Walker Evans is one of the leading photographers in the history of American documentary photography. Born in St. Louis, Evans studied at Williams College and the Sorbonne in Paris. He returned to the United States in 1928, and five years later, though self-taught in photography, was the subject of a solo exhibition at the Museum of Modern Art, and had his photographs published in Hart Crane's The Bridge (1930) and in Lincoln Kirstein's Hound & Horn (1931). Evans worked for the Farm Security Administration from 1935 to 1937, during which time he made many of the photographs for Walker Evans: American Photographs, an exhibition and publication organized by the Museum of Modern Art in 1938. In 1936 he took a leave from the FSA in order to document the living conditions of Alabama sharecropper families as part of a collaborative project with writer James Agee. The results were published in 1941 as Let Us Now Praise Famous Men, with text by Agee and photographs by Evans. Another of Evans's many photographic series was Many Are Called, comprised of images taken in the New York City subway system using a hidden camera between 1938 and 1945. Evans received three Guggenheim Fellowships and was a member of the National Institute of Arts and Letters. Between 1943 and 1965, he worked as a staff photographer for Time and Fortune. After retiring from professional photography in 1965, he taught graphic arts at Yale.
Walker Evans's photographs were as prototypes both for the American documentary movement of the 1930s and for street photographers of the 1940s and 50s. His precisely composed, intricately detailed, spare photographs insisted on their subject matter, and his impartial acceptance of his subjects made his work seem true and aesthetically pure--qualities that have been the goal of documentary photography ever since. Later in his career he often photographed with the new Polaroid camera, which he used to depict street graffiti and various detritus of the contemporary world.

Chronology

1903 - Born on November 3 in St. Louis, MO
1922 - Graduated from Phillips Academy, Andover, MA; attended Williams College, Williamstown, MA
1941 - Guggenheim Fellowship
1959 - Guggenheim Fellowship
1968 - Received an honorary degree from Williams College; became a Fellow, American Academy of Arts and Letters
1973 - Received Grant from Mark Rothko Foundation.
1975 - Died on April 10 in New Haven, CT

Selected Solo Exhibitions

2005 - "Walker Evans: African Art," Gallery Luisotti. Santa Monica, California
1966 - Szarkowski, John, curator. "Walker Evans: Subway Photographs," The Museum of Modern Art. New York
1967 - "Walker Evans," Robert Schoelkopf Gallery. New York, New York
1964 - Edwards, Hugh, curator. "Walker Evans," The Art Institute of Chicago. Chicago, Illinois
1962 - "Walker Evans: American Photographs," The Museum of Modern Art. New York, New York
1948 - "Walker Evans Retrospective," The Art Institute of Chicago. Chicago, Illinois
1938 - "Walker Evans: American Photographs," Museum of Modern Art. New York, New York
1935 - "African Negro Art: A Corpus of Photographs by Walker Evans," The Museum of Modern Art. New York, New York
1933 - "Walker Evans: Photographs of Nineteenth-Century Houses," The Museum of Modern Art. New York, New York

Collections

Addison Gallery of American Art, Andover, Massachusetts
Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois
George Eastman Museum, Rochester, New York
J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles, California
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York City
Museum of Modern Art, New York City
Whitney Museum of American Art, New York City
National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne, Australia
International Photography Hall of Fame, St. Louis, Missouri

Books from Walker EVANS

DOUBLE ELEPHANT

Manuel ÁLVAREZ BRAVO, Walker EVANS, Lee FRIEDLANDER, Garry WINOGRAND

Out of Stock