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Collections

Margaret Bourke-White
Untitled Industrial (cloth) [No. 24 Amoskeag A1]1934

On view:
Geffen Galleries, Modernism in the Marketplace
Sepia-toned circular photograph of three massive industrial rollers with interlocking gear teeth, a small worker visible in the gap between them

Margaret Bourke-White, Untitled Industrial (cloth) [No. 24 Amoskeag A1], 1934, Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Gift of Mr. and Mrs. Nahum Lainer through the 2000 Collectors Committee, photo © Museum Associates/LACMA

Maker
Margaret Bourke-White
United States, 1906-1971
Title
Untitled Industrial (cloth) [No. 24 Amoskeag A1]
Place Made
United States
Date Made
1934
Medium
Gelatin silver print
Dimensions
Image: 9 5/16 × 9 5/16 in. (23.65 × 23.65 cm) Primary support: 9 5/16 × 9 5/16 in. (23.65 × 23.65 cm) Secondary support: 20 7/16 × 13 15/16 in. (51.91 × 35.4 cm) Mat: 24 × 18 in. (60.96 × 45.72 cm)
Credit Line
Gift of Mr. and Mrs. Nahum Lainer through the 2000 Collectors Committee
Accession Number
M.2006.174.1
Classification
Photographs
Collecting Area
Photography
Curatorial Notes

In 1933, the Ford Motor Company commissioned freelance photographer Margaret Bourke-White to produce imagery for the company’s pavilion at the Century of Progress Exposition in Chicago. Bourke-White had previously (c. 1930) photographed various manufacturing processes and facilities at Ford’s River Rouge complex in Dearborn, Michigan, and had established a reputation for depicting large-scale industry with precision and grace. Her 1933 assignment was to photograph the production of interior upholstery fabrics at the Amoskeag Company in Manchester, New Hampshire. In the Ford Pavilion, designed by Albert Kahn, these photographs were components in displays about myriad aspects of automotive production, installed in a 900-foot-long main hall. LACMA’s prints (see also M.2006.174.2, .3, .4), trimmed into circles, are presumably unique maquettes for the 5½-foot-diameter enlargements that appeared in the pavilion. In cinematic progression, they show various steps leading to the finished plaid fabric, seen here, that graced the interiors of Ford’s 1933 line of automobiles.

Held in the midst of the Depression, the Century of Progress Exposition proclaimed that a prosperous future was just around the corner. While Ford weathered the downturn, the Amoskeag Company was one of the Depression’s casualties, filing for bankruptcy in late 1935.

Britt Salvesen

2025

Copyright
© Estate of Margaret Bourke-White / Licensed by VAGA, New York, NY