphotographer for Life magazine to the
United States Air Force, 1942-1944; author
and co-author of several books and articles on industrial subjects, Russia, and
World War II.
D
Margaret Bourke-White and Dwight D.
Eisenhower
Photograph at Rutgers University Commencement
June 13, 1948
Facsimile, Special Collections Research
Center, Syracuse University Library
General Eisenhower was president of Columbia University in 1948, when he was
given an honorary doctorate (L.L.B.) by
Rutgers and invited to give the commencement address. Bourke-White, who
also received an honorary doctorate, was
well known to him: during World War II, he
had approved her access to the Italian
front and she had interviewed him for Life
magazine.
E
“Margaret Bourke-White Goes to Hollywood” by William Hebert
Popular Photography, December 19, 1943
Returning from the battlefronts of World War II in February 1943, Bourke-White went on
a coast-to-coast lecture tour that ended in Los Angeles, where she was commissioned
by Samuel Goldwyn to shoot stills for his new war movie, The North Star, featuring Walter Huston, Eric Von Stroheim, Anne Baxter, and other well known actors. The North
Star was based on a book and screen play by Lillian Hellman and was one of many
morale-boosting movies produced by Hollywood to help the war effort. In the second
half of this Popular Photography article, William Hebert provides a surprisingly detailed
biography of the photographer. Hebert was employed as a Hollywood publicist; his
credits include promotion of the premieres of Gone with the Wind in 1940.
F
“An American Photographer Shoots ‘The Russian War’” by Leonid Mitrokhin
Soviet Life, May 1985
Soviet Life was a magazine
published by reciprocal
agreement between the
United States and the Soviet
Union. The agreement provided for the publication of
Soviet Life in the United
States and the magazine
America in the Soviet Union.
This special issue of Soviet
Life marked the 40th anniversary of the victory over
Fascism. The author recounts that Margaret BourkeWhite was in Moscow when
the Nazis attacked, that she
courageously photographed
the bombing of the capital,
and that she wrote a popular book about her experiences, Shooting the Russian War.
One of the highlights of her 1941 trip was photographing Stalin, who ruled the U.S.S.R.
with an iron fist. By coincidence, this issue of Soviet Life also featured the election of
Mikhail Gorbachev as General Secretary of the Central Committee of the Communist
Party of the Soviet Union, an event which
ushered in the “Perestroika” era of increased
freedom that in many ways was the antithesis
of Stalinism.
G
“Margaret Bourke-White: Eyes on Russia” by
Gary D. Saretzky
The Photo Review, 22:3&4 (Summer & Fall
1989), 1-14
The cover article in this issue of The Photo
Review provides an analysis of the events
which led to Bourke-White’s trip to the Soviet
Union in 1930, her first book, Eyes on Russia,
how her Russian portfolio helped further her
career, and how her Left-wing associations in
the 1930s caused her problems during the
anti-communist McCarthy era in the early
1950s. Much of the essay is based on excellent primary resources in Bourke-White’s archives at Syracuse University.
H
“The Margaret Bourke-White Collection” in
Syracuse University: Treasures of the University Library
[NY: Syracuse, 1996]
The Bourke-White Collection is one of the
most important in the impressive holdings
of Special Collections at the Arents Library
of Syracuse University, which loaned, or
provided reproductions for, a number of
items in this exhibition. The Collection includes a vast quantity of photographs,
negatives, correspondence, business records, clippings, publications, and photographic equipment. A guide to the collection is available on the University’s web
page. This brochure highlights some of
the holdings, including cameras, photos,
the first issue of Life magazine (with cover
photo by Bourke-White), and original story
boards for a comic book called Camera!
about the photographer.
10 In one scene in
the comic, she is shown standing with a
camera on a tripod photographing Stalin,
who is seated; in truth, he stood and she
was on her knees.
I-J
10 While is not known if this comic was ever published, U.S. Camera Publishing Co. started a series of
comic books called Camera Comics in July 1942. The third in the series featured “Linda Lens,” a character loosely based on Bourke-White.
Stephen Bennett Phillips
Margaret Bourke-White: The Photography of Design, 1927-1936
NY: Rizzoli, 2003
With exhibition brochure and admission tickets11
Margaret Bourke-White’s career falls more or less
into two phases: from 1927 to 1936, she sought to
make aesthetically inflected photographs, primarily
of architecture and industry, that could be considered works of art; from 1936 until illness forced her
to put down her cameras in the mid-1950s, she
worked primarily as a photojournalist and used
photography to help tell stories about economic
and social problems, war, and other current issues
with an emphasis on images of people. This book
focuses on the first phase of her career and was
issued as the catalog for an exhibition that opened
at The Phillips Collection, February-May 2003, and
subsequently traveled to a series of other venues.
In addition to Phillips’ informative introduction, excellent reproductions of the images in the exhibit, it
includes a chronology of Bourke-White’s life and
times, selected Bourke-White correspondence, and
two radio transcripts of Bourke-White talking about photography as a career for women.
#1
Joseph Rosenthal
Portrait of Margaret BourkeWhite
San Francisco
Original date stamped January 13, 1953, on verso
Digital enlargement, 24x20
This fine portrait was made
by Joe Rosenthal, the photographer renowned for his
photograph of the flag raising
on Iwo Jima in 1945. At the
time this picture was taken,
Bourke-White had recently
come back from Asia and
Life magazine had published
11 Brochure and tickets courtesy of Elsalyn Palmisano as gift to curator.
her photo essay, “A Savage Secret War is Waged in Korea,” on December 1, 1952.
Bourke-White didn’t know it, but her career as a photographer was coming to an end.
For more than a year, she had begun to feel stiffness in a leg and her hands and the
condition was getting worse. Eventually she learned that she had Parkinson’s Disease.
Although she continued to work as a photographer occasionally until about 1956, her
condition made it increasingly difficult.
#2
Margaret Bourke-White
“DC-4 Flying Over Manhattan,” 1939
Poster, 22x28
Published by Graphique du France, n.d.
Bourke-White had no fear of flying. In the 1930s, she had commercial assignments
from TWA and Eastern Airlines, including a series commissioned by Eastern showing
their planes flying over major U.S. cities. For that job, Bourke-White photographed from
a small plane that accompanied the larger one and she probably used the same technique here. The photo was made for a June 19, 1939, Life magazine story, “The DC4,” several years after Bourke-White gave up most commercial assignments to concentrate on photojournalism. The DC-4 has no airline markings, although the faint name,
“Super Mainliner,” on the side of the fuselage is associated with United Airlines, which
used the plane for flights between New York and Chicago. Two elevated railway lines,
now long gone, are clearly visible below the plane; in the background looms the Chrysler Building, which housed Bourke-White’s studio on the 61st floor in the early 1930s.
#3
“What Makes a Good Photographer”
Popular Photography, October 1957
Facsimile
Although Bourke-White, as a
result of Parkinson’s disease,
was no longer working when
this article was published, her
list of qualities needed for a
photographer describe her
own in her prime, not the
least of which was “energy,
energy, energy.” BourkeWhite had all of what she
calls for here, including willingness to get up before
dawn to use the best light,
having “a nose for news” to
get the scoop, personal magnetism to insure the cooperation of others, a sense of re-
sponsibility to history, and the desire to use her work to tell the truth and possibly influence millions of people.
#4
Portrait of Margaret Bourke-White
Photographer Unknown
Date stamped October 4, 1955 on verso
#5
Bourke-White: A Retrospective
Invitation to Exhibition Opening
International Center of Photography, New York
Exhibit, March 4-May 1, 1988
Invitation to a major exhibit, sponsored by United Technologies Corporation with the cooperation of Life and Fortune magazines, which after opening at ICP, traveled to nine
more museums, coast to coast, over the next two years. The photograph of BourkeWhite was taken on Chrysler Building scaffolding in 1930. Bourke-White photographed
the construction of the skyscraper, then moved her studio there from Cleveland in 1930.
The same photograph was used on the cover of the catalog for the ICP exhibit; see item
132.
#6-9
Trade Winds: Four covers
May and September 1928; February and
October 1929
Facsimiles, Special Collections Research Center, Syracuse University Library
For nearly five years beginning in November 1927, Bourke-White supplied
photographs for covers to Trade Winds,
an industrial magazine published by the
Union Trust Company in Cleveland, for
$50 each. Often emphasizing repetitive
lines and dynamic diagonals, her photographs helped popularize the “Machine
Aesthetic,” an artistic style that glorified
work and industry through finding beauty
in industrial form. The steady income
enabled her to move into a studio on the
12th floor of the prestigious Cleveland
skyscraper, The Terminal Building, which
she photographed repeatedly for its owners.
#10-11
Two illustrations from Trade Winds: Study in Steel and untitled images of Otis Steel Co.
ca. 1928-1929
Facsimiles, Special Collections Research Center, Syracuse University Library
In addition to publishing monthly covers by Bourke-White, Trade Winds also reproduced
industrial scenes that were printed on pages inside. Bourke-White probably made these
two images in Cleveland at Otis Steel in early 1928, when its president, Elroy Kulas,
agreed to give her unrestricted access. Kulas was so pleased with the photographs that
he selected some for $100 each and published a set in a booklet, “The Story of Steel.”
One of Bourke-White’s photographs of the two-hundred-ton ladle was awarded first
prize in a May 1928 exhibit at the Cleveland Museum of Art. Bourke-White’s steel photographs also brought her to the attention of Henry Luce, who hired her to be the first
photographer for Fortune magazine.
#12-20
Margaret Bourke-White
Photographs of U.S.S.R.
Twenty-Four Plates with an Introduction by the Artist
Argus Press, 1934
[Eight of 24 photogravures and BourkeWhite’s introduction in display.]
Special Collections Research Center,
Syracuse University Library
From hundreds of photographs she made
during her three annual trips to the Soviet
Union in 1930-1932, most of those BourkeWhite selected for this portfolio were of
workers and students representing the new
nation builders, the “men and women
around the machine.” With both Russian
and American audiences in mind, BourkeWhite also included portraits of Stalin’s
mother and great-aunt, four scenic views, a
dam with an American engineer, and the
huge Magnitogorsk blast furnace. In November 1934, Bourke-White suggested to
the Soviet Embassy that Ambassador
Troyanovsky present Roosevelt with a special copy “bound in red leather, with the
President’s name on it in gold.” She mentioned that she herself was preparing a
similar copy for Stalin.12
#21
Margaret Bourke-White
Eyes on Russia
Simon and Schuster, 1931
Rutgers University Libraries
In the fall of 1930, with recommendations from Sergei Eisenstein and others, BourkeWhite arrived in Moscow, where she obtained the endorsement and financial backing of
the chief of the Soviet publishing house, A.B. Khalatoff, a leading Bolshevik later liquidated in the 1937 purges.
Bourke-White toured some
of the most important industrial and other sites and
came back with stellar images of Russia under construction during the FiveYear Plan. She complemented the photographs with
a spirited narrative of her experiences as the first foreign
photographer to photograph
in the Soviet Union with official permission. From 800
negatives, she published
forty in a sepia tone in Eyes
on Russia. Along with at
least eight related illustrated
articles in Fortune, the New York Times Sunday Magazine, and other periodicals, Eyes
on Russia significantly enhanced Bourke-White's reputation and initiated her long-term
relationships with Soviet officials and Americans sympathetic to the U.S.S.R.13
#21A
Eyes on Russia
Facsimiles of Covers from Softcover Edition
Special Collections Research Center, Syracuse University Library
The reproductions here are believed to be identical to the now very rare dust jacket of
Eyes on Russia, although they come from a rare contemporaneous paperback version
of the book, which is geneally known in the cloth edition. The text on the cover clearly
was intended to market the “charming” Bourke-White as much as the Soviet Union.
12 Gary D. Saretzky, “Margaret Bourke-White: Eyes on Russia,” The Photo Review, 22: 3&4 (1999), 10.
13 Ibid., 1-14.
21B
Eyes on Russia
Photographic reproductions of title page and frontispiece
#22
Louis Fischer
Machines and Men in Russia
[Illustrated with seven photographs by Margaret Bourke-White]
NY: Harrison Smith, 1932
Rutgers University Libaries
Like Bourke-White, whose Eyes on Russia expressed hope about the future of the
U.S.S.R., Louis Fischer, a
journalist from Philadelphia
whose Russian wife
Markoosha was a linguist for
the Soviet Foreign Office,
wrote books in the 1920s
and early 1930s that helped
prepare the United States for
recognition of the Soviet Union in 1933 as a bona fide
regime. While he did not advocate Communism for the
United States, Fischer
thought that Lenin was the
greatest statesman of the
age and in this book, his
positive reports about the
Five-Year Plan of Economic
Construction underscored his sympathy for the Russian Revolution. In a few years,
Fischer would become disillusioned by the excesses of Stalinism. But in 1932, he was
still writing very sympathetically about the Soviets and Bourke-White’s upbeat photos of
children and workers, only one of which was in her book, Eyes on Russia, enhanced his
message. The frontispiece, displayed here, is titled, “A Member of the New Soviet Intelligentsia: A Draughtsman in a Moscow Factory.”
#22A
Machines and Men in Russia
Facsimile of endpapers by Margaret Bourke-White
#23
Sir Arthur Newsholme and John Adams Kingsbury
Red Medicine: Socialized Health in Soviet Russia
[Illustrated with eight photographs by Margaret Bourke-White]
Garden City, NY: Doubleday, Doran, 1933
In 1932, Bourke-White was on her third trip to Russia with a primary purpose of shooting a documentary film. In Georgia, she visited Borzhom, known for its spa, health clinics and mineral waters, and nearby Tiflis (Tblisi), where she photographed Stalin’s
mother (not reproduced in this book). Red Medicine, like several other books published
in the early 1930s with Bourke-White’s Russian photographs, is very sympathetic to Soviet innovations, in this case, universal preventive and curative medical care for all its
citizens, the first nation to offer this service. The authors visited Russia in August and
September 1932 and used carefully posed images that Bourke-White shot in health facilities in Moscow and, while traveling on horseback, in the mountainous Transcaucasian province of Georgia,
where she took the photograph on exhibit of a children’s rest home. Most of
the photos in Red Medicine
were not published elsewhere, although she used
two in her 1934 gravure portfolio, Photographs of the
U.S.S.R.: a hospital waiting
room in Moscow and medical
students at the Tiflis Tuberculosis Institute. Other photos in Red Medicine are by
co-author Kingsbury, the
former Commissioner of
Public Charities in New York
City, or supplied by the Soviet Photo Agency.
#24
“American Woman Endures Great Hardship in Russia”
Clipping, Denver, Colorado
December 4, 1932
Facsimile, Special Collections Research Center,
Syracuse University Library
This news story from an unknown paper reports that
Bourke-White had returned
from Russia with 20,000 feet
of movie film. Bourke-White
had little previous experience
with a motion picture camera
and experienced numerous
technical problems that
made much of this work unusable. Only about 10% of
her film was eventually released in two shorts, Eyes on
Russia and Red Republic. This clipping is also interesting for the two photographs: the
one by Bourke-White of the women in the Baku oil fields has not been published a book.
