Timeline

The life and career of Walker Evans, 1903–1975

1903

Born in St. Louis, Missouri on November 3

1922

Graduates from Phillips Academy in Andover, Massachusetts

1926

Spends a year in Paris, auditing courses and absorbing literary modernism

1928

Takes up photography while working a clerical job in New York

1930

Three of his Brooklyn Bridge photographs appear in Hart Crane's poem "The Bridge"

1931

Photographs Victorian houses near Boston with support from Lincoln Kirstein

1933

Travels to Cuba to photograph for Carleton Beals's book "The Crime of Cuba"

1935

Joins the Resettlement Administration (later the FSA) under Roy Stryker

1936

Photographs three tenant-farmer families in Hale County, Alabama with writer James Agee

1938

MoMA presents "American Photographs," its first solo exhibition for a photographer; begins secret subway portraits

1941

Publishes "Let Us Now Praise Famous Men" with James Agee

1945

Joins Fortune magazine, where he works as a writer and editor

1965

Becomes a professor of photography at the Yale University School of Art

1966

Publishes the subway portraits as the book "Many Are Called"

1971

MoMA mounts a major retrospective selected by John Szarkowski

1975

Dies of a stroke on April 10 in New Haven, Connecticut

Explore by Decade

1930s

The Great Depression years. FSA photography project begins.