by Gerald Boerner
“It was one of the worst cases I’ve ever known in my experience of the wealthy son who couldn’t get away from it.”
— Roy Stryker
“Roy Stryker, don’t you dare start talking about out of focus pictures because you’ve got plenty of them in here.”
— Sheldon Dick
“The group of photographs adds little to the volume [Documentary of Mexico].”
— Roy Stryker
“It is terribly important that you in some way try to show the town against this background of waste piles and coal tipples. In other words, it is a coal town and your pictures must tell it.”
— Roy Stryker
“I went through [his albums of prints] twice, the pictures were lousy, just plain lousy … It didn’t work out. He tried two or three other things for us and it didn’t work.”
— Roy Stryker
“He shot himself, or he shot his wife, and one of the kids and himself. … He never had a chance to be himself. It was one of the worst cases I’ve ever known in my experience of the wealthy son who couldn’t get away from it.”
— Colleen McDannell
“His first job was to go up to Shenandoah. You may remember the job that Harper’s did on the several states of the United States and one of them was at Shenandoah, it was a hard coal area that had lost its coal. It was a fantastic little town and you could practically set your cameras up and triggered them and have them on rotate, and gotten pictures.”
— Roy Stryker
Note:
The quotes included in this posting were taken from the public quotation site, PhotoQuotes.com, which does not indicate that they are covered by any special copyright restrictions. Likewise, the images included in this posting were obtained under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License from the Wikipedia.com web site. This blog makes every attempt to comply with the legal rights of copyright holders.This posting is intended for the educational use of photographers and photography students and complies with the “educational fair use” provisions of copyright law. For readers who might wish to reuse some of these images should check out their compliance with copyright limitations that might apply to that use.
GLB
Sheldon Dick (1906–1950)
Sheldon Dick was an American publisher, literary agent, photographer, and filmmaker. He was a member of a wealthy and well-connected industrialist family, and was able to support himself while funding a series of literary and artistic endeavors. He published a book by poet Edgar Lee Masters, and made a documentary about mining that has been of interest to scholars. Dick is best known for the photographs he took on behalf of the Farm Security Administration during the Great Depression, and for the violent circumstances of his death.
Early life
Sheldon Dick was the son of Albert Blake Dick, a wealthy manufacturer of mimeograph machines in Chicago, and Mary Henrietta Dick. He married Dorothy Michelson, the 21-year-old daughter of scientist Albert Abraham Michelson, in 1927, shortly before Dick began studies at Corpus Christi College at Cambridge University. On returning to the United States, the couple lived in New York; their daughter, also named Dorothy, was born shortly thereafter.
In January and February
of 1937, Dick photographed
the Flint Sit-Down Strike for
the FSA. Many of his
photographs, like this one, are
of ordinary life during the strike.
Dick was active as a publisher at the time, working with another minor publisher, C. Louis Rubsamen. Only one volume bore his name as an imprint: a book of poems, The Serpent in the Wilderness, by Edgar Lee Masters, published in a fine-press limited edition in 1933. It was large (8½ by 12 inches) and made with obvious attention to detail, but with some mistakes, the worst of which was the accidental binding of manuscript pages into some copies; the reception was mixed. A positive review in The New York Times describes the physical book as "an attractive piece of work." The book sold slowly, despite a brief spike caused by the Times review, and made no profit, and a trade edition, which Dick and Masters had discussed, never materialized, partly because Dick had indicated in promotional material that there would not be one. Masters biographer Herbert K. Russell blames the book’s failure in part on Dick’s "poor judgment."
In July of 1938, Dick was in
Baltimore, taking photographs
of poor black and white
neighborhoods.
Dick married Mary Lee Burgess in 1933; she would later assist in his documentary work. His first recorded activity as a photographer took place around this time, shortly after his failure in publishing; he took photographs for a book on Mexico, published in 1935. The book was not well-received, however, and a review states that "The group of photographs adds little to the volume.”
This photograph of a homemade
tractor came from an August,
1938 trip to FSA client farmers
in Berks County, Pennsylvania.
