- Willard Van Dyke
Willard Van Dyke (
5 December 1906 -23 January 1986 ) was an Americanfilmmaker andphotographer who believed that photography could have a major influence on the world.Willard Van Dyke apprenticed with
Edward Weston in 1928 and co-founded theGroup f/64 in 1932 withImogen Cunningham ,Ansel Adams , and Weston. The group believed in sharp-focus, "straight photography."In 1935, Van Dyke moved to
New York City and began making documentary films with the belief that films "could change the world." His name soon became synonymous with social documentary in the U.S. His images of cottonfields, steelmills and industrial towns, and his portraits of unemployed factory workers and their families, provide an invaluable chronicle of those years and have become timeless examples of cinematic art. He was a cinematographer onPare Lorentz 's "The River" (1938)."The City", his 1938 collaboration with
Ralph Steiner , ran for two years at the1939 New York World's Fair . DuringWorld War II , he produced propaganda movies for the government. In 1948, Van Dyke made thedocumentary film "The Photographer" about Edward Weston.He successfully fought attempts to
blacklist him during the 1950s. Van Dyke was director of the Department of Film at theMuseum of Modern Art from 1965 to 1974.External links
*imdb name|0886757|Willard Van Dyke
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