DOCUMERICA

Heavy smog in Los Angeles, 1973.

DOCUMERICA was a program sponsored by the United States Environmental Protection Agency to "photographically document subjects of environmental concern" in the USA from about 1972 to 1977.

Women smoking pot, Texas, 1973.
Gas shortage due to oil crisis, Portland, OR, 1973.

The images were made by approximately 70 well-known photographers contracted by the EPA for this project. Photographers included Boyd Norton, Danny Lyon, Gene Daniels, Marc St. Gil, Anne LaBastille, Bill Strode, Charles O'Rear, Jack Corn, Tomas Sennett, Erik Calonius, Yoichi Okamoto, Ken Hayman, and John H. White.

Some of the subjects photographed are urban cityscapes, everyday life in small towns, scenes of natural beauty including beaches and mountains, urban areas including junk yards, pollution treatment, highways, air quality and heavy industry; Amtrak; air and water pollution; waterfronts; mining and logging scenes; farms; and people, including workers in industry, environmental protection, farming, and mining. Among the areas included are National Parks and Forests, environmentally sensitive areas that were under development or considered for government protection, the planned route of the Alaska Pipeline, Hawaii and Washington, D.C.. The project even included some photographs of Canada, Yugoslavia and Austria[1]

Details

Like the photographers of the Federal photographic project of the Farm Security Administration during the Great Depression, some of the DOCUMERICA photographers interpreted their mission rather broadly, and sometimes artistically. Many of the photographs preserve a distinct visual record of time and place.

Digital scans of over 15,000 of the original 35 mm color slides and black and white negatives and prints are available through the National Archives and Records Administration's Archival Research Catalog.[2]

The color of many of the original negatives has degraded. NO: The problem is that the National Archives Administration is using copies of some of the the originals, which were made inexpensively in the 1970s, not the originals, which should not have degraded in quality. ref: Erik Calonius, one of the original photographers and assistant to Documerica director Gifford Hampshire.

The book Searching for the Seventies: The DOCUMERICA Photography Project (D Giles, 2013), edited by Bruce I. Bustard, features 100 images from the project.

In 2013 the string quartet ETHEL created a multimedia show called ETHEL's Documerica which incorporated images from the DOCUMERICA archives.[3] The show premiered at the Brooklyn Academy of Music and is currently on a national tour managed by Baylin Artists Management. [4][5]

Gallery

References

  1. "EAP decommission - Adapt". Narademo.umiacs.umd.edu. 2012-02-15. Retrieved 2013-12-02.
  2. In "Scope & Contents" page for series DOCUMERICA: The Environmental Protection Agency's Program to Photographically Document Subjects of Environmental Concern, compiled 1972 - 1977, National Archives Identifier 542493 / Local Identifier 412-DA; Series from Record Group 412: Records of the Environmental Protection Agency, 1944 - 2000. Record of holdings available from the National Archives Catalog of the National Archives and Records Administration under the National Archives Identifier 542493. Accessed February 18, 2009.
  3. "New Music Bonds With Vintage Images". The New York Times. 5 October 2013.
  4. "Documerica".
  5. "Baylin Artists Management - Baylin Artists Management".

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to DOCUMERICA.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/1/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.