The other one of Bourke-White, cropped from a wider view, is by James Abbe, a Hollywood glamour photographer whose several trips to Russia (without Soviet endorsement
for his photography) resulted in his book, I Photograph Russia (1934), which was not as
sympathetic to the Russian Revolution as Bourke-White’s Eyes on Russia.14
#25-27
Margaret Bourke-White
“Silk Stockings in the Five-Year Plan,” “Making Communists of Soviet Children,” and
“Where the Worker Can Drop the Boss”
Excerpts from three illustrated articles in Sunday New York Times Magazine
February 14, March 6 and 27, 1932
Facsimiles
With the United States wallowing in the Great Depression and the Soviet Union apparently booming with a state-managed economy, Western economists, social theorists,
and others began looking toward the U.S.S.R. as a model, especially after Stalin focused his nation on internal economic and social change rather than world revolution.
The U.S.S.R. had been practically closed to foreigners from 1917 to 1930 and much
was unknown in the West on the impact the Bolsheviks had had on the life of the people. And it was the people, rather than politics, that Bourke-White wrote about. Sympathetically portraying the Russians as diligent workers and peasants trying to make a life
for themselves under a new egalitarian social system, Bourke-White helped prepare
14 An uncropped version of this photograph, without credit to Abbe, was published in Jonathan Silverman,
For the World to See: The Life of Margaret Bourke-White (NY: Viking, 1983), 33, and in Carolyn Daffron,
Margaret Bourke-White (NY, et al.: Chelsea House, 1988), 65.
Americans for U.S. recognition of the Soviet regime in 1933. Demonstrating the depth
of her Russian files, the eighteen photographs published in these articles had not appeared in print previously and few have been reproduced since. That Bourke-White
was able to supply six articles to this prestigious magazine in 1932 is indicative both of
the degree of public interest in the Soviet Union and Bourke-White’s own growing celebrity as a courageous photojournalist with a flair for publicity. In addition to the three represented here, the other articles in the series were “Nothing Bores the Russian Audience (March 13); “A Day’s Work for the Five-Year Plan,” (May 22); and “A Day in a Remote Village of Russia” (September 11).
#28
Bourke-White photograph, “The Terminal Tower,” 1927
The New Home of the Cleveland Chamber of Commerce, [1928]
Special Collections Research Center, Syracuse
University Library
In 1927-1928, the Terminal
Tower in Cleveland became
a focus for Bourke-White’s
camera. Under its twentyeight stories, passengers arrived by train each workday
and boarded streetcars to
get to work. For both the city
and Bourke-White, the Terminal Tower symbolized the
fast-paced and efficient
modern metropolis. She
photographed it so extensively and well that, by the
end of 1927, the Van Sweringen brothers, powerful railroad magnates who owned the building, hired her as their official photographer. She was given unrestricted access to photograph the skyscraper
while it was being completed and obtained a twelfth floor studio for herself, after trying
unsuccessfully to get one over the Sweringens on the 28th. The Cleveland Chamber of
Commerce, which issued this brochure with Bourke-White’s photo inside the front cover,
had its offices on the fourteenth & fifteenth floors. The Terminal Tower series was a
precursor to Bourke-White’s extensive documentation in 1928-1929 of the construction
of New York’s Chrysler Building, to which she moved her studio in 1930.
#29-30
Town & Country Club News
April 1928 and May 26, 1928
Covers with Bourke-White photographs
Facsimiles, Special Collections Research
Center, Syracuse University Library
By the spring of 1928, Bourke-White had
made many contacts among architects and
business leaders in Cleveland and was doing a good business photographing the
steel industry, the construction of the Terminal Tower, mansions, and country clubs.
Her photographs appeared regularly in local publications such as Town & Country
Club News, The Cleveland District Golfer,
and Tradewinds. Often using soft focus
lenses, Bourke-White produced images
consistent with the pictorialist aesthetic she
had learned in the Spring 1922 semester at
the Clarence White School of Photography
in New York, through a course offered by
Teachers College, Columbia University, one
of six universities she attended as an undergraduate. As she later wrote in her
autobiography, “I belonged to the soft-focus
school in those days: to be artistic, a picture must be blurry. . . .”
#31
Margaret Bourke-White
“A Black Francis of Assisi”
The Clevelander, January 1928, p. 11
Facsimile, Special Collections Research
Center, Syracuse University Library
In 1927, after graduating from Cornell,
Bourke-White returned to Cleveland, where
she had lived in 1925. While peddling her
portfolio to Cornell-trained architects, she
later recalled, “I passed through the public
square and saw a Negro preacher standing
on a soapbox. He was earnestly exhorting
the air, but no one was paying the slightest
attention to him. Soaring about his widespread eloquent arms and gathered in a
bobbing congregation at his feet were
flocks of pigeons: what a wonderful picture! But that day I had no camera.” (Portrait of Myself, p. 36). Not to be denied,
Bourke-White dashed to the nearest camera store, borrowed a Graflex, and returned with a bag of peanuts to encourage
the “spectators.” One result was this published photograph. Another was a lasting
friendship with the camera store clerk, Alfred Hall Bemis, who became her coach and
technical advisor. The story, somewhat fictionalized, was featured in the film, Double
Exposure, with Farrah Fawcett in the role of Bourke-White. The photo was reproduced,
cropped and lightened, in Bourke-White’s 1963 autobiography, Portrait of Myself, under
the title, “A preacher and his parishioners, Cleveland Public Square.”
#32
“She May Snap at You; It’s All in a Day’s Work”
Cleveland Plain Dealer
November 13, 1927
Facsimile, Special Collections Research Center, Syracuse University Library
Quite possibly, the author of this article was the Harriet Parsons (1906-1983) who became a Hollywood film producer and director between 1935 and 1954 and whose
mother was the famous movie-star gossip columnist, Louella Parsons. Harriet Parsons
emphasized how unusual it was for a woman to be doing industrial photography:
“Swarthy, sweating men toiling in the inferno of the steel mills. . . . They all stop and
gaze at her wide-eyed and wide-mouthed with astonishment.” She also emphasized
Bourke-White’s femininity: “Tyrannical masculine customs, which hang like a pall over
the photographic profession, she is scornfully flouting. She sees no reason, for instance, why black is the only color for the camera cloth used while focusing. She uses
black only with her red outfit, while she has purple, green and blue ones to match her
other costumes.”
#33
Cornell Alumni News, March 24, 1927
Cover photograph by Margaret Bourke-White
Facsimile, Special Collections Research Center, Syracuse University Library
Taken during her senior year at Cornell University, Bourke-White’s soft focus picture of
Lake Cayuga seen through a window is typical of her work at this time and one of her
first published photographs. She graduated from Cornell in 1927, culminating a rather
peripatetic higher education. After Plainfield High School in 1921, Margaret White took
swimming and modern dance in the summer session at Rutgers. She then enrolled in
Columbia University; in her second semester she studied photography with Clarence
White (no relation). Margaret then transferred to the University of Michigan, where she
studied biology and herpetology and was a photographer for the yearbook. At Michigan,
she became engaged to senior Everett Chapman, whom she married on June 13, 1924.
Chapman got a teaching job at Purdue University, so Margaret enrolled there for her
senior year. However, in 1925, “Chappie” became employed in Cleveland, so Margaret
took classes at Case Western Reserve University, majoring in education. In 1926, Margaret left her husband, began calling herself Bourke-White (a combination of her parents’ surnames), and enrolled at Cornell, where she earned income through selling her
campus photographs.
#34
“Artist, With Camera as Brush, Dares Heights and Hidden Perils to Capture Spirit of
Steel Mills”
Cleveland Plain Dealer, May 6, 1928
Facsimile, Special Collections Research Center, Syracuse University Library
In less than a year after graduating from Cornell in 1927, Bourke-White achieved a
reputation as a daredevil, whether shooting from dizzying heights while wearing high
heels or ignoring searing heat and fumes in the heart of a steel mill. “I wanted to take a
picture from the top of a coke oven and no one would go up with me, as every time
workmen made repairs at the top of the oven a few were overcome by carbon monoxide
gas. But I took a deep breath and went up alone,” she said. “My idea is to reflect the
spirit of the steel mills in photographs. Artists spend their lives imitating what must have
been done before them. I didn’t want to do that. It seems to me that steel mills and sky
scrapers symbolize the spirit of the industrial age.” This article also praised BourkeWhite for her willingness to get up before dawn, wait for hours in the rain, or crawl over
dirty piles of ore to get the shots she wanted.
#35
“Girl’s Photographs of Steel Hailed as New Art”
Associated Press Feature News Service
May 28, 1928
Facsimile, Special Collections Research Center, Syracuse University Library
This AP Feature on Bourke-White went to newspapers across the country and probably
was reprinted numerous times. The article begins by mentioning Bourke-White’s first
prize at the spring exhibition of the Cleveland Museum of Art, helping to build BourkeWhite’s reputation as an innovative artist who could turn a grimy blast furnace scene
into an aesthetically pleasing dramatic photograph. Explaining her motivation, BourkeWhite’s statement quoted here must have been like sweet music to the ears of business
leaders: “Industry is the true place for art today. Art should express the spirit of the
people, and the heart of life today is in the great industrial activities of the country.”
Only a year out of college, Bourke-White was achieving a national reputation through
dogged determination, skill at photographic composition, and a shrewd understanding of
how to obtain and use publicity.
#36
“March of the Dynamos” [1928?]
American Annual of Photography, Volume 44, 1930
Boston: American Photographic Publishing, 1931
In 1930, the American Annual of Photography was still the leading annual compilation of
photographs in the U.S., especially for photographers with a Pictorialist orientation. Pictorialism, a photographic art movement that began in the 1890s and promoted aestheticization of the medium through special lenses and hand crafted printing processes, was
well past its prime by 1930 but the American Annual had not yet been challenged by the
Modernist U.S. Camera Annual that first appeared in 1935.
“Who’s Who in Pictorial Photography, 1928-9,” may be
found in the back of the 1930
American Annual. It provides data on the past four
years of exhibitor participation in competitive photographic salons sponsored by
amateur clubs all over the
world. Bourke-White exhibited two prints in two salons
in 1927-1928 and four prints
in three salons in 1928-1929.
As explained by Ann Thomas, “The adoption of the
word ‘salon’ by camera club
aficionados and pictorialists
to describe the setting in which their works were judged, selected, and hung, attests to
the self-conscious attempt that was made to situate photography within a fine-art
picture-making tradition.”15
That Bourke-White, already a successful commercial photographer by 1930, submitted
work to this American Annual of Photography is an indication that at this stage in her career, she still sought acceptance of her work as art. Her photograph with its repetitive
forms consistent with the Machine Age aesthetic that Bourke-White helped popularize,
is here published with an anthropomorphic title, “March of the Dynamos,” although it has
more recently appeared with the more prosaic, “Hydro-Generators.” It was one of a
number Bourke-White made at the Niagara Falls Power Company that were used in
stage sets for Eugene O’Neill’s play, “Dynamo,” in 1928; as a result, Bourke-White became known as “the girl who discovered the dynamo.”16
#37
Lincoln Steffens
The Autobiography of Lincoln Steffens, Vol. 2
New York: Harcourt, Brace and Company, 1931 [Fourth printing, July 1931]
Frontispiece of steel mill by Margaret Bourke-White
Born in San Francisco, California, on 6th April, 1866, Lincoln Steffens achieved renown
as a muckraking journalist exposing government corruption in the early 1900s. An advocate of social and political
revolution, Steffens visited
Russia in 1919; upon his return in 1921, he uttered the
famous dictum, "I have seen
the future and it works." But
by the time he wrote his
Autobiography, he was disillusioned with communism.
In addition to the frontispiece, Bourke-White’s photo
of St. Basil’s Cathedral in
Moscow appears in this volume, one of the first of her
Russian photographs to be
published in a book.
#38
America As America Sees It, edited by Fred J. Ringel
New York: Harcourt, Brace Jovanovich, 1932
15 “Reflections on an Exhibition,” Archivaria 17, Winter 1983-1984, 143).
16 Stephen Bennett Phillips, Margaret Bourke-White: The Photography of Design, 1927-1936 (NY: Rizzoli,
2003), 175.
Photograph of Grain Elevator by Margaret Bourke-White
Rutgers University Libraries
Although first published in the United States, America As America Sees It was intended
to inform Europeans about many aspects of American culture, in forty-six short chapters
and more than one hundred
illustrations by American artists. The juxtaposition of photographs by Margaret
Bourke-White, still an upand-coming young photographer, with one by Edward
Steichen, then the dean of
American photographers,
underscored the remarkable
rise of Bourke-White to the
heights of her profession in
just a few years. Even being
included in this book was
quite an honor, as the contributors included the elite in
American literature and the
arts. While the reputation of
some have faded over time, others are still familiar names today, such as writers Sherwood Anderson, Robert Benchley, Malcolm Cowley, W.E.B. DuBois, Will James, James
Weldon Johnson, and Upton Sinclair. Among painters and graphic artists were George
Bellows, Thomas Hart Benton, Marsden Hartley, Edward Hopper, Rockwell Kent, John
Marin, Reginald Marsh, Georgia O’Keeffe, John Sloan, James Thurber, and Ben Shahn.
Photographers, in addition to Bourke-White and Steichen (who also contributed an article on news photography), included Anton Bruehl, Walker Evans, Lewis W. Hine, Charles Sheeler, Paul Strand, and Ralph Steiner. Even Walt Disney contributed thirty-four
small drawings of Mickey Mouse. In short, this book remains an excellent resource for
the American culture of which Bourke-White was a part in 1932.
#39
Color facsimile of cover of America as Americans See It
#40
“Medical Students at TB Clinic in Tiflis” by Margaret Bourke-White
M. Lincoln Schuster, ed.
Eyes on the World: A Photographic Record of History in the Making
NY: Simon and Schuster, 1935
In its attempt to show newsworthy events through photography, Eyes on the World
was a book format precursor
to Life magazine. The kaleidoscopic contents address
the rise of Fascism and
communism, although domestic economics, arts and
sciences also are covered.
Schuster boldly explained, “It
is the function of such a
chronicle as this to disclose
glimpses of the mad, incredible totality of human
behavior at its highest and
lowest reaches, and to take
the entire earth for its province.” A number of Russian and other photographs by
Bourke-White appear in this volume, issued by the same publisher as her 1931 book,
Eyes on Russia.
#41
“Dizzy Heights Have No Terrors for This Girl Photographer....”
New York Sun
April 25, 1929
Facsimile, Special Collections Research Center, Syracuse University Library
This article by Marjorie Lawrence (not to
be confused with the famous opera singer
of the same name) emphasized BourkeWhite’s ambition, youth, and femininity.
Lawrence provides a laudatory account of
Bourke-White’s varied images, from gardens to heavy industry, and predicts a
bright future for her. Like other accounts
of the period, Bourke-White was headlined as “the girl photographer.” On May
3, this piece was reprinted (without illustrations) under the title, “Former Local Girl
Fine Photographer,” in The Chronicle
(Bound Brook, NJ), prefaced by an editorial note stating that Bourke-White formerly lived with her parents in the present
residence of Mrs. Cookman on West Union Avenue and that her family later built a
house in Beechwood Heights.
