Morris Loeb's poem
1886
Artist, American, 1864 - 1946

Artwork overview
-
Medium
platinum print mounted on cabinet card
-
Credit Line
-
Dimensions
image: 14 x 5 cm (5 1/2 x 1 15/16 in.)
support: 22 x 13.6 cm (8 11/16 x 5 3/8 in.) -
Accession
1949.3.11
-
Key Set Number
3
Associated Artworks
See all 10 artworks
Freienwalde a. O.
Alfred Stieglitz
1886

Freienwalde a. O.
Alfred Stieglitz
1886

Freienwalde a. O.
Alfred Stieglitz
1886

Alfred Stieglitz
Curious for more Alfred Stieglitz scholarship?
Discover over 1,000 artworks that the artist’s wife Georgia O’Keeffe termed his “Key Set” of prize photographs. Museum scholars have illuminated each work, his career, practices, and lifetime achievements.
Artwork history & notes
Provenance
Georgia O'Keeffe; gift to NGA, 1949.
Associated Names
Bibliography
2002
Greenough, Sarah. Alfred Stieglitz: The Key Set: The Alfred Stieglitz Collection of Photographs. Washington, 2002: vol. 1, cat. 3.
Wikidata ID
Q64034640
Scholarly Remarks and Key Set Data
Remarks
This photograph is bound in a small (5 3/8 × 8 3/4 inches) leather album stamped in gold: July 4th 1886 / Freienwalde a.O. (Freienwalde-an-der-Oder, now known as Bad Freienwalde, was a resort town northeast of Berlin, near the Oder River.) The following Key Set numbers are also included in the album: 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13. This photograph and Key Set number 13 are mounted on cabinet cards and slipped into a small pocket on the inside back cover of the volume.
Each stanza in this poem by Stieglitz’s friend Morris Loeb refers to one of the following ten photographs. The poem is a spoof on Gilbert and Sullivan’s “Three Little Maids from School Are We” from their recently released, popular musical The Mikado (1885).