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Dimensions: measurements note 13 1/4 by 9 in. (33.7 by 22.9 cm.)
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Literature:
Other prints of this image:
Margaret Bourke-White, Portrait of Myself
(New York, 1963), p. 75
Sean Callahan, The Photographs of Margaret Bourke-White
(Greenwich, 1972), p. 43
Stephen Bennett Phillips, Margaret Bourke-White: The Photography of Design 1927-1936
(Washington, D. C.: The Phillips Collection, 2003, in conjunction with the exhibition), p. 125
Constance Sullivan and Eugenia Parry Janis, Women Photographers
(New York, 1990), pl. 56
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Notes: This image was used in a Fortune magazine feature story on the Port of New York, appearing in the July 1939 issue. Bourke-White recounted in her autobiography, 'The bridge was under construction then and breathtakingly beautiful, with no floor built yet but with the gossamerlike cables gracefully strung from bank to bank. I had been waiting for just this phase of the construction, and it was my bad luck that it came in midwinter on a zero day. . . I spent the morning perched high over the ice-flecked Hudson River on the mighty cables, which on closer acquaintance, I found not to be gossamer at all but thick as tree trunks. . .' ( Portrait of Myself, p. 87).