#42
“Industrial Photographer Is Pioneer; Miss Margaret Bourke-White, Out of College Two
Years, Has Successful Business”
Cleveland Press
August 6, 1929
Facsimile, Special Collections Research Center, Syracuse University Library
At the age of twenty-four, writes Helen N. Allyn, Bourke-White has achieved national
recognition and has a studio in the Terminal Tower in Cleveland with her name in gold
letters on the door. Her motto, “anything to get the right picture,” leads her to “almost
life threatening situations.” Allyn quotes Bourke-White about the severe lighting problems she encounters when photographing blast furnaces and her frequent need to take
500 pictures to get a good one. Her recent jobs have included steel mills in Pittsburgh,
a light bulb factory in New York State, and an orchid farm. The orchid photographs
probably were shot for the first issue of Fortune magazine, which appeared in February
1930 with four photo-essays by Bourke-White, including one on the orchid industry.
#43
“She’s Sitting on Top of the World”
Chicago Daily News, 1930
Facsimile, Special Collections Research Center, Syracuse University Library
This 1930 clipping from Bourke-White’s archives dates from just after Bourke-White
boarded the S.S. Bremen on June 30 on her first trip abroad to photograph industry in
Germany and then Russia, which was in the midst of its Five-Year Plan of industrialization. During the interview for this piece, she was still excited about her recent meeting,
arranged by Congressman James T. Begg of Cleveland, with President Herbert Hoover
to discuss her trip. Bourke-White states that “Russia is the most interesting place, industrially, in the world right now.” The photograph of Bourke-White was taken at the
Chrysler Building in New York where she had moved her studio after relocating from
Cleveland. The author of this article was novelist Eleanor Blake (born 1899).
#44
“Trade Routes Across the Great Lakes: A Portfolio of Photographs of Iron, Steel, Coal
and Ships” by Margaret Bourke-White
Fortune, Volume 1, Number 1
February 1930
Henry Luce, publisher of Time magazine, was deeply impressed with the photographs
Bourke-White made in Cleveland for Otis Steel. He invited the young photographer to
New York and made her a lucrative offer she couldn’t refuse: to become the first photographer for his new business magazine, Fortune, a sumptuous monthly that cost $1
an issue during the Great Depression. For the first number, Bourke-White photographed
pigs, orchids, and Great Lakes industry and shipping. She soon moved to New York,
where she worked half-time for herself on commercial assignments and half-time for
Luce.
#45
“Cloak & Suit”
Fortune, Volume 1, Number 5
June 1930
Bourke-White was adept at finding her “Machine Age” patterns of repetitive forms, such
as these bobbins, wherever assignments took her. This essay also included more conventional images of garment workers, finished dresses on the rack, and West 36th
Street in New York, the heart of the garment district then dominated by Russian Jewish
immigrants.
#46
“Soviet Panorama”
Photographs by Margaret Bourke-White
Fortune, February 1931
By early 1931, Bourke-White was being bombarded with requests for her 1930 Russian
pictures from the New York newspapers and Vanity Fair. At lunch in her studio, young
publishers Richard (Dick) Simon and Lincoln (Max) Schuster encouraged her to do a
book. Max advised her to publish a few photographs to build up interest. A spread appeared in the February 8, 1931, New York Herald Tribune and there were nine full-page
pictures in the February 1931 issue of Fortune; seven would appear in Eyes on Russia.
Fortune introduced the illustrations with a statement that Bourke-White was "both reporter and artist." It put a frame around each photo for the art connotation, but also provided a caption and a brief paragraph of information under each picture to convey the
reporting function.
By comparison to Eyes on Russia, the captions in Fortune were much more detailed
and specific, and emphasized the industry rather than the worker where both were present. For example, "The Red October Rolling Mills in Stalingrad" in Fortune became
"An Iron Puddler" in Eyes on Russia. Other captions were changed in Eyes on Russia to
reflect Bourke-White's text, for example, "Pattern in Thread" in Fortune became "The
Woman Who Wept for Joy." (She cried because she was chosen to be photographed
by the "Amerikanka.")17
#47
“Risking Life for Photos Causes Young Woman to Become Famous Figure; Margaret
Bourke-White, Back from Russia, Where She Snapped Great Construction Work, Writes
Book of Her Experiences”
Central Press Association, December 15, 1931
Facsimile, Special Collections Research Center, Syracuse University Library
Published on the occasion of the release of Bourke-White’s first book, Eyes on Russia,
this article includes some additional details about the dangers and difficulties the photographer encountered trying to photograph dam building on the Dnieper and the Red
October Rolling Mills at Stalingrad, where she said she exposed 100 plates from a badly
vibrating traveling crane in the hope that one would come out. Although the book and
the articles Bourke-White penned about her experiences in the early 1930s emphasized
what she learned about the Russians, newspaper articles about Bourke-White focused
on her courage, youth, and commercial success.
#48
“Wheels of Industry Turn for Camera Artist; At 25 Miss Bourke-White Has Won Fame”
New York Telegram, February 13, 1931
Facsmile, Special Collections Research Center, Syracuse University
Like most of the clippings in this exhibit, this one comes from Bourke-White’s own extensive files. In the 1930s, she subscribed to a clipping service that sent her hundreds
of articles. This laudatory piece, written after her return from the first of three trips to
Russia, calls her “the most modern of modern artists,” who has become virtually a
queen of photgraphy. It suggests that she inherited some of her abilities and interests
17 Gary D. Saretzky, “Margaret Bourke-White: Eyes on Russia,” The Photo Review, 22:3&4 (Summer/Fall
1999), 1-14.
from an architect great-grandfather on her
mother’s Irish side of the family and from her
father, a camera buff. Bourke-White’s father,
Joseph White, who came from a Jewish family
in Poland named Weiss, was described by
Bourke-White in her autobiography as an inventor of improvements to printing processes
and an enthusiastic amateur photographer. It
seems possible that he also modified cameras
as stated in this article but if he did, it is curious that Bourke-White didn’t mention it in Portrait of Myself.
#49
“Soviets by Camera”
Time, December 14, 1931, p. 56
“Her pictures confirm the conviction that photography is an art, that she is a photographer
of the first hypo. Now at 26, her income is
$50,000 a year. . . . Nervy, she has gone
where her eye led her, never takes no for an
answer,” opined Time in its review of BourkeWhite’s first book, Eyes on Russia. Time was
published by Henry Luce, who also published Fortune, Bourke-White’s principal employer in 1931. While one might expect Time to provide a favorable review, its opinion
was consistent with others in print media. The article’s illlustration shows the photographer sitting on scaffolding near the top of the Chrysler Building while she was documenting its construction.
#50
“Girl Puts Soviet Russia on 20,000 Feet of Film; Margaret Bourke-White Breaks Red
Barrier”
Daily News [New York], December [?], 1932
Facsimile, Special Collections Research Center, Syracuse University Library
Published after her third trip to the U.S.S.R., this article emphasizes Bourke-White’s attempt to make a movie of her travels in the socialist republic of Georgia, the birthplace
of Stalin. After traveling for the most part just with her guide from Moscow to Baku, in
Georgia she was accompanied by a military guard to protect her, it was said, from fifteen escaped Turkish murderers who had crossed the border. Highlights of this trip included photographing Stalin’s mother, great-aunt, and other relatives. In Eyes on Russia, one of two short films produced from her footage, Stalin’s great aunt emerges
laughing from her bunker-like underground home. Bourke-White also did portrait photographs of Stalin’s relatives; Stalin’s mother and great-aunt were included in her gravure portfolio, U.S.S.R. Photographs (1934).
#51
Sperryscope, Vol. 6, No. 9, July 1931
Sperry Gyroscope Co.
Cover Photograph of Passenger Ship by
Margaret Bourke-White
Facsimile, Special Collections Research
Center, Syracuse University Library
This photograph was published during the
period when Bourke-White was working
half-time for Fortune magazine and half on
her own for corporate clients, working out
of her studio in the Chrysler Building in
New York.
#52
“Cosmetics with a Conscience”
Ladies Home Journal, May 1935, pages
30-31
Photographs by Margaret Bourke-White
Facsimile, Special Collections Research
Center, Syracuse University Library
Although by 1935, Bourke-White was beginning to become more interested in photographing people as a photojournalist, she
still was taking on commercial assignments. These photographs of cosmetics
manufacturing are classic examples of her
Machine Age style, with repetitive forms
and strong diagonals that create dramatic
geometric designs.
#53
“Competition Not Cartelization”
Fortune, October 1932
Photographs by Margaret Bourke-White
This article is about the Champion Paper Company, which in 1932 made one-third of all
the paper sold to printers in the United States. To illustrate the essay, Bourke-White
photographed one of Champion’s suppliers, the Oxford Paper Co. in Rumford, Maine.
The style of these photographs, with workers being dwarfed by huge machines, is similar to those in her book, Eyes on Russia (1931). Later in her career, Bourke-White
made more photographs of the paper industry, including a 1937 story for Life magazine.
#54
“Where the Streams Dried and the Cattle Thirsted”
Cincinnati Post, August 29, 1934
Photographs by Margaret Bourke-White
Facsimile, Special Collections Research Center, Syracuse University Library
In 1934, Bourke-White was sent by Fortune magazine to cover the great drought that
was creating the Dust Bowl in the Midwest. Hiring a small plane, she spent five days
flying from the Dakotas to Texas. Although her story did not appear in Fortune until October, some of her photographs were published in August in the Cincinnati Post, leading
to a subsequent copyright dispute. For Bourke-White, as she recalled frankly in her
autobiography, the trip was “a powerful eye-opener and had shown me that right here in
my own country there were worlds about which I knew almost nothing.” “I think this was
the beginning of my awareness of people in a human, sympathetic sense as subjects
for the camera. . . . During the rapturous period when I was discovering the beauty of
industrial shapes, people were only incidental to me, and in retrospect I believe I had
not much feeling for them in my earlier work. But suddenly it was the people who
counted.”18
#55
“The Drought”
Fortune, October 1934
Seventeen Photographs by Margaret Bourke-White; text by James Agee
When Fortune sent Bourke-White to the Midwest to photograph the worst drought in
United States history in the summer of 1934, neither the editors nor Bourke-White knew
what a profound effect the experience would have on her. From the small plane she
hired, Bourke-White saw mile after mile of devastated land turning into dust that rose in
the sky and landed as far away as Boston. “Below us,” she wrote later, “[I saw] the
ghostly patchwork of half-buried corn, and the rivers of sand which should have been
free-running streams. Sinister spouts of sand wisping up, and then the sudden yellow
gloom of curtains of fine-blown soil rising up and trembling in the air. Endless dun18 Margaret Bourke-White, Portrait of Myself (NY: Simon and Schuster, 1963),110-113.
colored acres, which should have been green with crops, carved into dry ripples by the
aimless winds. I had never seen people caught helpless like this in total tragedy.”19
Not long after this experience, with her social conscience heightened, Bourke-White
started turning down lucrative advertising assignments and sought to do more socially
conscious work.
Although James Agee wrote this text for Fortune, in the following year, Bourke-White
published her own eloquent article, without illustrations, about dust storms.20 Along
with photographer Walker Evans, Agee subsequently was sent by Fortune to Georgia to
write about sharecroppers, a topic that Bourke-White examined in depth with Erskine
Caldwell.
#56
“Billions of Bottles”
Fortune, April 1932
Three photographs by Margaret Bourke-White
This Fortune story about the Owens-Illinois Glass Company, which dominated the bottle
manufacturing industry at the time, is illustrated with three of Bourke-White’s signature
style industrial photographs. In the one of the gleaming bottles on the conveyer belt,
she composed on the diagonal, with the line going out of the frame on the upper right,
suggesting that it continues indefinitely. Similarly, in the image of the pile of bottles, she
moved in close so that the bottles are cut off by the frame on three sides, implying an
endless number of bottles outside the picture. Both photographs are expertly lit:
Bourke-White was noted for her use of multiple flash units and often enlisted the assistance of whoever was nearby to hold them for her.
#57
[Margaret Bourke-White at Russian Consulate]
New York Times
June 24, 1934
After her trips to Russia in the early 1930s, Margaret Bourke-White became an advocate for diplomatic recognition by the United States of the Soviet Union. The New York
Times reported on March 25, 1933, that she was one of 170 women who signed a petition advocating recognition that was hand delivered to the White House; others included
Jane Addams and Amelia Earhart. Later that year, the United States recognized the
U.S.S.R. and embassies were established in Moscow and Washington, DC. BourkeWhite soon began socializing with Soviet Ambassador Troyanovsky and his wife. After
an unsuccessful attempt to have her work decorate the Soviet Embassy, she was contracted to install five eight-foot enlargements of her Russian photographs in the Soviet
19 Ibid., 110)
20 “Dust Changes America,” The Nation, 140:3646 (May 22, 1935), 597-598.
Consulate in New York, for which she was paid $202.05.21 On June 24, 1934, the New
York Times ran a photo of Bourke-White with the Soviet Consul, Leonid M. Tolokonski,
in front of one of her mural-sized photographs taken at Magnitogorsk in 1931, which
was also issued as a postcard in the U.S.S.R.
#58
“Experience of Monumental Photography in U.S.A.”
Sovietskoye Foto, March/April 1934
Facsimiles, Article and translation, Special Collections Research Center, Syracuse University Library
Bourke-White’s photo mural for NBC Studios at then-new Rockefeller Center was the
largest in the world at the time. Installed in the public rotunda, it was a total of 160 feet
long in two hemispheric sections and ten feet, eight inches high. In the center of one
section was an image of microphones with the
NBC logo (seen in the illustration with BourkeWhite standing next to them); in the other, radio tubes. Surrounding these central images
were close-ups bordering on abstraction of
radio components and, on the ends, four antenna towers. Of the numerous articles about
this prestigious commission in Bourke-White’s
papers, perhaps the most critical was this bizarre review in a Russian photography magazine, which while praising “Boork-Yait” as a
“well-wisher” toward the Soviet Union, stated
that the mural, while technically brilliant,
“makes an impression of an enormous congealed chaos . . . deprived of apparent visual
directions and void of composition.” In the
1950s, the mural was removed and probably
destroyed; the circumstances concerning its
disappearance have not been determined by
historians.22
#59
“Making Radio City Murals”
Citizen (Asheville, North Carolina), November
9, 1933
Facsimile, Special Collections Research Center, Syracuse University Library
21 Gary D. Saretzky, “Margaret Bourke-White: Eyes on Russia,” The Photo Review, 22:3&4 (Summer &
Fall 1999), 10, 14.
22 For fourteen reproductions of the mural photographs, see “Photomurals in NBC Studios, R.C.A. Building, Radio City, New York, Photographs by Margaret Bourke-White,” Architectural Record, August 1934,
pp. 129-138.
At the height of her career, Bourke-White’s name was frequently before the public. Between 1929 and 1949, she wrote or was mentioned in 331 articles in just the New York
Times, an average of more than once per month over a period of twenty-one years.
This article was sent to Bourke-White by the clipping service she used to keep track of
the hundreds of stories about her that appeared annually in newspapers across the
country in the 1930s. The photo shows “the celebrated artist-photographer” in front of
her NBC mural in Rockefeller Center, which was about to be dedicated on November
11, 1933. This commission for the world’s largest photo mural was timely, as BourkeWhite’s income was declining from clients unable to pay their bills in the depths of the
Depression and fee cuts by Fortune magazine; despite her celebrity and high business
volume, she was outspending her income and getting into debt. In 1934, she moved
her studio out of the Chrysler Building to less expensive quarters but her financial woes
continued.
