The Metropolitan Museum of Art
This major retrospective of the work of American photographer Walker
Evans (1903-1975). Displays some 175 vintage prints from public and
private collections throughout the United States and Canada, and draws
on newly available material from the photographer's archive, which was
acquired by the Metropolitan Museum in 1994. The photographs span the
artist's long and productive career, focusing not only on the classic
pictorial documents of America during the Depression, but also on
little-known experimental images from the 1920s, photo-essays for
Fortune magazine from the 1940s and 1950s, and SX-70 Polaroid color
prints from the 1970s. The exhibition is accompanied by two
publications: a monographic treatment of Evans's work; and an anthology
of materials that makes available for the first time the artist's early
short stories, important letters, and critical essays now housed in the
Walker Evans Archive.
The exhibition is made possible by Prudential Securities. The
conservation of the Walker Evans Archive has been made possible through
the generous support of the William Randolph Hearst Foundation as part
of the Save America's Treasures program. Additional conservation
support has been provided by The Horace W. Goldsmith Foundation, the
National Endowment for the Humanities, the Henry Nias Foundation, the
Institute of Museum and Library Services, and The Andrew W. Mellon
Foundation. The exhibition catalogue is made possible by The Andrew W.
Mellon Foundation.
The Metropolitan Museum of Art
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New York, New York 10028-0198
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