Eyes on Russia (1)

Margaret Bourke-White— portrait from the rear cover of Eyes on Russia (1931)

Things are happening in Russia, and happening with staggering speed. I could not afford to miss any of it. I wanted to make pictures of this astonishing development, because, whatever the outcome, whether success or failure, the plan is so gigantic, so unprecedented in all history, that I felt these photographic records might have some historical value. I saw the five-year plan as a great scenic drama being unrolled before the eyes of the world.

rear cover blurb

Margaret Bourke-White was 27 when she went to Russia to photograph. Eyes on Russia features forty photographs, an introduction by Maurice Hindu, and a substantial text by Bourke-White. I will post more as I get the chance to scan them. But for starters, these are the final five images in the book.

Continue reading “Eyes on Russia (1)”

Bourke-White Trivia

Margaret Bourke-White— One of her earliest photographs from 1922

Margaret Bourke-White

Reading Vicki Goldberg’s biography of Bourke-White has been fun. It has answered a lot of trivia questions that don’t really have anything to do with my project, but that are fun nonetheless.

Her hyphenated name is not the result of a marriage. It was a choice on her part to include her mother’s name. Minnie Bourke was the “daughter of a drunken Irish ship’s carpenter and an impoverished English cook” (5). Her father, Joseph White (originally Weiss) was a lapsed Jew who wanted to do his part in “dissipating the race and the idea it stands for satisfied that if there is any special virtue in the race it will find a better field if merged into the American spirit, the American virtue, of the regenerating American type” (5). Her father was a follower of Felix Adler’s teachings on ethical culture.

Interestingly, Joseph White felt that sexual activity without the purpose of procreation was “a criminal act” (6). Her mother kept a diary which included a record of each time they had sex. They had three children, and took advantage of the safe time of pregnancy to have sex a bit more often.

Her name change was probably mostly a business decision. Margaret White was just too plain for a woman who wanted to be famous. She adopted the dual name when she began her professional career in 1927. I found it interesting that she was so fashion conscious that she had her camera dark cloths cut from the same fabric as her dresses. She did not share her father’s attitude about sex. While working for Life, dirty lingerie was often found stuffed in her camera bags, and she startled a technician by leaving her diaphragm in a camera bag. His question was: “What sort of lens-cap is this?”

However, it was really interesting to find that her father held twenty patents on printing press technology, and was the first to develop a Braille printing press in America. Bourke-White’s first book Eyes on Russia is dedicated to him:

In Memory of My Father,
Who Invented Machines
Instead of Photographing Them

I have started a new category to consolidate the Bourke-White posts— many more are sure to follow.