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Release Date: May 20, 2002
"Alfred Stieglitz: Known and Unknown"
On View at the National Gallery of Art, June 2 - September 2, 2002
Provides New Insights into the 50-Year Career of This Seminal Artist
Washington, DC--Alfred Stieglitz has been renowned for his introduction
of modern European art to America and for his support of contemporary
American artists, but he was first and foremost a photographer. His photographs,
which span more than five decades from the 1880s through the 1930s, are
widely celebrated as some of the most compelling ever made. Alfred
Stieglitz: Known and Unknown, on view at the National Gallery
of Art West Building June 2 through September 2, 2002, presents 102 of
Stieglitz's photographs from the National Gallery's collection. Encompassing
the full range and evolution of his art, the exhibition includes many
works that have not been exhibited in the last fifty years. It highlights
less well-known images in order to demonstrate how they expand our understanding
of the development of his art and his contributions to 20th-century photography.
The exhibition, which is the culmination of a multi-year project on Stieglitz
at the National Gallery, also celebrates the publication of Alfred
Stieglitz: The Key Set, a definitive study of this seminal figure
in the history of photography. Consisting of 1,642 photographs, the key
set of Stieglitz's photographs was donated to the National Gallery by
Georgia O'Keeffe in 1949 and 1980 and contains the finest example of every
mounted print that was in Stieglitz's possession at the time of his death.
It is the largest and most comprehensive collection of his work in existence.
"The photographs in this exhibition eloquently reveal the power of
the medium to create work expressive of both the new American modernist
spirit and the maker himself," said Earl A. Powell III, director, National
Gallery of Art. "We are extremely grateful to Eastman Kodak Company
for sponsoring this exhibition and the entire Alfred Stieglitz Project."
Corporate Sponsor
The exhibition is made possible by a generous grant from Eastman Kodak
Company.
"When we sponsor a cultural project, we look for a dedication to excellence
that matches our own aspirations," said Daniel A. Carp, chairman and
CEO of Kodak. "Alfred Stieglitz was a great photographer and among the
most influential figures in 20th-century American art. We're honored
to help make his work accessible to people around the world."
Exhibition Organization
The exhibition, which is arranged chronologically, provides new insights
into the development of Stieglitz's art and demonstrates how he continuously
investigated the technical and expressive capabilities of the medium.
Germany, 1886-1890: Born in Hoboken, New Jersey, Stieglitz began
to photograph, probably in 1884, while a student in Germany. The medium
captivated and challenged him as nothing else had done before. His teacher,
Hermann Wilhelm Vogel, a highly respected photographer, scientist, and
professor at the Königliche Technische Hochschule in Berlin, instilled
in him a profound appreciation for the science and practice of the process.
At Vogel's direction, Stieglitz tackled a wide variety of subjects and
exhaustively explored the relationship of light to photography. These
technical experiments, including A Street in Sterzing, The Tyrol
(1890), on view in the exhibition, are among his most accomplished early
works. Stieglitz was also influenced by contemporary German, Dutch, and
Austrian painters, several of whom were close friends. He strove to replicate
their anecdotal, narrative, and picturesque subject matter in such photographs
as The Harvest, Mittenwald (1886), also on view in the exhibition.
1890-1904: In the fall of 1890, after nine years of study in Germany,
26-year-old Stieglitz returned to New York and quickly established himself
as a leading artistic photographer. He continued to draw inspiration from
contemporary painters, but his scope widened considerably to include the
French artist Jean-François Millet, the German Max Liebermann,
and the American James Abbott McNeill Whistler. Like other photographers
of the time, Stieglitz began to use a small, hand-held camera, but he
utilized every means available to him to transform his images, as he wrote,
from mere "photographs [into] pictures." He radically cropped
his negatives to eliminate distracting and extraneous elements from his
compositions. He also often enlarged them to make prints as big as twenty-one
inches wide and to retouch portions of the pictures easily. Further appropriating
the materials and palette of a painter, he also made carbon, gum bichromate,
and photogravure prints in charcoal gray and brown, even red, green, and
blue hues. And he carefully matted and framed his finished prints so that
they would command attention in the large international exhibitions. Several
of the photographs, including Winter-Fifth Avenue (1893), Gossip-Katwyk
(1894), and A Wet Day on the Boulevard, Paris (1894), are in their
original mats and framed as Stieglitz would have presented them in the
1890s.
291, 1905-1917: In 1905 Stieglitz opened a gallery, which came
to be called 291 (from its address on Fifth Avenue in New York), where
he exhibited the work of his elite group of artistic photographers, the
Photo-Secession (founded by Stieglitz in 1902). In 1908, in order to initiate
a dialogue between contemporary photographers and painters, he began to
show the work of leading European modernists, including Paul Cézanne,
Henri Matisse, Pablo Picasso, and Constantin Brancusi. These artists introduced
Stieglitz to new ideas of color, form, and abstraction that deeply influenced
his art. In a series of photographs of New York from 1910, such as Outward
Bound, The Mauretania, and Old and New New York, Stieglitz
abandoned the soft focus of his work from the turn of the century and
revealed the new, bolder use of form that he had learned from these artists.
Stieglitz continued his investigation of New York in the spring of 1915
in a series of photographs made out of the back window of 291. Influenced
by Picasso and Braque, he sought to eliminate a sense of three-dimensional
space and traditional one-point perspective. In these precisely constructed
and elegantly realized photographs, Stieglitz carefully dissected the
planes of the rooftops and buildings in order to reveal both the physical
mass of the city and its psychological weight.