#60
“Outstanding Woman Photographer Banked on Industry”
Newark Evening News, September 13, 1934
Facsimile, Special Collections Research Center, Syracuse University Library
In addition to the fine photograph of the trim and physically fit Bourke-White with her
view camera, this article recounts Bourke-White’s successes as an industrial photographer in the U.S. and the U.S.S.R., and as an associate editor for Fortune. Although she
has a staff of five, for every Bourke-White Studio photograph “she herself has clicked
the shutter.” Recently, Bourke-White has been actively making murals and advocates
them for home decoration. The author of the piece, Virginia J. Fortiner, also recounts
that Bourke-White had recently been an active participant in a career counseling conference in Newark, New Jersey, when she said, “There is probably no profession that
will call on all of a woman’s faculties as that of photographer will. If she is able to arrange flowers, if she knows how to adjust the fold of a dress, if she can read the characteristic expression of a person’s face, if she can chat comfortably and be at ease, or if
on the other hand she has a feeling for architecture, for industry, or a sense for news,
any or all of these qualities will be brought into her business.”
#61
“Girl Translates Machinery into Photographic Murals”
Washington Herald, January 14, 1934
Facsimile, Special Collections Research Center, Syracuse University Library
One of a number of clippings in Bourke-White’s files about the murals she installed in
the Radio City rotunda at Rockefeller Center, this one is another example of how
Bourke-White got national attention for her work during this period. One unusual aspect
of the way in which Bourke-White marketed her services was that she often included
photographs of herself in her media releases. In fact, in the history of photography, she
was arguably the most successful who tried to market her commercial business through
regular distributions of self-portraits to the press. Decades before Andy Warhol, Bourke-
White understood how her celebrity status, as much as the quality of her photographs,
were important elements in commercial success. When called for, she did straight
product photography in the early 1930s, but her forte was creating an image, whether
for herself or for a major industry, through visual associations with physical beauty.
#62
“America’s Interesting People”
American Magazine, October 1935
Photograph of Margaret Bourke-White by
Peter Keane
Of the ten men and women featured in this
article, seventy years later, Bourke-White is
the best known. Most of the others are
now obscure, with the exception of
nineteen-year-old Keenan Wynn who was
just beginning a long acting career. Each
was accompanied by a moniker--BourkeWhite was “Dangler” because she liked
dangling from skyscrapers and smokestacks to get bird’s eye views. The text
mentions that she has exposed about
40,000 negatives in the past nine years,
likes to tango, and hates slow talkers, all
probably true. But there is also an error in
the text, where it states that Bourke-White
became interested in photography through
an art course at Cornell, when in fact she
took a photography course with Clarence
White several years earlier when she was a
Columbia University student.
#63
Mrs. Clarence H. White, “Camera’s Eye”
Independent Woman, 16:2, February 1937
Facsimile, Special Collections Research Center, Syracuse University Library
After an introduction in which
she briefly mentions several
prominent women photographers with enduring reputations, Mrs. White (no relation
to Margaret) profiles several
in greater depth, of whom
only Bourke-White is a nationally known figure today.
Mrs. White, the widow of
Bourke-White’s first photography teacher, recalls
Bourke-White as a Columbia
University freshman in 1921-
1922, arriving at her husband’s studio with pet
snakes around each arm.
This is not as surprising at it may seem: as an undergraduate, Bourke-White intended to
become a herpetologist.
Clarence White had been a leading member of the Pictorialist group of art photographers known as the Photo-Secession and led by Alfred Stieglitz. Stieglitz published
White’s soft-focus photographs in the Photo-Secession’s sumptuous magazine, Camera
Work, ensuring White’s emplacement in the history of photography. By all accounts, a
gentle, sensitive man, Clarence White was an inspirational teacher and Bourke-White’s
early work was influenced by him. After his death, his Clarence White School of Photography was continued until the 1940s by his wife and son, Clarence H. White, Jr.
Other famous photographers who studied there included Laura Gilpin, Dorothea Lange,
Paul Outerbridge, Jr., and Ralph Steiner.
#64
“The Vanitie” by Margaret Bourke-White
U.S. Camera 1935, edited by
Thomas J. Maloney
NY: William Morrow, 1935
Bourke-White’s inclusion in
the first of more than forty
U.S. Camera annuals was a
mark of her prominence by
1935. Among other photographic artists in this landmark publication were
Berenice Abbott, Victor Keppler, Charles Kerlee, Dmitri
Kessel, Dorothea Lange,
George Platt Lynes, Wendell
Macrae, Ira Martin, Martin
Munkacsi, D.J. Ruzicka, Ben
Shahn, Edward Steichen,
Ralph Steiner, Max Thorek, and Brett and Edward Weston. Taken with a 5x7 Graflex
camera, Bourke-White’s photograph is of one of the grand yachts of the 20th century,
“The Vanitie,” a 118-foot J Class America’s Cup racer built in 1914. The photograph
was also published in the New York Times on December 22, 1935.
U.S. Camera was started by Tom Maloney, then a young advertising executive. He
gathered together a committee of well known photographers led by Edward Steichen to
select the photographs. The first few annuals, modeled on the earlier French Photographie and the German Das Deutsche Lichtbild, were published in high quality photogravure on heavy weight paper with outstanding deep black tones but Maloney later
switched to less expensive halftones on glossy, thinner paper. The annual was so successful that Maloney started a monthly magazine of the same name in 1939. After
1935, Bourke-White’s work appeared regularly in U.S. Camera publications. In 1963,
when Maloney presented Steichen with the U.S. Camera Achievement Award, BourkeWhite sat next to Steichen at the formal dinner at the George Eastman House.23
23 Gary D. Saretzky, “U.S. Camera: A Thomas J. Maloney Chronology,” The Photo Review, 26:4/27:1
(2004), 1-13,45.
#65
“Landscape,” by Margaret
Bourke-White
U.S. Camera 1936 edited by
Thomas J. Maloney
NY: William Morrow, 1936
Bourke-White was one of
only a few photographers in
U.S. Camera 1936 given the
honor of a double-page
spread, as seen in this dramatic mountainous landscape. It must have been
one of her favorites, as she
used part of the same image
for the dust jacket of her
autobiography, Portrait of
Myself (1963). In the first
decade of her career, Bourke-White was best known for her images composed with repetitive forms in industry and architecture, but as this photograph shows, her style extended to her landscape work as well.
#66
One Thing Leads to Another: The Growth of an Industry by Fred C. Kelly
Boston & New York: Houghton Mifflin, 1936
17 illustrations by Margaret Bourke-White
When this book appeared, Margaret Bourke-White was making a career transition from
commercial industrial photographer to photojournalist. One Thing Leads to Another is
more relevant to her commercial career. It contains fine examples of her industrial photography; as in other industries, she found beauty in the repeating forms of machinery
and architecture used in the manufacture of chemicals. One Thing Leads to Another is
the story of the Commercial Solvents Corporation, which was formed after World War I
to profit by the discovery of scientist Chaim Weitzmann that bacteria could be used to
produce industrial products. Commercial Solvents bought the rights to Dr. Weitzmann’s
patent for using bacteria to distill a corn mash into butanol, ethyl alcohol, and acetone, a
process of enormous economic and military importance (acetone was needed to produce naval munitions). Weitzmann used the substantial royalties to support and lead
the Zionist movement; in 1947, he became the first President of Israel.
#67
Newsprint: A book of pictures illustrating the operations in the manufacture of paper on
which to print the world’s news. Montreal: International Paper Sales Company, Inc.,
[1939].
Illustrated with photographs by Margaret Bourke-White, et al.
For the first issue of Fortune magazine in
May 1930, Bourke-White photographed International Paper’s manufacturing operations in Quebec, where most paper used in
newspapers was produced. In April 1937,
shortly after her return from the South
where she worked with Erskine Caldwell on
You Have Seen Their Faces, Margaret
Bourke-White returned to Canada. Her
photographs for International Paper were
used in Newsprint. Bourke-White covered
the story of newsprint manufacturing from
lumbering (the cover photo) to sawmill to
pulp to paper machine to finished product,
but she also included the lives of the workers, an indication that her growing humanist orientation was influencing her commercial assignments.
This promotional book was probably issued
to coincide with International Paper’s fortieth anniversary. It features approximately
eighty of Bourke-White’s photographs, as compared to forty in Eyes on Russia and
sixty-seven in You Have Seen Their Faces, and is in a larger format. Although it includes some of her strongest work, it remains one of Bourke-White’s lesser known publications since it was not sold in bookstores and is scarce today. In 1988, Boston University Art Gallery refocussed interest on Newsprint through an exhibition and accompanying catalog that examined this important phase in Bourke-White’s career.
24
24 John R. Stomberg and Kim Sichel, Power and Paper: Margaret Bourke-White, Modernity, and the
Documentary Mode. Boston University Art Gallery, March 6-April 12, 1988. Seattle and London: University of Washington Press, 1988. Stomberg’s excellent essay was helpful in writing the caption for Newsprint in the Rutgers exhibition.
#68
Camel Cigarettes Ad
Featuring Margaret Bourke-White
Life, 1938 [issue unknown]
Bourke-White was the first photographer to have the celebrity status that
enabled her to earn income by endorsing non-photographic products. Consequently, she not only made photographs to illustrate Life magazine, she
also appeared in its full-page ads for
tobacco and wine in 1938 and 1939, as
did other prominent men and women.
In this ad, featuring three photographs
of the photographer, she describes
smoking non-filtered Camels as “extramild and delicate,” fun, helpful for digestion, and “different” and states that
it is rare that she doesn’t keep “plenty”
along with her. In 1944, she testified to
the Federal Trade Commission investigating truth in advertising that she was
“a constant smoker” but did not smoke
Camels exclusively. She liked Camels but also smoked Old Golds and Luckies.25
#69
“Acoma,” March 1935
Aerial Photograph by Margaret Bourke-White
Bourke-White file #226 AC
25 Official Report of Proceedings Before the National Trade Commission. Docket No. 4795. In the matter
of R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Company. New York, April 4, 1944, pp. 794-800, National Archives, Washington, DC; New York Times, April 5, 1944, p. 30. For her testimonial, Bourke-White was paid $250 and a
weekly carton of Camels for a year. Tobacco companies were not required to include warnings about the
possible negative health effects of smoking in their ads in the United States until 1965.
Vintage Print 26
Bourke-White took this aerial
photograph of Acoma, New
Mexico, thought to be the
oldest continuously inhabited
Native American settlement
in the United States, for
Transcontinental & Western
Air, Inc., better known as
TWA. At the time, BourkeWhite noted on a sheet of
TWA stationery, “I suppose
the ins. [insurance] people
would love it if they knew I
do all my work with a parachute strapped to my back--
just in case.” In September
1935, she filled an order for thirteen contact prints, including one of this image, to TWA’s
magazine, Speed, for 35 cents each.27 “Acoma” was also published in “America from
the Air,” Scientific American, October 1936.
#70
“Camera Eye View of Life Given PHS Students by Graduate of Class of 1921”
Courier-News (Plainfield, New Jersey), September 29, 1939
Facsimile, Special Collections Research Center, Syracuse University Library
Margaret Bourke-White grew up in Bound Brook, New Jersey. Less than a month after
Germany started World War II by invading Poland, Bourke-White returned to her secondary school alma mater, Plainfield High School, to address the students. Bourke-White
said that to form one’s own judgments, one must know what is going on in the world and
26 This vintage print produced by the Bourke-White studio was given to Gary Saretzky by Grace Turner
Wood, the widow of Ben D. Wood (1894-1986), Director of Collegiate Educational Research at Teachers
College, Columbia University. Dr. Wood is best remembered for the introduction of standardized multiplechoice tests such as the Graduate Record Examinations and the National Teacher Examinations (precursor to the current Praxis Series: Professional Assessments for Beginning Teachers). Why, when, or how
Dr. Wood acquired the Bourke-White photograph is unknown, but he had a strong interest in civil aviation.
During World War II, he was chairman of the Education Committee for the Institute of the Aeronautical
Sciences, which sponsored the Air-Age Education Series, consisting of fifteen volumes produced under
his direction and authored largely by the Aviation Education Research Group at Teachers College. Wood
described his efforts to promote aviation as “air-conditioning America.” Through her aerial photographs,
Bourke-White did that, too. Gary D. Saretzky, A Guide to the Ben D. Wood Papers (Princeton, NJ: ETS
Archives), November 1989.
27 Margaret Bourke-White Papers, Special Collections Research Center, Special Collections Research
Center, Syracuse University Library Library, information courtesy of Carolyn A. Davis, Reader Services
Librarian, to Gary Saretzky, September 17, 1992.
she helps herself and the public develop this knowledge by traveling to all parts of the
world and bringing back photographs of what she sees. She described some of the
highlights of her career, emphasizing the amusing and adventurous aspects, including
two days on short rations with the Governor General of Canada at a remote spot in the
Arctic after their small plane was forced down by fog. A month after this hometown visit,
Bourke-White was on her way to Europe to cover the war.
#71
Bourke-White: A Retrospective
Invitation to Exhibition Opening
International Center of Photography, New York
Exhibit, March 4-May 1,
1988
24x20 Digital Enlargement
See #5 for caption.
#72
Portrait of Margaret BourkeWhite
Photographer Unknown
Original date stamped January 22, 1953, on verso
24x20 Digital Enlargement
This publicity photo from a newspaper file was probably used to publicize one or more
of Bourke-White’s frequent public lectures.
#73
U.S. Camera 1937
Edited by Thomas J. Maloney
New York: William Morrow & Company, 1937
[Sleeping Worker with Coffee Sacks] by Margaret Bourke-White, p. 48.
Bourke-White’s photographs shot in South America for the American Can Company are
among her least known today. In late Spring 1936, she flew to Brazil, visiting Rio de
Janeiro and Sao Paolo, as well as the “interior” on horseback. A selection was published in Coffee Through the Camera’s Lens (#74 in this exhibit). As she was wont to
do, Bourke-White also sought to publish her Brazilian photographs elsewhere, as seen
in this sumptuously printed photography annual. Bourke-White submission of a photograph of a worker rather than a machine to U.S. Camera for consideration by the committee of judges led by Edward Steichen is indicative of the shift in her concerns by
1937. (In You Have Seen Their Faces, also issued in 1937, one of the first photographs
is strikingly similar to this one: a worker sleeping on a pile of tobacco.) Curiously, editor
Tom Maloney juxtaposed Bourke-White’s photo with an industrial photograph taken for
Fortune by Dmitri Kessel that is reminiscent of Bourke-White’s earlier work.
#74
Coffee Through the Camera’s Lens
American Can Company, 1936
[11 photographs by Margaret Bourke-White]
This small educational publication about
coffee, described as “the principal product
of Brazil,” reproduces eleven of BourkeWhite’s pictures. It consists of a printed
folder with a small vignette of Bourke-White
next to a camera on a tripod. Pockets hold
sixteen instructional inserts, including photographs by Bourke-White, a map, and two
tests for students. Also included is a postpaid postcard for the student’s mother if
she wanted a complimentary copy of “Coffee Facts for Homemakers.” BourkeWhite’s compassionate photographs of
Brazilian children and workers in 1936 anticipated her documentation of Southern
United States tenant farmers in You Have
Seen Their Faces (1937).
