Arkansas Family, Seven Months in California, Feb. 1936 (1936) by Dorothea Lange

The artwork titled “Arkansas Family, Seven Months in California, Feb. 1936” was created by Dorothea Lange in the year 1936. This piece is a black and white photograph that falls under the genre of Social Realism. It captures the essence of a family who had relocated from Arkansas to California, reflecting the broader socio-economic themes prevalent during the Great Depression.

In the artwork, a family is depicted in an austere landscape, likely their temporary abode in California after leaving Arkansas. In the foreground, various garments and beddings are hung on a makeshift clothesline, suggesting the transitory and challenging conditions the family endures. To the right, a man is engaged in the labor of managing a stack of wood, possibly for a fire, while two women and a child stand nearby, engaged in daily activities with a backdrop of rolling hills under an overcast sky. The photograph exudes a sense of perseverance and resilience amidst adversity, characteristic of Lange’s evocative documentation of migrant families and their plights during the era.

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