ART PHOTOGRAPHERS
Here there are two women during the great depression. Their clothes are dirty, worn, torn, and cheap. Their hair isn't too neat, they seem to be the same children in both photographs. Same haircuts, clothing, height, skin tone, and position. They seem to be pensive maybe they're thinking about money, food, or where they are going to get something for their families to eat. Both of them are surrounded by, I believe, their children.
Dorothea LanGE
In both of these photographs there is a landscape view. The setting seems to be the same place. There is only one person in the photograph, both are male. One is a pioneer and the other a militia man. There's about 1/3 of skyline which means he used the technique horizon line. The pioneer man seems to just fit in to the background maybe because he's lived there for quite a while and he also seems dirty. He's probably the early example of a homeless man.The other man doesn't fit in he looks like he's engaged in battle but there's no one around him.
Timothy O'Sullivan
Here I have two different but equally alike photographs. They both contain "colored" people with "white" people. The one with the bus has an imaginary line dividing the bus. It divides the white from colored. The colored man has a longing look as if he's trying to tell his story from his eyes. The colored woman holding the baby has a half-smile on, but the baby she's holding has an earnest look. Both of these pictures have a sense of thought or ponder to them. Maybe they just have a couple of things they'd like to change in society.
Robert Frank
Diane shows us inner beauty in a wonderful and unique way. As you can see in the first picture there are ,I believe, 2 sisters all dressed up embracing arms because their inner beauty can portray outer beauty with just their big beautiful smiles this is more valuable then the outer appearance. The second picture shows us some kids with bags over their heads and rags over their normal clothing. Her message she probably wants to portray are inner beauty is better than just any kind of appearance.
Diane Arbus
Here I see a small girl maybe in a factory of clothes, or silk, or any kind of material to make clothing. She is looking out the window , her face expression shows sadness and clothing and shoes are old, worn out to the point where she might only be walking on her own skin. The small boy , this is my favorite picture. His eyes are pure, his face is so smooth that hes probably only 3 or 2 years old. His sweater is too big for him, his hair is so messy and tangled. His face is dirty, it also seems like the sweater is tearing apart and maybe his mom tried fixing it with pins. Both of these pictures tie together to form a message: Children aren't slaves or sources to be worked like they aren't human beings. This picture alone makes me want to cry.