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A photograph of Mohandas Gandhi at his spinning wheel, taken by Margaret Bourke-White, ca. 1946. Burt Finger appraised the print at the 2018 ROADSHOW in San Diego, California, for $40,000 to $50,000.
Margaret Bourke-White lived the life any photographer would want. Throughout her career, she captured images of some of the most critical moments in history, from World War II and the Korean War ...
"Margaret Bourke-White: The Photography of Design, 1927-1936" at the Phillips Collection, 1600 21st St. NW, surveys, for the first time, the crisply calculated images that the pho ...
Exhibition sticker "#108" on the mount verso, 13 x 18.25 in. (33 x 46.4 cm). Margaret Bourke-White (American, June 14, 1904–August 27, 1971) was a documentary photographer and a photojournalist.
Margaret Bourke-White was a trailblazing documentary photographer — documenting the liberation of Buchenwald concentration camp at the end of World War II and becoming the first foreigner to … ...
A 1937 photograph by Margaret Bourke-White titled "At the time of the Louisville Flood," shows residents waiting in line for flood relief standing in front of a mural that reads "World's Highest ...
In the male-dominated world of early twentieth century photojournalism, American photographer Margaret Bourke- White (1904-1971) was a pioneer. In her extensive and diverse career, she photographed ...
Margaret Bourke-White was a world-famous photographer, journalist and social activist. After the University of Michigan printed, as an artistic collection, the photos she took as the yearbook ...
Margaret Bourke-White: Margaret Bourke-White (June 14, 1904, to Aug 27, 1971) was a photojournalist who was named one of the most prominent women in 1936. She spent her childhood in Bound Brook.
Vicki Goldberg, an influential photography critic and the author of a lauded 1986 biography of Margaret Bourke-White, the pioneering and colorful Life magazine photographer, died on May 29 in ...