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The Monday Morning Memo


“Walker Evans invented the images of essential America

that we have long since accepted as fact, and his work has influenced not only modern photography but also literature, film and visual arts in other mediums. The original edition of American Photographs was a carefully prepared letterpress production, published by The Museum of Modern Art in 1938 to accompany an exhibition of photographs by Evans that captured scenes of America in the early 1930s. As noted on the jacket of the first edition, Evans, “photographing in New England or Louisiana, watching a Cuban political funeral or a Mississippi flood, working cautiously so as to disturb nothing in the normal atmosphere of the average place, can be considered a kind of disembodied, burrowing eye, a conspirator against time and its hammers.”
– description of book, Amazon.com

This seventy-fifth anniversary edition of American Photographs, made with new reproductions, recreates the original 1938 edition as closely as possible to make the landmark publication available for a new generation. Walker Evans (1903-1975) took up photography upon his return to New York in 1927, following a year in Paris when his aspiration to become a writer withered in the shadow of Fitzgerald, Hemingway and Joyce.

In 1935, Evans was commissioned by the Farm Security Administration to photograph the effects of the Great Depression in the Southeast. Evans joined the staff of Time magazine in 1945 and shortly thereafter became an editor at Fortune, where he stayed for the next two decades. In 1964, he became a professor at the Yale University School of Art, where he taught until his death in 1975.
 

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Random Quote:

“I usually start with two or three completely unrelated big ideas (issues that have been rattling around in my brainpan for many months) and maybe a character or two who have no ostensible connections to each other or to any of the big ideas. The challenge, then, is to bring these disparate themes and characters together so smoothly and seamlessly that it would appear that from the very beginning they were cohesive elements in a preconceived whole. I never force them to merge, understand, but patiently coax or excite them into revealing their innate hidden connections as they collide within the labyrinth of my gradually developing plot. Everything in the universe is connected, of course: it’s a matter of using imagination and research to discover the links and using language to expand and enliven them.”

- Tom Robbins, in an interview with François Happe (March, 2009)

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