With the FSA
Roy Stryker, head of the Information Division of the Farm Security Administration, collected a large group of photographers in the mid-1930s, including well-known artists like Walker Evans and many who were far less experienced, with the goal of documenting the times and the nation itself. In a 1965 interview, Stryker remembers that Dick originally was introduced to him through his contacts in the publishing world:
Henry Lester was a partner of Willard Morgan in the early days of their book publishing. And Sheldon Dick was a rich man’s son and he had a desire to do things, and I went up one time and they wanted to know if I would take Sheldon down to Washington on more or less a dollar a year, he would like to work, and I agreed to it.
One of Dick’s FSA photographs:
"Man Sleeping in a Fish Market,
Baltimore, Maryland," July 1938.
Dick’s wealth allowed him to provide his own funding, and gave him an independence the other photographers lacked. Stryker attempted to provide some guidance for the kind of photographs he was looking for, writing to Dick, "It is terribly important that you in some way try to show the town against this background of waste piles and coal tipples. In other words, it is a coal town and your pictures must tell it." Instead, many of Dick’s photographs are interiors, bars, and images of ordinary life. Critic Collen McDannel has pointed out that, particularly in regard to his treatment of religion, Dick’s work is different from most of the FSA file. Because of his composition of images of the poor surrounded by religious items and by ordinary household objects (objects not in themselves indicating poverty), Dick’s photographs are less politically clear than those of the other FSA photographers. His composition "transgresses common assumptions about men and religion and therefore appears to be less ‘documentary.’ "
That September, Dick took photographs
of damage from the New England
Hurricane of 1938 in Connecticut
(where this photograph of a
destroyed tobacco barn was
taken) and Massachusetts.
Dick worked relatively briefly for the FSA, in 1937 and 1938. He supported himself, submitting his photographs for payment of one dollar a year, but Stryker soon terminated his work anyway. In the 1965 interview, Stryker says, "I went through [his albums of prints] twice, the pictures were lousy, just plain lousy [. . .] It didn’t work out. He tried two or three other things for us and it didn’t work." During the period of his association, however, he travelled as widely and submitted as many photographs as the full time employees. Because Dick was not a full-time employee of the FSA, his travels are not well documented, but they can be inferred from the photographs he took. Some of the greatest concentrations of surviving images come from a few documentable trips over the two years of Dick’s work.
A number of images exist of the
Lancaster County, Pennsylvania area,
dated "1938?." The description filed
with this photograph includes
the note, "Notice the Amish boy
on the extreme left."
Men and Dust
One of Dick’s last assignments for Stryker was a trip to the mining towns surrounding Joplin, Missouri (known as the "tri-state area"). He decided to return to the area to make a documentary film about the effects of silicosis on the region, but did not receive approval for the project from the FSA. Dick evidently decided to fund and direct the film himself.
Dick’s images of Pennsylvania
mining towns, including this one
of a bar in Gilberton (also dated
"1938?"), focus on everyday
activities, household living and
items, and the mines themselves.
The result was a 16½-minute documentary film, narrated by the actor Will Geer, and consisting of both moving images and Dick’s photographs of the region and its people. The film, titled Men and Dust, released in conjunction with the Association of Documentary Film Producers in New York; Lee Dick, his wife, is credited as producer under the aegis of Dial Films. The score, by Fred Stewart (an actor), and narration included both informational and more suggestive narration; a comment by Paul Bowles on the film’s use of sound provides a useful description:
One does not remember any music as such, but rather a constant sound of human voices, talking, singing, or humming. The idea of the possibility of human ascendancy over the deplorable conditions shown is thus made more vivid.
Dick’s film proved to be his most influential effort; it is cited in modern scholarship on the region’s history, and his photographs of the miners and their families were displayed in a New York gallery to positive reviews. Film scholar William Alexander, documenting films of the American left wing, has said that Men and Dust is "affecting and powerful" through its "mind-jogging changes of stance."
Dick and Stewart collaborated on another film, Day after Day, released later in 1940. The film, written and photographed by Dick and with narration by Storrs Haynes, depicts the efforts of a community nursing service operated by the Henry Street Settlement in New York.
Background and biographical information is from Wikipedia articles on:
Sheldon Dick can be found at…
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sheldon_Dick
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