#75
S.A. Spencer
The Greatest Show on Earth: A Photographic History of Man’s Struggle for Wealth
Garden City, NY: Doubleday, Doran, 1938
Photograph of machine by Margaret Bourke-White, pp. 82-83.
Margaret Bourke-White’s photographs have been used in numerous publications by
authors with a variety of political perspectives. In florid style, author S.A. Spencer advocated capitalism and the book’s hero for “The Machine Age” is the middle class:
“Never has the Middle Class dared thus usurp the center of the stage before.
But that now seems its historic destiny. Only through the vigorous new Middle Class
can a new Hero emerge. He will be, he must be--to the use that word later to be so
much maligned--a Bourgeois.
“All power, then, to the Middle Class!”
Profusely illustrated with photographs of industry and agriculture, the publisher used
Bourke-White’s name on the cover of the dust jacket to enhance it’s appeal. Three of
the photos are credited to Bourke-White: a steel mill; shoe factory; and a huge unidentified machine. Among other sources, the book used government file photographs from
the Resettlement Administration (later reorganized as the Farm Security Administration)
taken by Arthur Rothstein and Ben Shahn.
#77
The Story of Rockefeller Center. Souvenir of the Rockefeller Center Guided Tour.
NY: Rockefeller-Center, Inc., 1939
Photographs by Margaret Bourke-White, et al.
In addition to creating the huge photo-mural for the rotunda at the R.C.A. Building,
Bourke-White also photographed the exteriors of Rockefeller Center and the spectacular views afforded by the skyscrapers. Her photographs were used in this guide pamphlet as well as in The Last Rivet, a more elaborate promotional book about the skyscraper complex. In neither publication are the photographs individually credited and
the Rockefeller Archives does not have information about which were taken by BourkeWhite. The centerfold of the souvenir booklet features the famous observation deck on
top of the 70-story RCA building, which was closed in 1986 to make way for an expansion of The Rainbow Room, a revolving restaurant. Fortunately for view seekers, the
deck was reopened in 2005.
#78-79
The Last Rivet. The story of
Rockefeller Center, a city
within a city, as told at the
ceremony in which John D.
Rockefeller, Jr. drove the last
rivet of the last building, November 1, 1939. NY: Columbia University Press,
1940
Illustrated with photographs
by Berenice Abbott, Margaret
Bourke-White, et al.
Green velveteen clothcovered boards inlaid with a
metal rivet design, backed in
red cloth, spine lettered in
silver. End-papers decorated with repeating silver rivet design.
Rutgers University Libraries
Columbia University, which owned the
land on which Rockefeller Center was
built, published this book about its famous tenant. Like the guide booklet, The
Story of Rockefeller Center (#77), photographs are uncredited in this publication
but it seems likely that Bourke-White was
responsible for the birds-eye view on
page 26, as aerial photography was one
of her specialties and a negative taken
from a similar angle is in Bourke-White’s
archives. She was also contracted by the
Center in August 1935 to document artistic architectural features such as entrances, murals, and decorations.28
Since the Time-Life building at Rockefeller Center housed the offices of Life
magazine, for which Bourke-White
worked for decades, she was a regular
visitor to the complex even when she was
not on assignment to photograph it.
#80
“Travels”
[Chronology by Margaret Bourke-White, 1954 or later]
Vicki Goldberg Research Files, Box 1, Time-Life Folder
Facsimile, first five pages, Special Collections Research Center, Syracuse University
Library
Bourke-White’s extensive travels beginning in 1929, when she began work for Fortune
magazine, to June 1954, when she zig-zagged across the U.S. by air and car, are well
documented in this typed eleven-page chronology.
#81
Margaret Bourke-White and Erskine Caldwell
You Have Seen Their Faces (NY: Viking, 1937)
Facsimile of dust jacket of first edition
Unlike the rather common 1937 softcover reprint by Modern Age, which featured a
woman and child sitting in front of an abandoned plantation mansion, the dust jacket of
the first hardcover edition published by Viking depicted tenant farmers living in homes
wall-papered with the Saturday Evening Post. As noted in Roth’s compendium of 101
28 E-mail, Carolyn A. Davis, Syracuse University, to Gary Saretzky, April 16, 1998.
“seminal” photography books published in the twentieth century, the design for the dust
jacket was influenced by Russian Constructivism, with white text on red blocks in opposing corners.29
#82
Erskine Caldwell and Margaret Bourke-White
You Have Seen Their Faces
NY: Modern Age, 1937 (reprint of 1st edition by Viking, 1937)
Bourke-White’s most successful book, in terms of
sales, was You Have Seen
Their Faces. The first hardcover edition sold out and
was followed by this inexpensive (75 cents) soft cover
reprint with a different cover
design and a new caption
format under the illustrations.
Throughout her career,
Bourke-White went after the
big story of the day whenever possible. In the late
1920s and early 1930s, it
was industrialization, including the Soviet Union’s Five-Year Plan. By the mid-1930s, it was the Dust Bowl and the
impoverishment of farm workers. Some of the nation’s most able photographers like
Walker Evans and Dorothea Lange, were hired by a New Deal agency, the Resettlement Administration, to document agricultural problems.
Instead of working for the government, Bourke-White
joined with best-selling author, Erskine Caldwell, to do this
book about Southern tenant farmers.
Caldwell, by the mid-thirties, was the more famous of the
team: he had written two best sellers, Tobacco Road and
God’s Little Acre, and was considered an authority on his
native South. The combination of a famous writer and a
famous photographer guaranteed the book’s commercial
success and helped develop public interest in a significant
social problem, subsequently addressed by other documentary photography books such as Dorothea Lange and
Paul Schuster Taylor’s American Exodus (1939).
29 Andrew Roth, ed., The Book of 101 Books: Seminal Photographic Books of the Twentieth Century (NY:
PPD Editions, 2001).
To accompany her dramatic and explicit photographs of suffering, Bourke-White and
Caldwell jointly wrote “quotations” by the subjects. This technique, while not uncommon
at the time, came to be viewed by some as undercutting the documentary value of the
work. As critic Shelley Rice recently argued, “when the caption underneath a picture of
a woman . . . reads: ‘Life is hardly worth living,’ this assessment represents the opinion
of the authors, not the subject. In You Have Seen Their Faces, photographs and text
conspire to create a simplified image of les miserables that is a middle-class projection
rather than an earnest attempt at understanding and communication.”30 Despite the
captions, Bourke-White’s photographs in this book remain among the most memorable
of the decade.
#83
Ralph Thompson
“Books of the Times [review of You Have Seen Their Faces]
New York Times
November 10, 1937
Facsimile
Erskine Caldwell conceived the idea for You Have Seen Their Faces and employed
Bourke-White to do the photographs. In recognition of his leading role in the book, one
reviewer called it “Erskine Caldwell’s Picture Book.”31 Ralph Thompson, writing for the
New York Times, characterized it as a book by Caldwell illustrated by Bourke-White but
he seemed to imply that the text was superfluous when he wrote that the text and captions “are eclipsed by the wordless eloquence of the photographer’s lens.” Today, con30 “When Objects Dream,” in Andrew Roth, ed., The Book of 101 Books: Seminal Photographic Books of
the Twentieth Century (NY: PPP Editions, 2001), 18.
31 D. Davidson, “Erskine Caldwell’s Picture Book,” Southern Review, 4:1 (Summer 1938), 15-25.
sistent with Thompson’s response, the work is principally valued for BourkeWhite’s photographs of
Southern tenant farmers
rather than what Caldwell
had to say about them.
#84
“You Have Seen their Faces”
by Erskine Caldwell and
Margaret Bourke White
Popular Photography, 2:3
(March 1938)
Facsimile
In these companion articles,
Caldwell and Bourke-White
provided separate accounts about their experiences over a two-year period producing
their best-selling book about Southern sharecroppers, You Have Seen Their Faces
(1937). Both accounts stress the terrible poverty of the farmers whose story needed to
be brought before the public. Caldwell recalls that he spent years looking for the right
photographer for the project and when he reviewed Bourke-White’s portfolio, at first he
didn’t think she was the right one for the job. But then he came across her picture,
“Borscht,” of three Russian women eating out of the same bowl, and knew that at last
he had found her. In her essay, Bourke-White stresses the difficulties, both emotional
and logistical, of trying to photograph “hungry, ragged, crippled, or imbecilic children;
haggard, undernourished, snuff-dipping mothers; bitter, frustrated, “body-sick” fathers--
all living in flimsy shacks, the walls of which were covered with sheets of newspaper.”
#85
Erskine Caldwell and Margaret Bourke-White
North of the Danube
NY: Viking Press, 1939
This second book by Caldwell and Bourke-White was
issued in only one edition
and is the scarcest of the
three that they did together.
It is based on their twelve
weeks of travels in Czechoslovakia just before Hitler
annexed its Germanspeaking areas and assumed virtual control over
the country. It was on this
trip that Margaret BourkeWhite was first directly confronted by the threat of Nazism. Particularly chilling is
an account by Caldwell of a confrontation between a Nazi and an Austrian Jewish
woman on a train that clearly conveys the fanaticism that made the Holocaust possible.
Bourke-White’s photographs of Nazis underscored the threat but most Americans at the
time tried to steer clear of European problems. Perhaps because it dealt with a problem
abroad rather than at home, it got less attention than Bourke-White and Caldwell’s previous effort, You Have Seen Their Faces.
#86
“Czechs Will Fight to the
Death Says Miss BourkeWhite”
New York Post, September
17, 1938
Facsimile, Special Collections Research Center,
Syracuse University
In 1938, Hitler was complaining that Germans in Czechoslovakia were starving, unemployed, and miserable, as
a pretext for annexing his
neighbor’s territory. But
Bourke-White returned from
Czechoslovakia with the impression that ethnic Germans
there were well treated, along with other minorities. Much of the trouble, she said, was
caused by Nazi propagandists, “a smooth lot, of the type of our own high-pressure ad-
vertising men.” She told Michael Mok, the reporter who interviewed her, that she had a
Nazi guide show her around Prague and he “picked all the ugly buildings” and “constantly sneered at the Czechs.” At the time of this interview, France and England, which
had supported democratic Czechoslovakia, was negotiating with Germany. In a classic
case of appeasement known as the Munich Pact, the French and English allowed Hitler
to annex four Czech provinces on September 29. In March 1939, the same month that
Caldwell and Bourke-White’s book, North of the Danube, was published, Hitler occupied
the rest of the country.
#87
U.S. Camera Annual, 1940
Edited by Thomas J. Maloney
“Czech Children” by Margaret Bourke-White, pp. 22-23
This sympathetic photograph
of Jewish children in
Czechoslovakia also was
published in Life magazine,
May 30, 1938, which featured a 15-page photo essay
by Bourke-White after her
return from that country. Although this photo was not
published in her book, North
of the Danube, two of the
three children appear in another one published therein of a crowded schoolroom in Carpathian Ruthenia under the title, “Talmudic Scholars.” In U.S. Camera, the caption is
just “Czech Children,” leaching the photograph of much of its political and social significance.
#88
“Erskine Caldwell Weds; ‘Tobacco Road’ Author Takes Miss Bourke-White as Bride”
New York Times, February 28, 1939, p. 17
Facsimile
Margaret Bourke-White and Erskine Caldwell took time out from their busy schedules to
get married in Silver City, described by Bourke-White as a “ghost town” in Nevada, after
taking a cab there from Reno with a Nevada State Representative who was also a minister. As much as she loved Caldwell, Bourke-White had many reasonable doubts that
a marriage to the moody author would succeed and she made him sign an elaborate
prenuptial agreement, including a clause that he wouldn’t interfere with her photographic assignments. They honeymooned in Hawaii.32
32 Margaret Bourke-White, Portrait of Myself (NY: Simon and Schuster, 1963), 169-173.
#89
U.S. Camera Annual 1939
Edited by Thomas J. Maloney
NY: William Morrow, 1938
“Arctic Madonna” by Margaret BourkeWhite, p. 138
One of two photographs by Bourke-White
in U.S. Camera Annual 1939, “Arctic Madonna” was taken in August 1937 on assignment for Life magazine, which published two photo essays taken in the Far
North by the photographer in its October 25
issue. Bourke-White made this portrait in
Coppermine, Northwest Territory, at 10pm,
in the “land of the midnight sun.” The Inuit
woman had come several hundred miles in
an open boat to greet the Bishop of the
Arctic, with whom Bourke-White was traveling by air. At one point, due to bad
weather, the party was forced down in the
Arctic Ocean two hundred miles from the
magnetic North Pole and spent time on a
small island far from any human habitation. During this trip, Bourke-White was besieged with telegrams from love-struck Erskine Caldwell, addressed to “Honeychile”
from “Skinny,” asking her to return and marry him. One was even read on the radio
when she was marooned in the Arctic.33
#90
33 Vicki Goldberg, Margaret Bourke-White: A Biography (NY: Harper & Row, 1986), 199-203.
“Focusing on Romance; Erskine Caldwell and Margaret
Bourke-White on Their Honeymoon” [Facsimile]
Atlanta Journal Magazine,
May 14, 1939
Facsimile, Special Collections Research Center,
Syracuse University Library
When Bourke-White met
Caldwell, he had achieved
fame as the author of Tobacco Road, a best seller
made into a long-running
Broadway play. They fell in
love in 1936 during their long
trip through the South gathering material for You Have
Seen Their Faces but Caldwell was married at the time. Some months after his divorce in 1938, Bourke-White and
Caldwell tied the knot at the end of February 1939. It was also Bourke-White’s second
marriage; her first to a college flame lasted but briefly. In 1942, while Bourke-White was
abroad for a long period covering the war in Europe, Caldwell asked her for a divorce.
Bourke-White never married again; Caldwell had two more wives. This article, published a few months after their marriage, found the celebrated couple still in love in
Georgia, Caldwell’s birthplace, where Bourke-White had gone to photograph the Southern Paper Festival.
#91-92
Erskine Caldwell and Margaret Bourke-White
Say, Is This the U.S.A.
NY: Duell, Sloan and Pearce, 1941
The third and last book Caldwell and
Bourke-White co-authored, Say, Is This the
U.S.A., was the result of a 10,000 mile jaunt
zigzagging across America and interviews
with the locals they encountered (none of
them famous), including a gas station attendant, a horse trader, a hotel clerk, a farmer,
and a coffin maker. Bourke-White photographed Americans at work and play in St.
