Girl at Gee's Bend

Getty Museum

Girl at Gee's Bend

Creator

Arthur Rothstein

American Photographer · 1915–1985

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> Because powerful images are fixed in the mind more readily than words, the photographer needs no interpreter. A photograph means the same thing all over the world and no translator is required. Photography is truly a universal language, transcending all boundaries of race, politics and nationality. > > --Arthur Rothstein Born in New York to immigrant parents, Arthur Rothstein began to photograph

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Date
1937
Medium
Gelatin silver print
Culture
American
Department
Photographs
Institution
Getty Museum

>You see the girl--that's effect one. You see the ad [the blond woman]--that's effect two. But the third effect is when you see both images together and recognize the irony. Arthur Rothstein understood and believed in the power of photography to make social commentary. Working for the United States government, Rothstein photographed Artelia Bendolph in Alabama, to illustrate the effects of the Bankhead-Jones Farm Tenancy Act of 1937. The serious, weighted expression on the child's face poignantly illustrates her disenfranchised social and economic position. The framing of the crude cabin window and the newspaper insulation with its unattainable food advertisements reinforce her isolation from the recovering American economy.

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