The Bitter Years

The Bitter Years

The Bitter Years at the Waassertuerm gallery

The Bitter Years is the last exhibition famous photographer Edward Steichen curated as the Director of the Photography Department of the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) in New York.

It is a testimony to documentary photography, featuring over 200 images from one of the largest collective projects in the history of photography: the documentation of rural America during the Great Depression by the Farm Security Administration (FSA).

Fifty years after its opening at MoMA, The Bitter Years has now found a permanent home in Dudelange, Luxembourg, on the site of a former steel mill, in the stunning Waassertuerm gallery, an old water tower, next to the Centre national de l'audiovisuel (CNA).

Wishing to create a lively platform for discussion and creation around the heritage collection, the CNA combines Steichen's selection of FSA images with events and temporary photographic exhibitions organized at Pomhouse, the former pumping station adjacent to the water tower. Waassertuerm + Pomhouse thus form a space of dialogue bewteen the historic collection and contemporary image making.

  • Lucille Burroughs, la fille d’un cueilleur de coton, Hale County, Alabama. 1935 ou 1936 © Library of Congress
  • Dorothea Lange, U.S. No. 54, au nord de El Paso, Texas. Une des routes des migrants vers l'ouest, juin, 1938 © Library of Congress
  • Dorothea Lange, maison d'une bénéficiaire du programme de relogement rural, Tulare County, Californie. Novembre 1938 © Library of Congress
  • Un fermier des monts Ozarks et sa famille, Missouri. Mai 1940 © Library of Congress
  • Mère migrante. Cueilleurs de petits pois indigents en Californie ; mère de sept enfants âgée de 32 ans, Nipomo, Californie, férvier 1936 © Library of Congress
  • Anciens métayers Texans évincés par la mécanisation de l’agriculture. Mai 1937 © Library of Congress

Historical summary

The FSA - a historic undertaking

Within the Farm Security Administration, a historical section is documenting the appalling situation in rural America with the help of a group of photographers. This documentary mission is headed by Roy Stryker, an economist from Columbia University in New York. He works with a talented team of photographers that travel the breadth and width of their country, documenting the rural exodus and the fate of migrant workers in California as well as the daily life in remote parts of the US or monuments and road signs. Famous authors as Dorothea Lange, Walker Evans, Ben Shahn, Russell Lee or Arthur Rothstein are part of the FSA mission.

Over eight years, from 1935 to 1943, the group produces over 250.000 negatives and prints that become emblematic for the Great Depression in the United States. As a whole, the FSA file constitutes a compelling image collection which has marked the collective visual memory of the Great Depression.

The FSA file is unique in the history of photography: not only is it the first time that photography is used in such a systematic way to establish an inventory of a situation, but this "great visual encyclopedia of America" is also the largest collective photographic project undertaken by a government administration.

Steichen & the FSA photographs

Edward Steichen discovers the Farm Security Administration images in 1938 at the First International Photographic Exhibition in New York's Grand Central Palace. He is fascinated by these images and their capacity to tell a story and trigger emotions. He presents a first selection of the FSA photographs in the prestigious publication US Camera Annual in 1939. He also includes comments from visitors at the 1938 exhibition whose opinions widely differ as they discern communist propaganda as well a shattering account of reality.

For Steichen they are "the most remarkable human documents ever rendered in images". They will stay with him for the rest of his career. They will be the focus of his last exhibition at the Museum of Modern Art in 1962.

For The Bitter Years, Edward Steichen selects some of the most iconic but also the most desperate images from the FSA file, corresponding to the initial goal of the mission: to document and illustrate poverty in order to trigger compassion for the represented subjects, the future beneficiaries of the government programs established by Franklin Roosevelt. At the same time, Steichen depicts courageous, even heroic people through a dramatic scenography.

Restoration & conservation

The original prints from the exhibition present a similar materiality to those of The Family of Man: black & white prints glued onto wooden panels of various sizes. With the integration of the collection into the CNA-archive, all the prints have been meticulously restored by the experts Silvia Berselli, then Sandra Petrillo.  

Delicate objects, rendered fragile by time and the strains of travel, the conservators were able to restore the picture’s original luster while preserving the traces of their history. They are stored in archival boxes in the controlled environment of the CNA archive.

Given the limited exhibition space available at Waassertuerm, the rotation of the collection - also for long-term conservation reasons - is planned in a regular interval.

© CNA/Romain Girtgen