Johnsbury, Vermont; Sarasota, Florida;
Pretty Prairie, Kansas; Texarkana, Texas;
Tucson, Arizona; Elko, Nevada; Provo, Utah;
San Diego, California; and numerous other
places en route. The result was a snapshot
of the United States on the eve of World
War II. Reviewing the book in the New York
Times, Ralph Thomson concluded, “There is
nothing mysterious about the book itself. It
is as candid and unaffected as America. It
reflects the plain, earnest, expressive face
of the country we all know. . . .”34
#93-94
Margaret Bourke-White
34 June 26, 1941.
Shooting the Russian War
NY: Simon and Schuster, 1942
With facsimile of dust jacket
After her three trips to the Soviet Union in
the early 1930s, Bourke-White didn’t return
to Moscow until May 1941, just in time for
the nightly German bombings of the Russian capital. Rather than go to a fallout
shelter as was required, Bourke-White hid
under the bed in her hotel until the air raid
wardens had finished their inspection, then
went out on the balcony and photographed
the fireworks. Her visit was also notable
for her coup in photographing Stalin in the
Kremlin.
With Bourke-White in Moscow, her husband, Erskine Caldwell, gave nightly radio
news broadcasts. They each wrote their
own books about the war in Russia.
Bourke-White wrote about her own experiences. Her text remains valuable as an
eye witness account of the first days of the
war between Germany and the Soviet Union.
#95-96
Margaret Bourke-White
They Called It “Purple Heart Valley”; A
Combat Chronicle of the War in Italy
NY: Simon and Schuster, 1944
Rutgers University Libraries
With facsimile of dust jacket
On the ground and in the air, Bourke-White
spent five tough months on the Italian front
near Cassino, accompanying American
forces as they slowly fought their way up
the boot of Italy against strong opposition.
The casualties were heavy and BourkeWhite pulled no punches in her account of
the grim realities of war, including what it
was like in a field hospital as the casualties
poured in. She highly praised the courage
of the G.I.’s and was critical of bureaucratic
ineptitude. Although this book includes
many photographs, it was praised even
more for its text, in which a young soldier,
Corporal Padgitt, emerges as the leading
character. The New York Times reviewer,
Foster Hailey, concluded, “one of the best and most remarkable books to come out of
the war. . . this book qualifies her as a first-rate reporter, in command of a lean, hard
prose that is the only true medium of description for the ordered insanity of war.”35
#97
Margaret Bourke-White
“Dear Fatherland, Rest Quietly”: A Report on the Collapse of Hitler’s “Thousand Years”
NY: Simon and Schuster, 1946
Rutgers University Libraries
The defeat of Hitler’s Third Reich was undoubtedly one of the great news stories of the
20th century and Bourke-White was there to cover it: According to her recollection, in
the spring and summer of 1945, she “covered almost all major industrial cities and ind.
centers by air & ground, as each point fell to our armies.”36 Bourke-White accompanied
General George Patton’s troops in their victorious thrust into the heartland of Germany.
Her photographs of the liberation of the Buchenwald concentration camp, some of
which are included in this book, were among the most important of her career. At Pat35 November 26, 1944.
36 Itinerary (“Travels”), 1929-1954, copy of typescript, Vicki Goldberg Papers, Time-Life folder, Box 1,
Special Collections Research Center, Syracuse University Library.
ton’s insistence, a thousand local Germans were rounded up, brought to the camp, and
forced to witness piles of corpses and emaciated survivors.
Along with images taken by different photographers at Dachau and other camps,
Bourke-White’s photographs were unprecedented in their frank depictions for mass media publications and seared the memories of the public. Recalling her own experience
viewing such visual evidence of evil, Susan Sontag wrote, “One’s first encounter with
the photographic inventory of ultimate horror is a kind of revelation. . . . Nothing I have
seen--in photographs or in real Life --ever cut me as sharply, deeply, instantaneously.
Indeed, it seems possible to divide my life into two parts, before I saw those photographs (I was twelve) and after. . . .”37
The liberation of the camps is only one part of Dear Fatherland: it’s scope is much
broader. Particularly valuable are her portraits and interviews with a range of Germans
from industrialist Alfred Krupp on down the social ladder, capturing their opinions on the
past and future of the nation at this critical juncture. In 1945, most of them were still unrepentant Nazis.
#98
“Gandhi Joins the Hindu Immortals”
Life, February 16, 1948
Photographs by Margaret
Bourke-White and Henri
Cartier-Bresson
Essay, “On Day of Death He
Talked of Love and the
Atomic Bomb” by Margaret
Bourke-White
Bourke-White spent much of
two years in India working on
her book, Halfway to Freedom, and photographing for
Life magazine. The first time
she photographed Gandhi,
she had to learn how to use a spinning wheel before she was allowed to photograph
him with one. (For Gandhi, spinning meant economic independence for India and was
symbolic of his people’s non-violent struggle for freedom.) Eventually, after many visits,
they became friends, although he jokingly called her “The Torturer” because he disliked
37 Susan Sontag, On Photography (NY: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1977), 19-20. Sontag was not referring specifically to Bourke-White’s photographs but they were comparable in explicit content.
her flash bulbs.38 Just a few hours before he was assassinated by a fanatic, BourkeWhite interviewed Gandhi on world affairs and her memoir was included in this story
about his death. In the double-page spread on pages 22 and 23, Bourke-White took the
photo on the top left on page 22 and the photograph on page 23.
In 1982, Candice Bergen played Bourke-White in the movie, Gandhi.
#99
Margaret Bourke-White
Halfway to Freedom: A Report on the New India
NY: Simon and Schuster, 1949
Rutgers University Libaries
After World War II concluded in 1945, Bourke-White made a series of extended trips to
India for Life magazine, recording the momentous changes that were occurring there:
independence from British rule and the creation of the independent countries of India
and Pakistan. At the time, a Life representative in India wrote that she “has more energy than anybody else in India, and she works like hell in spite of the deadly heat.”39
Bourke-White met and photographed important industrial and political leaders, including
Gandhi just before his assassination. Her historically important photographs of the region appeared in several Life magazine articles from 1946 to 1948; more than one hundred are in her book, Halfway to Freedom.
38 Margaret Bourke-White, Portrait of Myself (NY: Simon and Schuster, 1963), 278.
39 Memorandum, Will Lang to Wilson Hicks, June 5, 1946. , Vicki Goldberg Papers, Time-Life Archives
folder, Special Collections Research Center, Syracuse University Library.
#100
Margaret Bourke-White
Interview with India
London: Phoenix House, 1950
Interview with India is the British edition of
Bourke-White’s 1949 book, Halfway to Freedom
that was published by Simon and Schuster in
New York. The title and some of the content
was changed to downplay India’s recent independence. For example, in Bourke-White’s introduction, her concluding sentences were
dropped: “But to an American, the whole charter
of liberty for the Indian people is illuminated by
its first five words. ‘We the People of India. . . ,’
it begins.” The main body of the text also shows
evidence of careful excising: negative references to the period of British rule were largely
eliminated.40 In fact, so much was cut that Interview with India is about fifty pages shorter
than Halfway to Freedom. Although most of the
illustrations are the same, there are both obvious and subtle differences in the sequencing,
cropping, and captioning. This version of Bourke-White’s book on India is practically
unknown in the U.S. and has not been not discussed by her biographers.
#101
Gordon Parks
Camera Portraits: The Techniques and Principles of Documentary Portraiture
NY: Franklin Watts, 1948
Gordon Parks, soon to become the first black photographer to work for Life magazine,
included this fine portrait of Margaret Bourke-White taken at her home in Darien, Connecticut, in his second technical book about photography. In his biographical notes
about her, he mentioned that Bourke-White had recently been awarded an honorary
doctorate from Rutgers University. In addition to being a successful photographer, Parks
later became a film director, composer, and writer.
#102
Stanley Rayfield
How Life Gets the Story: Behind the Scenes in Photo-Journalism
Garden City, NY: Doubleday & Co., 1955
40 For example, Bourke-White’s statement, “Great Britain offered nothing but discouragement to Indian
industrial enterprise” on page 78 in Halfway to Freedom.
Chapter, “Shooting from a Whirlibird” re Margaret Bourke-White, pp. 34-35
Margaret Bourke-White spent several months photographing America from above for
Life magazine in the fall of 1951. Her photo essay, “A New Way to Look at the U.S.,”
appeared in the April 14, 1952, issue. One of a number of large format books about Life
photographers, How Life Gets the Story includes an account of how Bourke-White’s
Navy helicopter lost power over Chesapeake Bay. After escaping into the water, she
was rescued by another helicopter, although but she lost her three 20-pound aerial
cameras. Bourke-White’s willingness to hang from a helicopter to get a better camera
angle, as seen in one of the accompanying photos, augmented her reputation as a courageous photographer.
41
#103
Memorable Life Photographs
Foreword and comment by Edward Steichen
NY: Museum of Modern Art, 1951
Two Photographs by Margaret Bourke-White
Rutgers University Libraries (Art Library)
This book commemorates an exhibit celebrating the first fifteen years of Life magazine,
held at the Museum of Modern Art, with photographs selected and arranged by Edward
Steichen. The larger of the two Bourke-White photographs reproduced here, “Family
Fleeing Pakistan,” was taken during The Great Migration, when, as a result of the split
of the subcontinent into India and Pakistan, followed by six weeks of massacres, ten
million people crossed the border in two months, Hindus in one direction, Moslems in
the other. Bourke-White, who traveled in India for five months with Life reporter Lee Eitington, particularly liked this group. Eitington recalled, she “made them go back again
and again and again. They were too frightened to say no. They were dying. . . . That’s
why she was such a good photographer. People were dying under her feet. . . . She
thought herself a great humanitarian, but when it came to individual people. . . .”42
#104
Stanley Rayfield
Life Photographers: Their Careers and Favorite Pictures
[Garden City, NY]: Doubleday & Co., 1957
Although several volumes had been published with photographs from Life magazine,
this was the first book about the photographers themselves. Thirty-nine Life photographers were asked to submit a dozen of their favorite pictures. (Robert Capa, who had
been killed in Indo-China, was also included.) Stanley Rayfield, the editor, selected six
images by Margaret Bourke-White, one of the original members of the Life staff. Two of
41 The New York Times, September 8, 1951, page 15, reported that the Sikorsky helicopter went down
300 yards offshore near Little Creek, Virginia, while practicing a rescue of a man in the water. The helicopter narrowly missed the man it was trying to “save.”
42 Quoted in Vicki Goldberg, Margaret Bourke-White: A Biography (NY: Harper & Row, 1986), 311.
the six were from the first issue of the magazine. Asked why she had chosen these pictures, she wrote, “I like to look deep into the human heart with my camera.”
#105
Margaret Bourke-White
“Caste: India”
Photo-Graphic 1949. The Annual of America’s Leading Photographers, Selected and
Edited by the American Society of Magazine Photographers
NY: Whittlesey House/McGraw Hill, 1948
Bourke-White’s contribution to this prestigious compilation of photographs is taken from
her large body of work on India and graphically depicts a “wealthy landlord of southern
India dropping wages into the hands of his low caste workers.” Cropped differently, it
also appeared in Bourke-White’s books on India, Halfway to Freedom and Interview
with India; in the latter, the
right half of the picture, including the old man, was
eliminated to make it into a
vertical image.
#106
LaFarge, John, S.J.
A Report on the American
Jesuits
Photographs by Margaret
Bourke-White
NY: Farrar, Straus, and Cudahy, 1956
Rutgers University Libraries
Bourke-White was in the
early stages of Parkinson’s
disease when in 1953-1954 she went on an extensive trip to Maine, California, and British Honduras to photograph the Jesuits for Life magazine. The story was expanded into
a book, with text by the editor of America, a Catholic magazine. Due to her deteriorating
health, A Report on the American Jesuits was Bourke-White’s last major photographic
project. Her biographer, Vicki Goldberg, commented that it provided “an ironic coda to
the religious history of a woman whose Irish mother had refused to have her children
baptized, whose Jewish father remained a well-kept secret, and who said that work was
the only religion she ever had.”43
#107
43 Ibid., 345.
Margaret Bourke-White
Portrait of Myself
NY: Simon and Schuster,
1963
Rutgers University Libraries
Bourke-White spent ten
years writing her autobiography during a period when,
due to the worsening effects
of Parkinson’s disease, she
sometimes could barely
move her fingers on the
typewriter. (Much of her time
was spent exercising to prevent growing rigidity and in
recuperating from two experimental brain operations.)
The autobiography became her “constant companion,” to which she could always return
when she was able, even if it meant adding only one or two sentences a week. Her determination not to let her disease stop her work entirely earned the admiration of the
public and Portrait of Myself was widely read, especially after it became a Book-of-theMonth Club selection.44 Her battle with the disease also became the subject of a TV
film45 and a number of magazine articles that helped educate the public about Parkinson’s.
44 The book club edition was slightly smaller than the first edition on view in the exhibit.
45 “The Margaret Bourke-White Story,” starring Teresa Wright (1918-2005), was broadcast in 1960 on
NBC’s Sunday Showcase. The actress earned an Emmy nomination for her stellar performance. Life
magazine had an article about the film in its January 11, 1960 issue.
#108
“Aviators of 38 Nations Do
Their Jumping in Parachutes”
Life, March 22, 1937
Photographs by Margaret
Bourke-White
Although Leonardo DaVinci
understood the practicality of
parachutes, and pioneer balloonists used the devices,
there was not much demand
for them until the advent of
airplanes in the 20th century.
As a frequent flyer who
sometimes wore a parachute
while photographing from
small aircraft, Bourke-White must have taken a particular interest in doing this photo essay on the Irving Air Chute Company which almost had a monopoly on parachute manufacture in the U.S. The Life cover, of a descending parachute test dummy, was BourkeWhite’s second of twenty that she did for the magazine. Toward the end of the article,
Life correctly emphasized that parachutes would be important in the next war.
#109
Margaret Bourke-White
Twenty Parachutes
Tucson, AZ: Nazraeli Press, 2002
Bound in white parachute silk in an edition of 1,000.
To date, Twenty Parachutes is the only posthumous book of consisting entirely of previously unpublished Bourke-White photographs. These tiny gems, reproduced 1:1, are
unused images from a photoessay Bourke-White shot for the Life magazine issue of
March 22, 1937, about the Irving Air Chute Company. Each beautifully composed photograph depicts an epic struggle between men and the wind. According to Trudy Wilner
Slack’s introduction, “Their wonder is in their ambiguity, their lack of captons and context, their archetypal address of human insignificance, of who is really pulling the
strings.”
#110
Phyllis Ehrlich
“Margaret Bourke-White: Still Aiming for the Moon”
New York Times, June 27, 1963
Facsimile
The publication of Bourke-White’s autobiography, Portrait of Myself, was the occasion
for numerous positive articles about the photographer, including this piece in the New
York Times. The title is in reference to Bourke-White’s request to be the first Life magazine photographer to be sent to the moon, an assignment she no doubt would have enjoyed. The reporter, Phyllis Ehrlich, visited the photographer at her home in Darien,
Connecticut, where Bourke-White talked about her career and her daily physical therapy for Parkinson’s that kept her from becoming rigid. In 1971, she had a fall and was
confined to bed; the resulting immobility led to her death two months later.
