Margaret’s work is defined by its painter sensibility — an enduring influence on generations that followed. Most artists are dead; following is a declaration of love.

A Mile Underground, Kimberly Diamond Mine, South Africa
Margaret Bourke-White American, 1904–1971

World's Highest Standard of Living
Margaret Bourke-White American, 1904–1971

Buchenwald Camp Victims
Margaret Bourke-White American, 1904–1971

Mahatma Gandhi Spinning
Margaret Bourke-White American, 1904–1971

42,000 feet over Kansas
Margaret Bourke-White American, 1904–1971

Fort Peck Dam, Montana
Margaret Bourke–White American, 1904–1971

Vultures of Calcutta, India
Margaret Bourke-White American, 1904–1971

Statue of Liberty
Margaret Bourke-White American, 1904–1971

Approaching Storm, Hartman, Colorado
Margaret Bourke-White American, 1904–1971

Untitled
Margaret Bourke-White American, 1904–1971

Workman on Top of Thomas Alva Edison's Tower, Menlo Park, NJ
Margaret Bourke-White American, 1904–1971

Harvest Talk
Charles White American, 1918-1979

This, My Brother
Charles White (American, 1918–1979)

Birthday Party
Margaret Burroughs American, 1915-2010

Julia Jackson
Julia Margaret Cameron English, 1815–1879

Sketchbook
Charles White American, 1918-1979

Portrait of a Woman
Charles White American, 1918-1979

Love Letter III
Charles White (American, 1918-1979) printed and published by Edward Hamilton (American)

White Crucifixion
Marc Chagall Born Vitebsk (formerly Russian Empire, now Belarus), 1887; died Saint-Paul, France, 1985