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Mark Durden is an artist, writer and lecturer. He has written extensively on photography and contemporary art for a number of journals, including Creative Camera, Portfolio and Art Monthly. Together with Craig Richardson he curated the exhibition `Face On' and also co-edited the accompanying book Face On: Photography as Social Exchange (2000). He is currently Senior Lecturer in History and Theory of Photography at the University of Derby.
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Dorothea Lange (1895-1965) was a highly acclaimed social realist photographer who recorded one of the most important historical periods in American social history. Her career began in 1916 taking portraits in a studio. During the Depression she changed her career path and started to take pictures of people on the streets of San Francisco. In 1935, she was hired by the Farm Security Administration (FSA) to formally document the Depression, where she established her photojournalistic talent for simultaneously emphasizing the laborer's struggle between dignity and poverty. She also photographed other historic events in America such as Japanese Internment Camps and the 1945 United Nations Conference.
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