“If I could tell the story in words, I wouldn’t need to lug around a camera.”
–Lewis Hine
Hine’s oft-quoted and punchy one-liner underscores a central belief in the history of photography: only a photograph is capable of telling a certain kind of story. When words fail, photographers have shouldered the burden of both heavy equipment and the role of social historian in pursuit of these visual narratives, which can range from bleak to humorous tales of moral or economic circumstances. NOMA has long had a deep collection of early social documentary work but recently the Museum acquired four significant groups of photographs by later photographers: Milton Rogovin, Leon Levinstein, Frank Paulin, and Debbie Fleming Caffery. Each of these photographers, although stylistically very different, picked up the camera in search of artful documents of daily life. Their photographs, alternately uplifting and touching or deeply serious, are presented here alongside select works by the earlier photographers that inspired them.
Lower West Side, Buffalo
Circa 1980
Milton Rogovin
Photography
St. Patrick’s Day
Circa 1962
Leon Levinstein
Photography
Man with Cigar
1952
Frank Paulin
Photography
Harry
1985
Debbie Fleming Caffery
Photography
One of the Homeless Wandering Boys
1933
Dorothea Lange
Photography