#111
“A Life Photographer Looks at Moscow a Week Before the Nazi Invasion Began”
Life, August 11, 1941
Nearly a decade after her last visit to the Soviet Union, Bourke-White and her husband
Erskine Caldwell arrived in Moscow after a lengthy trip via the Pacific and China to
avoid the war in Europe. They brought 617 pounds of luggage, of which 600 was hers,
including five cameras, twenty-two lenses, and three thousand flash bulbs.46 In the
August 11 issue of Life, the first of nine photo-essays in 1941 by Bourke-White on Russia, the thirty photographs show streets, subways, Moscow University, a kindergarten,
government meetings, exhibition halls, shops, and recreational activities. Atypical
scenes for the communist society included an expensive shop, where a dress cost the
equivalent of about ten months rent for an average apartment, and a pricey bar that
served “cowboy cocktails,” consisting of apricot liqueur, benedictine, a raw egg yolk, gin,
and pepper liqueur. The egg yolk kept the colors of the drink separated.
#112
Margaret Bourke-White
“How I Photographed Stalin and Hopkins in the Kremlin”
Life, September 8, 1941
In 1941, Bourke-White scored an incredible photographic coup by gaining permission to
photograph Stalin, who rarely made himself accessible to foreign photographers. Stalin
needed support from the United States to fight the Germans, so he probably hoped that
Bourke-White’s photographs would improve his image among Americans. Nevertheless, the photographer reported that the rather short dictator maintained a stony visage
until she got down on her knees to make him look taller in the photographs, a posture
he apparently found amusing. With Stalin, in some of the pictures, was Roosevelt’s
trusted emissary, Harry Hopkins, who has recently been identified through KGB records
as “Agent 19,” a high level spy for the Soviet Union.47
#113
46 Vicki Goldberg, Margaret Bourke-White: A Biography (Harper & Row, 1986), 236-237.
47 Herbert Romerstein, The Venona Secrets: Exposing Soviet Espionage and America's Traitors (Washington, DC: Regnery, 2001).
Margaret Bourke-White
“Women in Lifeboats; Torpedoed on an Africa-Bound Troopship, A Life Photographer
Finds Them as Brave in War as Men”
Life, February 22, 1943
In December 1942, Bourke-White took a troop ship to cover the war for Life in North Africa, a month after the Allied invasion. One night, after a very rough trans-Atlantic crossing, Bourke-White’s ship was torpedoed in the Mediterranean. Thrown from her bunk
by the explosion, she climbed out on the severely listing deck and got on line to get into
a lifeboat already half full of water. Perhaps for the first time, she knew what fear felt
like. Once they were launched, she and her shipmates, who included Eisenhower’s
driver, Kay Summersby, and forty nurses, bailed with their helmets. At dawn, BourkeWhite did what came naturally: she started to photograph. After eight hours in the
crowded little boat, she and sixty-three others were picked up by a destroyer. Upon
reaching Algiers, knowing it would make a good story, she cabled a Life editor, “what
incredible luck to get torpedoed!”48
#114
“Life’s Bourke-White Goes Bombing: First woman to accompany U.S. Air Force on
combat mission photographs attack on Tunis”
Life, March 1, 1943
With the permission of General Jimmy Doolittle, Bourke-White flew on a B-17 that successfully attacked a German airfield at Tunis, a career highlight to which she devoted
two chapters in her autobiography. After several weeks of training, Bourke-White
boarded the bomber on January 22, 1943, about a month after she was rescued from a
torpedoed troop ship in the Mediterranean. She was not without risk of being shot
down: her plane took two hits in a wing but suffered only minor damage. During the
flight in the leading plane in the squadron, she photographed the crew at work, other
bombers, and scenes below, including the burning target. More than one hundred
German planes were destroyed on the ground, while the Allies lost two in the attack.49
The Life article on the event included a dozen of her photographs, as well as an uncredited one of Bourke-White in a high-altitude outfit that became the best known photograph of her. (See also exhibit items #127 and 129.)
#115
“Women in Steel: They Are Handling Tough Jobs in Heavy Industry”
Photographs by Margaret Bourke-White
Life, August 9, 1943
48 Eliot Elisofon speech at Ohio University, April 14, 1969, Vicki Goldberg Papers, Time-Life folder, Special
Collections Research Center, Syracuse University Library.
49 Margaret Bourke-White, Portrait of Myself (NY: Simon and Schuster, 1963), 217-232.
In 1943, Bourke-White returned to the steel mills, one
of her favorite subjects in the
late 1920s, for this outstanding photo essay with two
dozen images. In 1928,
when she photographed the
foundries of Otis Steel in
Cleveland, she was the only
woman there; now, as a result of the war, there were
nearly 5,000 women working
for U.S. Steel subsidiaries in
Gary, Indiana. Bourke-White
photographed scenes of
“Rosie the Riveter” wearing a
gas mask and doing a variety of tiring, dirty, and dangerous tasks. She also did a series of close-up portraits, including flame burner Ann
Zarik, who appeared, using a blow torch, on Life’s cover. In a note on the Table of Contents page introducing the story, Life drew a parallel to Bourke-White’s photographs of
Soviet women workers in its September 1, 1941 issue.
#116
“Herr Goring [sic] Talks; The Fat Former Reichsmarschall Sweats Out a Press Conference”
Life, May 28, 1945
Photographs by Margaret Bourke-White & Signal Corps photographers
In one of the more bizarre incidents of the immediate post-war period in Germany, Herman Goering, Hitler’s legal heir and one of the top Nazis since 1923, was allowed to
conduct a press conference with fifty reporters in attendance. Although he denied any
guilt for atrocities, he was later convicted for war crimes at Nuremburg and committed
suicide by swallowing potassium cyanide to avoid execution. Bourke-White took the
full-page photo on page 30 of this issue of Life, as well as the four close-ups on page
31.
#117
Photo of Margaret Bourke-White on a Refrigerator Magnet
Fabricated by Vivian G. Weaver, Kimberly, Idaho,
ca. 2000
An unusual piece of Bourke-White ephemera, the
photograph on this magnet was taken no later
than September 13, 1934, when it appeared in
the Newark Evening News.
#118
First Day Cover
15 Cent Photography USA Stamp, June 26, 1978
Bourke-White on silk cachet
Issued by National Organization for Women (N.O.W.-N.Y.)
Women’s History Series, No. 64
Whether or not in military uniform, Bourke-White was noted for her style throughout her
career. Here she is wearing the first uniform designed for a woman war correspondent
after she was accredited in
the late spring of 1942. The
picture of Bourke-White on
the first day cover is based
on a photograph that appeared in Bourke-White’s
autobiography and earlier in
Life magazine. (The hand
holding the camera was not
in the original image.) In her
autobiography, Bourke-White
recalled that the design was
seriously debated by officers
in the Army War College,
with much discussion on the
buttons. While following the basic design for male officers’ uniforms, it came with both
skirt and slacks. Army green was the color for the standard uniform, with “dress pinks”
(a shade of gray) for special occasions. Once the design was approved, Abercrombie &
Fitch in New York City custom made the uniforms for Bourke-White. While at the store
for a fitting on July 30, 1942, Bourke-White was overheard by an FBI informant to state
that she was going on a secret bombing mission. She said it loud enough for everyone
in the store to hear and this incident generated a report to FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover
in Washington.50
#119
Double Exposure: The Life of Margaret Bourke-White
Starring Farrah Fawcett and Frederic Forrest
Turner Home Entertainment, 1989
VHS Tape
According to the liner notes to Double Exposure, Bourke-White “discovers that her obsession for work is stronger than her passion for the man she loves.” Based largely
upon selected chapters of Vicki Goldberg’s biography of Bourke-White, much of this film
dramatizes the photographer’s steamy affair with Erskine Caldwell during their first trip
to the South in 1936 for You Have Seen Their Faces. Somewhat fictionalized (especially the dialogue), Double Exposure provides a reasonably accurate portrait of BourkeWhite’s personality, emphasizing her abilities to charm men who could get her access to
what she wanted to photograph and once she got there, to get the picture. Some of the
scenes, such as one where she rearranges people on a bread line for a famous photograph, while pure invention, are consistent with her character. Others, such as when
she borrows a camera to make a photograph of a man preaching to the pigeons in
Cleveland, are mostly accurate. While Goldberg’s book is a much more accurate
50 Teletype, Bourke-White FBI file, copy in Vicki Goldberg Papers, Arents Library, Special Collections Research Center, Syracuse University Library. Due to her left-wing associations, Bourke-White was under
FBI surveillance from no later than 1941, when she and her husband Erskine Caldwell were put on the
“A” list of most dangerous individuals who would be detained in the event of a national emergency, to
1947 when her name was removed from the Security Index after years of spying on her without finding
any evidence that she was a threat. See Robert E. Snyder, “Margaret Bourke-White and the Communist
Witch Hunt,” Journal of American Studies, 19 (1985), 1, 5-25.
source for information about Bourke-White, the
film is reasonably entertaining.
#120
Margaret Bourke-White. The 1930s.
Exhibition Catalog, Syracuse University Lubin
House Gallery, New York City
October 23-November 14, 1975
Bourke-White, who received an award from the
Newhouse School of Public Communications at
Syracuse University in 1966, began donating
her archives to Syracuse well before her death
in 1971, when she bequeathed to the university
an enormous collection of papers, photographic
files, and equipment. In 1975, Syracuse exhibited 45 original prints at the Lubin House: 22
from the Soviet Union and Eastern Europe,
1930-1938; and 23 from Appalachia and the
South, 1936. The portrait of Bourke-White in
the brochure is by Latvian-born Philippe Halsman, another recipient of the Newhouse Citation and, like Bourke-White, a LIFE magazine photographer.
#121
Life, Volume 1, Number 1, November 23, 1936
Cover story, “Dam at Fort Peck, Montana,” by Margaret Bourke-White
Reduced size dummy distributed in advance to sign
up advertisers
Life’s prospectus stated its
intentions: “To see life; to see
the world; to witness great
events; to watch the faces of
the poor and the gestures of
the proud; to see strange
things, machines, armies,
multitudes, shadows in the
jungle and on the moon; to
see man’s work -- his paintings, towers and discoveries;
to see things thousands of
miles away, things hidden
behind walls and within
rooms, things dangerous to come to; the women that men love and many children; to
see and take pleasure in seeing; to see and be amazed; to see and be instructed.”51
To produce the magazine, Henry Luce initially hired four photographers: Margaret
Bourke-White, Alfred Eisenstaedt; Thomas D. McAvoy, and Peter Stackpole. BourkeWhite’s work was featured as the cover and lead story of the first issue, which was an
immediate success. The editors had sent Bourke-White to the Northwest to get a story
on WPA projects and they pestered her by wire for night life pictures at the Fort Peck
dam under construction. Bourke-White delivered. She wrote back, “Think Peck night
life will be very good. Have several bar scenes, crowd watching bowling, billiards, taxi
dancers at work, two or three hard-won snaps of prostitutes, also exteriors, their establishments, also famous Ruby Smith with her boy friends, also typical shanty-town orchestra, also assorted drunks.” Bourke-White’s essay firmly established the major
theme of the magazine on “the lives of ordinary people, their work, their pleasure, their
follies, their anguish. Such stories touched virtually every reader.”52
#122
“Muncie, Ind. Is the Great U.S. ‘Middletown’ and This Is the First Picture Essay of What
It Looks Like”
Life, May 10, 1937
Photographs by Margaret Bourke-White
With twenty-five photographs, selected from a three-foot stack she brought to Life’s editors, Bourke-White told the story of a typical American town, which had been made famous in the 1920s by Middletown, a book by sociologists Robert and Helen Lynd. This
Life article was published on the occasion of a followup by the Lynds, Middletown in
Transition, which was released in April 1937. The economy of Muncie, the real Middletown, was largely based on the Ball Mason Jars factory and the essay is framed between a shot of William H. Ball getting a shave at a barbershop and a view of women
workers in the factory. In between are scenes from daily life in Muncie, including the
first publication of a frequently reproduced Bourke-White photograph, “In the Conversation Club.”
#123
“Jersey City’s Mayor Hague: Last of the Bosses, Not First of the Dictators”
Life, February 7, 1938
Photographs by Margaret Bourke-White
On one of the few occasions when her photographic assignments brought her to New
Jersey, Bourke-White and Life’s editors pulled no punches in this major essay on Jersey
City Mayor Frank Hague. The article details how Hague enriched himself at the expense of the taxpayers and used police intimidation to fight unions seeking to organize
51 Marianne Fulton, Eyes of Time: Photojournalism in America (Boston: NYGS/Little, Brown, 1988), 130.
52 Loudon Wainwright, “Life Begins: the Birth of the Late, Great Picture Magazine,” Atlantic, May 1978, 70.
workers. During Hague’s term in office, the tax rate in Jersey City tripled and city debt
increased 500%. Hague’s salary was only $6,520 per year, yet in seven years he acquired $400,000 in real estate, including the $125,000 summer home in Deal, New Jersey, depicted in one of Bourke-White’s twenty-two photos.
#124
“Senate and Senators”
Life, June 14, 1937
Photographs by Margaret-Bourke-White
In a major photo-essay on the U.S. Senate illustrated with thirty-five Bourke-White photographs, Life provided readers with insights into what the Senate does, some of its
leaders, and the Capitol Hill working environment. Both the layout skill and male prejudices of Life’s editors are evidenced by the two-page spread featuring Senate “ladies
man” Bob Reynolds with a sling-shot on the left and a group of women, senators’
daughters, on the right. In the lower right, Hattie Caraway, the first woman elected to
the Senate, is described as “mousy” in the caption because she never made a speech
from the floor and became known as “Silent Hattie.” She was a Senator from 1931 to
1945.
#125
“The Flood Leaves Its Victims on the Bread Line”
Life, February 15, 1937
Photographs by Margaret Bourke-White
Bourke-White’s seven photographs of the aftermath of the Louisville flood were atypical
for her photojournalistic work before World War II in that here she documented an event
rather than a group of people, an industry, or a place. But her lead photo of the bread
line for flood refugees transcended the disaster to become a frequently published, ironic
icon about the lower socioeconomic status of black Americans. As explained by Theodore Brown, although “it is not a scene of unemployment, or welfare, or the kind of
chronic poverty documented by FSA and by Bourke-White in the cotton South. . . the
photo has been used repeatedly to comment on inequality, poverty, and deprivation.”53
Bourke-White, who hitch-hiked on rowboats and a large raft to get to the city, recalled
this important coverage in her autobiography, where she stated, “this mammoth flood
was another bitter chapter in the bleak drama of waste of our American earth, which I
had watched unfolding and had tried to record since the drought. The juxtaposition of
blowing soil and rainfall, of eroded farmlands and inundated cities, made an ominous
continuing pattern.”54
#126
53 Theodore M. Brown, Margaret Bourke-White: Photojournalist (Ithaca, NY: Cornell University, 1972), 61-
62.
54 Portrait of Myself (NY: Simon and Schuster, 1963), 150.
“American Aces: Margaret Bourke-White”
U.S. Camera, #9, May 1940, pp. 43-48
Tom Maloney, who introduced U.S. Camera Annual in 1935, had such success with his
annuals that a few years later he started a monthly magazine, U.S. Camera, initially in
this large format.55 Bourke-White was honored in the ninth issue by a lengthy encomium. Maloney noted that while her politics were to the left of most business leaders,
they were enthusiastic about how her photographs could glamorize their industries. He
praised her for her courage and determination, noting that she is not well liked by most
male photographers because she was very competitive and didn’t do things the “feminine way.” “Strange indeed is the fate that has chosen a woman to be the most famous
on-the-spot reporter the world over. Never before has any man, let alone the skeptical
newspaper man, even thought of such a happening, to say nothing of countenancing it.