The portraits Stieglitz made at 291 represent a significant advancement
in his art and demonstrate the dialogue between modern painting and photography
that he sought to construct. In Marius de Zayas (1913) and Georgia
O'Keeffe (1917) he placed the artists in front of their own works,
echoing the forms from the canvas in his own depictions of them. Fascinated
by Picasso, whom he met in 1911 and exhibited that same year and again
in 1915, Stieglitz photographed several friends and family in front of
the Spanish artist's works, as, for example, in Kitty at 291 (1915).
Georgia O'Keeffe, 1918-1921: The years from 1918, when Georgia
O'Keeffe moved to New York, until 1937, when Stieglitz put his camera
away because of poor health, were the most prolific ones in his career.
O'Keeffe inspired in him a creative passion he had never known before,
and within the first three years that they lived together he had made
more than 140 studies of her (the key set contains 331 photographs of
O'Keeffe taken between 1917 and 1937). He called his photographs of her
a "composite portrait," and his aim was to document not only his understanding
of O'Keeffe's personality but also the larger concept of "womanhood."
Stieglitz soon applied the lessons he had learned from photographing O'Keeffe
to his portraits of other people. In his series of studies of Helen
Freeman (1921/1922), for example, he progressed, as he had done with
O'Keeffe, from the formal studies of face and shoulders to more intimate
photographs, and he also recorded her hands as an index of her personality.
Lake George, 1920s: A lighthearted, playful quality, coupled with
a more daring experimentation, entered Stieglitz's work in the 1920s.
With the closure of 291 in 1917, Stieglitz was freed from his responsibilities
as a gallery director and had more time to devote to his own art. During
the 1920s he and O'Keeffe spent several months each year at Lake George--his
family's summer home in New York's rolling Adirondack Mountains. Here
he vigorously investigated the most amateurish aspect of photography,
the snapshot. Made with his small hand-held 4 x 5 or 3 1/4 x 4 1/4 inch
cameras, these casual and spontaneous compositions record the long, languid
days of summer, as seen in Bly and Venus (1920), Georgia O'Keeffe
and Waldo Frank (1920), Katharine (1921), and Rebecca Salsbury
Strand (1922).
In the late 1910s and early 1920s, encouraged by the work of American
artists Arthur Dove, John Marin, and O'Keeffe, Stieglitz, for the first
time in his art, began to explore the rural American landscape and photographed
the surrounding vistas at Lake George. It was also during these years
that Stieglitz made his series of abstract and evocative studies of clouds.
Using a small hand-held camera that could be easily pointed at the zenith
of the sky, he made photographs without a horizon line to anchor the viewer,
thus creating a sense of disorientation and abstraction. He strove to
make a new language for photography that was less dependent on subject
matter, more intuitive and expressive of a mood or emotional state.
New York, 1927-1937: In the early 1930s Stieglitz rediscovered
a subject that had inspired him throughout his career--New York City--but
his photographs of it from these years have a formal strength and lucidity
unknown in his previous work. He was inspired by the views from his windows
high up in the newly constructed Shelton Hotel, where he and O'Keeffe
lived from 1925 to 1936, as well as from his last gallery, An American
Place, at 509 Madison Avenue, which he directed from 1929 until his death
in 1946. At various times of the day and using different lenses, he photographed
the visual spectacle of the constantly changing city as seen in his series
of photographs, From My Window at An American Place, taken from
1930 to 1932. When Stieglitz exhibited these photographs he grouped them
into series--two of which have been recreated in the exhibition--that
charted both the growth of the skyscrapers and the more subtle but constantly
changing patterns of light and shade. Once the buildings were completed,
though, Stieglitz generally lost interest in photographing them for the
sense of change was no longer present.
Lake George, 1929-1937: In the early 1930s, O'Keeffe reappeared
as a major subject in Stieglitz's art, but the distance between them,
as seen in several studies on view in the exhibition, is obvious. With
their metallic sheen, deep blacks and complex geometry, these photographs
are among his strongest portraits of O'Keeffe and also his most poignant.
As he spent more time alone at Lake George, the farmhouse and its surrounding
fields, trees, and lakes once again became the focus of his art. Like
his photographs of New York from the same time, these are rigorous but
also quiet and intensely autobiographical works.
Curator and Catalogue
The exhibition is organized by the National Gallery of Art, Washington.
The curator is Sarah Greenough, the Gallery's curator of photographs and
a noted expert on Alfred Stieglitz. It will be on view at the Museum of
Fine Arts, Houston, from October 6, 2002, through January 5, 2003.
The two-volume catalogue--in which all 1,642 photographs in the Gallery's
key set are beautifully reproduced--includes an introductory essay by
Greenough and appendices on Stieglitz's techniques and processes. It presents
a wealth of significant new research, and, for the first time, an accurate
record of the development of Stieglitz's art. It will be available for
$150.00 in the Gallery Shops and through the Web site at www.nga.gov/shop/shop.htm.
To order by phone, call (800) 697-9350. A range of educational programs
will be offered in conjunction with the exhibition, including a lecture
by Greenough on June 2 at 2 p.m. followed by a book signing.
Stieglitz Project
The multi-year endeavor to make this important body of work more widely
known began with the August 1999 release of a new edition of the Gallery's
award-winning 1983 book Alfred Stieglitz: Photographs and Writings,
which had long been out of print. A series of thematic presentations called
Alfred Stiegltz: New Perspectives were presented on the Gallery's
Web site over the last two years. A culmination of these online tours
will be available at www.nga.gov
at the end of August 2002. The project concludes with the publication
of the catalogue Alfred Stieglitz: The Key Set and the opening
of this exhibition.
General Information
The National Gallery of Art and its Sculpture Garden, located on the National
Mall between 3rd and 9th Streets at Constitution Ave. NW, are open Monday through
Saturday from 10:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. and Sunday from 11:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m.
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737-4215 or the Telecommunications Device for the Deaf (TDD) at (202) 842-6176,
or visit the Gallery’s Web site at www.nga.gov.
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