Michigan in the Early 1940s

   

Born 1913 in Detroit, American photographer and educator Arthur Sidney Siegel began photographing in the mid-1920s as a youth. He worked as a photojournalist for the New York Times, and took journalism assignments for newspapers, magazines, and government agencies for several decades. During World War II, he photographed for the U.S. Army Air Corps and the Office of War Information.

After the war, Siegel returned to the New Bauhaus (by then the IIT Institute of Design) as an instructor, at the request of Moholy-Nagy. He eventually became head of the school’s photography department. He left in 1955 to work in photojournalism full-time, and returned in 1965; in 1971, he was named president of the IIT Institute of Design. In 1955, he married Irene Yarovich, an artist whom he met at IIT.
 
Siegel’s photography was included in several major exhibitions at art galleries, including two shows devoted exclusively to Siegel at the Art Institute of Chicago and as part of the “Image of America” exhibit at the Museum of Modern Art. He was noted for his use of experimental color techniques, and from the 1950s often explored abstract use of color as a vehicle for expression. He worked with light in novel ways by “introduc[ing] creative methods of back-lighting and projecting light onto surfaces”. He also wrote extensively on photography and influenced the development of photographic education programs.
 
Siegel died in 1978 in Chicago, aged 64. These photos are part of his work that Arthur S. Siegel took life of Michigan in the early 1940s.
 
A Venetian night party at the Detroit yacht club, whose members represent the wealthier class of manufacturers and their friends, Detroit, Michigan, 1940
 
 
A Venetian night party at the Detroit yacht club, whose members represent the wealthier class of manufacturers and their friends. Cabin cruisers and sailboats decorated with lights, 1940

 

A Venetian night party at the Detroit yacht club, whose members represent the wealthier class of manufacturers and their friends. Crowd dancing, 1940
 
 
A Venetian night party at the Detroit yacht club, whose members represent the wealthier class of manufacturers and their friends. Small cabin cruiser, summer 1940
 
 
Sailing boat at a Venetian night party at the Detroit yacht club, whose members represent the wealthier class of manufacturers and their friends, 1940
 
 
Buying a radio in the Crowley-Milner department store, Detroit, Michigan, July 1941

 

Farmers drinking beer during a hard day's work, Jackson, Michigan, fall 1941

 

Operator taking telephone orders at the Crowley-Milner department store, Detroit, Michigan, July 1941
 
 
A student eating an ice cream cone at the National music camp in Interlochen, Michigan where 300 or more young musicians study symphonic music for 8 weeks each summer, August 1942

 

A United States Army Air Corps air ferry command base sixteen miles from Detroit, Michigan at Wayne County Airport. Factory inspector and Captain Roddy inspect a new P-38, September 1942
 
 
A Worker resting on a park bench in the zoological park, Detroit, Michigan, July 1942

 

An African-American family recently moved into the Sojourner Truth homes for War workers, Detroit, Michigan, 1942
 
 
Army sentries guarding against a riot at the Sojourner Truth federal war workers housing project, caused by white neighbors' attempt to prevent African-American tenants from moving in, February 1942

 

Art director and copy writer at a large advertising agency, Detroit, Michigan, July 1942

 

Ceremonies at the presentation of the Army and Navy "E" (for efficiency) award to the Briggs manufacturing company. Worker who is a war veteran, near Detroit, Michigan, September 1942
 
 
Chrysler Corporation Dodge truck plant. Dodge Army ambulances are here, lined up for delivery to the Army, Detroit, Michigan, August 1942

 

Chrysler Corporation Dodge truck plant. One of many conferences about production schedules, blueprints, etc. are required to maintain the smooth steady flow of Dodge Army trucks, 1942

 

Display at a scrap salvage rally sponsored by the Work Projects Administration (WPA) at the state fairgrounds, Detroit, Michigan, 1942
 
Election of officers to the Ford local 600, United Automobile Workers, Congress of Industrial Organizations. 80,000 River Rouge Ford plant workers voted, April 1942

 

First Black family moving into the Sojourner Truth neighborhood, Detroit, Michigan, 1942
 
Girls coming out of the Highland Park Chrysler plant in Detroit, Michigan, 1942

 

Group waiting to drink water out of a public fountain in the zoological park, Detroit, Michigan, July 1942
 
High school students strolling through the zoological park, Detroit, Michigan, July 1942

 

Lobby of the Fisher Building, Detroit Michigan, July 1942
 
 
National music camp where 300 or more young musicians study symphonic music for eight weeks each summer. Swimming dock, Interlochen, Michigan, August 1942

 

New defense houses in Detroit, Michigan, September 1942

 

Spectators at zoological park, Detroit, Michigan, July 1942
 
 
Spectators watching a fountain at a zoo, Detroit, Michigan, July 1942

 

Street view of Radio station WWJ in Detroit, Michigan, August 1942
 
 
War worker and child, Detroit, Michigan, July 1942

 

Woman adjusting a harness strap to prevent child from getting lost in zoological park, Detroit, Michigan, July 1942
 
 
Workers at the zoological park, Detroit, Michigan, July 1942
 
 
 
Workers coming out of the Highland Park Chrysler plant, Detroit, Michigan, spring 1942

 

 
Workers inspecting a plane at the Wayne County Airport, a United States Army Air Corps air ferry command base sixteen miles from Detroit, Michigan, September 1942

 

Workers' children playing in the front yard, Detroit (vicinity), Michigan, September 1942