But Bourke-White goes gladly on her way. She still seems to eat it up.” The article is
well illustrated with a range of her work, including industrial photographs and selections
from her books with Erskine Caldwell, You Have Seen Their Faces and North of the Danube.
#127
The 100 Greatest Women of American
History
Margaret Bourke-White, Issue No. 17
Coin issued by the Franklin Mint, 1977
Accompanying card with text, 1978
Bourke-White’s canonization after her
death in 1971 is reflected by this commemorative coin. The image is based on
a 1943 photograph in which BourkeWhite is wearing her high-altitude flying
suit and is holding her camera and goggles. Behind her is a propeller from a B17 bomber. In her autobiography, Portrait of Myself, she wrote, “I was flattered
when this picture . . . became popular as a pin-up.” The text that accompanied the coin
mentioned that Bourke-White retired from Life magazine in 1969; while literally true,
55 Gary D. Saretzky, “U.S. Camera: A Thomas J. Maloney Chronology,” The Photo Review, 26:4 &
27:1(2004), 1-13, 45.
Parkinson’s disease pre
vented her from doing photography after the mid1950s. (For other versions
of the image, see items #114
and 129.)
#128
Ruth Ann Appelhof, Curator
Margaret Bourke-White: The
Humanitarian Vision
Exhibition Catalog, Joe and
Emily Lowe Art Gallery,
School of Art, College of Visual and Performing Arts,
Syracuse University, April 24
- September 9, 1983
Printed in an edition of 1,000
by Syracuse University
A short but excellent catalog documenting an exhibit of 110 Bourke-White photographs,
largely drawn from her bequest of 15,000 photographs to Syracuse University, supplemented by the archives of Time, Inc. The exhibition was arranged by geographic location, which was for the most part was also chronological: U.S.S.R; American South;
Czechoslovakia; Italy; Germany; India; South Africa; Korea; and North America. The
catalog includes an introductory essay by the curator, a biographical profile by Jonathan
Silverman, and essays by Syracuse University graduate students on seven individual
photographs. The cover illustration depicts
Gandhi with his grandniece and grand
daughter a few hours before his murder
on January 29, 1948.
#129
American Photographer, June 1986
Magazine Cover with Hand-Colored Photograph of Bourke-White with B-17 Bomber
This popular photograph of Bourke-White,
then about to embark on a bombing mission in North Africa, was published in Life
magazine in 1943 (see also exhibit items
#114 and 127). Since no other photographer has been credited for this image, it is
probably a self-portrait. Originally in blackand-white, American Photographer had
the image hand-colored. The accompanying 24-page article, “Margaret BourkeWhite: She Went Boldly Where No Man
Had Gone Before” by Vicki Goldberg,
adapted from Goldberg’s biography (also
published in 1986), and includes reproductions of many of Bourke-White’s most famous photographs. Writing about BourkeWhite’s twenty-year battle with Parkinson’s disease, Goldberg wrote, “Fighting illness,
she showed a courage that knew no bounds and an optimism that admitted no obstacles.” (For another version of the image, see items #114 and 127.)
#130
Vicki Goldberg
Margaret Bourke-White: A Biography
NY: Harper & Row, 1986
Vicki Goldberg did such a fine job on her comprehensive and balanced biography of
Margaret Bourke-White that no one else has attempted one in the twenty years since it
was published. Goldberg was able to conduct her research when many people who
knew Bourke-White well were still living and she interviewed, or received letters from,
about 300 individuals. In addition to her personal contacts, Goldberg used BourkeWhite’s extensive archives at Syracuse University, the Time-Life archives, and other
primary and secondary sources. It took Goldberg four years to write this impressive
book, now the standard reference for all those interested in Bourke-White’s life and
work.
#131
Margaret Bourke-White Photographs
Terrence Heath, Introduction
Toronto: Jane Corkin Gallery, 1988
The Jane Corkin Gallery has published a number of exquisitely designed and printed
photography catalogs, including this one from 1988 which reproduced images collected
by Ms. Corkin over a ten-year period. Each photograph in the catalog is reproduced in
its original tonality from a vintage print, most of them signed by the photographer and
some with notes by Bourke-White on the verso. Since so much of Bourke-White’s work
is known from reproductions, some of which were cropped by editors, Corkin’s catalog
is valuable as a reference for what Bourke-White wanted her own prints to look like.
Most of the thirty-one photographs were either previously unpublished or not published
since about the time they were made. The cover image, “Nursury in Auto Plant, Moscow, 1931” (Children at Table), silver gelatin print, was issued as a photogravure in
Bourke-White’s Photographs of U.S.S.R. (1934).
#132
Vicki Goldberg
Bourke-White
n.p.: United Technologies, 1988
This sumptuous book was the catalog for the major exhibition, “Bourke-White: A Retrospective,” that opened at the International Center of Photography in New York and traveled for two years. The exhibit included 120 items, most of them vintage photographic
prints. This catalog remains the best printed publication that surveys the whole of
Bourke-White’s career, from student photos made in 1922 to a color aerial view of
American farmlands in 1955. Most of the photographs before 1936 were printed in a
warm-tone or sepia color, as seen in these examples of her industrial work.
#133
Sean Callahan, ed.
The Photographs of Margaret Bourke-White
Theodore M. Brown, Introduction; Carl Mydans, Foreword
Greenwich, Connecticut: New York Graphic Society, 1972
Margaret Bourke-White helped a Life editor, Sean Callahan, on this first retrospective of
her photographs in book form, issued a year after her death. In the last two months of
her life, she was so immobilized (only her eyes could move freely) that Callahan had to
put his ear next to her mouth to catch the few words she managed to speak. It was a
difficult process for both of them but the result was worth the effort. The Photographs of
Margaret Bourke-White contains selections from all the major periods of her career, accompanied by a scholarly essay by Theodore Brown, Professor of Art History, Cornell
University, who also provided an excellent bibliography. Brown’s essay is accompanied
by many fine photographs of Bourke-White. Photographer Carl Mydans, BourkeWhite’s colleague at Life for more than thirty years, writing his heart-felt foreword on the
day she died, recalled, “She was a woman of indomitable courage, dedicated to capturing on film the events of our times, and she would not cringe from any scene or action
that she thought should be photographed and added to the record of men and the
world they live in.”
#134
Theodore M. Brown
Margaret Bourke-White: Photojournalist
Ithaca, NY: Cornell University, 1972
Margaret Bourke-White was delighted to learn that her alma mater, Cornell University,
planned the first large retrospective of her work--two hundred prints--but unfortunately,
she did not live to see the exhibition, on view at Andrew Dickson White Museum of Art,
March 15-April 23, 1972. Cornell Art History Professor Theodore M. Brown, the curator
and author of this accompanying book, limited the exhibition to published work and all
the photographs on view were new prints made from Bourke-White’s negatives. In
Margaret Bourke-White: Photojournalist, Brown provided an extensive illustrated text
about Bourke-White’s major books and photo essays, with insights about the context in
which she worked. His text is still instructive although he did not yet have access to the
Bourke-White archives that came to Syracuse after her death. The book also includes
an exhibition list and a lengthy selected bibliography of publications upto 1971 by or
about Bourke-White that, while now out of date and limited to the most important items,
is still the most extensive in print.
#135
Theodore M. Brown, Introduction
Margaret Bourke-White: The Cleveland Years, 1927-1930
[Exhibition Catalog], The New Gallery of Contemporary Art
Cleveland, Ohio, May 8 to June 5, 1976
This catalog of an exhibit of 73 items remains an excellent source for Bourke-White’s
early years as a professional photographer. It reproduces fifty-three photographs,
mostly of the estates of wealthy Clevelanders, Terminal Tower views, and industrial
scenes (Otis Steel, Lincoln Electric Company, and other heavy industry firms). Examples of her early published photographs, especially Tradewinds magazine covers, are
also featured. Theodore M. Brown, who curated a major Bourke-White retrospective in
1972, writes in his introduction that Machine Age photographers like Bourke-White “held
an almost millennial belief in salvation through technology” and that she “shared with
painters, architects, and critics her belief in the cultural value of industrial forms.” Building on the work of Paul Strand, Charles Sheeler, and Lewis Hine, Bourke-White, according to Brown, helped define the Machine Age aesthetic and explored “the dynamic nature of the man-tool partnership.”
#136
Genie Iverson
Margaret Bourke-White: News Photographer
Mankato, Minnesota: Creative Education, 1980
[ex-Grant School Library, Fairview Heights, Illinois]
One of several juvenile biographies56 of Bourke-White issued since her death, Iverson
provides an accurate, if abbreviated, account of the photographer’s life, illustrated with
some of her best known photographs. Rather surprising for a book intended for children, Iverson included Bourke-White’s disturbing image of the burned bodies of concentration camp prisoners alongside a barbed wire fence where they tried to escape after
their clothes were set on fire by their guards. Iverson wrote, “Margaret wanted to turn
away. But she didn’t. She stayed to photograph the Nazi concentration camp and its
victims.”
#137
Jonathan Silverman
For the World to See: The Life of Margaret Bourke-White
NY: Viking, 1983
Silverman’s For the World to See was the first major biography of Bourke-White after
her own autobiography of 1963 and Theodore Brown’s Margaret Bourke-White: Photojournalist (1972), which relied on secondary sources. While it was to some degree
overshadowed by Vicki Goldberg’s thoroughly researched and lengthy biography a few
years later, Silverman’s account still stands well on its own merits and was the first to
use Bourke-White’s correspondence and photographs in her archives at Syracuse University. It has about thirty pages on the photographer’s important Russian trips and
throughout the book, the quality of the reproductions, including some full-page, is excellent. Many of the photographs of Bourke-White in For the World to See are hard or impossible to find in print elsewhere, such as a shot of Bourke-White with Dwight D. Eisenhower at Rutgers University, when she received an honorary degree in 1948.
#138
Sean Callahan
Margaret Bourke-White, Photographer
Boston, et al.: Bulfinch/Little Brown, 1998
Twenty-six years after his first book on the photographer, The Photographs of Margaret
Bourke-White (1972),57 Sean Callahan wrote the prologue for this retrospective monograph in 1998. Although each book provides a chronologically arranged selection of
Bourke-White’s photographs, there are significant differences. The first had more than
200 photographs; though more comprehensive, many were small and reproduced two
or more to a page. The result was a somewhat cluttered layout that underscored
Bourke-White’s career as a photojournalist and commercial photographer. The second
56 Others include Iris Noble, Cameras and Courage: Margaret Bourke-White (NY: Julian Messner, 1973);
Beatrice Siegel, An Eye on the World: Margaret Bourke-White, Photographer (NY & London: Frederick
Warne, 1980); Carolyn Daffron, Margaret Bourke-White (NY, et al: Chelsea House, 1988); Eleanor H.
Ayer, Photographing the World: Margaret Bourke-White (NY, et al.: Dillon Press, 1992); and Emily Keller,
Margaret Bourke-White: A Photographer’s Life (Minneapolis: Lerner Publications, 1996).
57 See exhibit item 133.
was more selective--138 illustrations--and most were reproduced one to a page, leaving
the reader with a stronger impression of Bourke-White’s achievement as an artist. As
regards context, the first book published a number of fine photographs of the photographer and included much more text: a biographical essay, introductions to the different
phases in Bourke-White’s career, and Theodore M. Brown’s useful bibliography of
books and articles by and about Bourke-White.58 By comparison, the 1998 work is almost exclusively pictures and doesn’t mention that in addition to her photographic work,
Bourke-White wrote six lengthy books and about two dozen significant magazine articles. These differences between the two books are reflective of the enhanced appreciation of photography as an art medium between 1972 and 1998.
#139
Eyes on Russia: From Caucusus to Moscow
Motion Picture Produced, Directed, and Narrated by Margaret Bourke-White
RKO Pictures, Van Beuren Productions
1934
Margaret Bourke-White returned from her third trip to
Russia in 1932 with 20,000
feet of silent movie film but,
due to her inexperience,
much of it was unusable.
After giving up on two
scripts, she shelved the project and unsuccessfully tried
to sell it to Hollywood. The
U.S. recognition of the
U.S.S.R. on November
16,1933, revived interest and
RKO bought a tenth of her
footage for a third of her cost
to make it. Two short travelogues in 1934 were the result: Eyes on Russia and Red Republic, the former narrated
by Bourke-White herself.59
Bourke-White seems to have been naively unaware that, during the years of her visits to
Russia in 1930,1931, and 1932, repressive Soviet policies resulted in the deaths of
many thousands of people, especially the kulaks (better off peasants). Although she
includes an outdoor exhibit showing how the kulaks were being gradually eliminated
(without stating how), the film Eyes on Russia conveys the overall impression that Soviet citizens are enthusiastically building a new, more progressive society. “The real rul58 Later published in Brown’s own book; see exhibit item 134.
59 Vicki Goldberg, Margaret Bourke-White: A Biography (NY: Harper & Row, 1986), 134-135.
ers of the Soviet state are the people,” she states, who have shifted their allegiance
from religion to nation-building.
Eyes on Russia begins in a small village in the Soviet state of Georgia, where Stalin
was born. Many of his relatives dressed in regional costumes appear in the film, of
whom the greatest attention is given to the oldest member of the family, his great-aunt
who lives underground in a room with a dirt floor. (Bourke-White also did a superb portrait of her that she included in her U.S.S.R. portfolio [see items 12 to 20].) The scene
then shifts to Moscow, where Bourke-White narrates views of the Kremlin, ballet dancers, religious institutions, and child-rearing practices, including a ban on spanking. Interspersed in the film are shots of Bourke-White vigorously cranking her hand-powered
movie camera.
Image Color:Black & White
Region of Origin:United States
Subject:SAILMAKING
Type:Photograph
Year of Production:1940
Width (Inches):APPROX. 3 1/4 X 4 1/4
Photographer:MARGARET BOURKE-WHITE
Height (Inches):APPROX. 3 1/4 X 4 1/4
Style:Photojournalism
Theme:Americana
Features:8 PHOTOS STAMPED ON BACK BY MARGARET BOURKE-WHITE
Time Period Manufactured:1925-1949
Production Technique:PHOTOS AND NEGATIVES
Country/Region of Manufacture:United States
Color Type:Black & White
PicClick Insights - Margaret Bourke-White Negatives 1940'S Rare Unique Famous Photographer Rare PicClick Exclusive
Popularity - 0 watchers, 0.0 new watchers per day, 7 days for sale on eBay. 0 sold, 1 available.
Popularity - Margaret Bourke-White Negatives 1940'S Rare Unique Famous Photographer Rare
0 watchers, 0.0 new watchers per day, 7 days for sale on eBay. 0 sold, 1 available.
Best Price -
Price - Margaret Bourke-White Negatives 1940'S Rare Unique Famous Photographer Rare
Seller - 808+ items sold. 0% negative feedback. Great seller with very good positive feedback and over 50 ratings.
Seller - Margaret Bourke-White Negatives 1940'S Rare Unique Famous Photographer Rare
808+ items sold. 0% negative feedback. Great seller with very good positive feedback and over 50 ratings.