The Flatiron

1903

Alfred Stieglitz

Artist, American, 1864 - 1946

Media Options

This object’s media is not available for download. Contact us about image usage.

Artwork overview

  • Medium

    photogravure

  • Credit Line

    Alfred Stieglitz Collection

  • Dimensions

    image: 16.8 × 8.3 cm (6 5/8 × 3 1/4 in.)

  • Accession

    1949.3.1270.41

  • Copyright

    Image courtesy of the Philadelphia Museum of Art

  • Key Set Number

    287

Associated Artworks

See all 4 artworks

Camera Work: Vol.1: Numbers 1-4

Alfred Stieglitz

1903

Icy Night (featured in ad for Goerz lenses)

Alfred Stieglitz

1898

The Street—Design for a Poster

Alfred Stieglitz

1900

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

Exhibition History

1992

  • Stieglitz in the Darkroom, National Gallery of Art, Washington, DC, October 4, 1992–February 14, 1993

Bibliography

2002

  • Greenough, Sarah. Alfred Stieglitz: The Key Set: The Alfred Stieglitz Collection of Photographs. Washington, 2002: vol. 1, cat. 287.

Wikidata ID

Q64037864

Scholarly Remarks and Key Set Data

Remarks

Late in his life Stieglitz recalled: “One day there was a great snow storm. The Flat-Iron Building had been erected on 23rd Street, at the junction of Fifth Avenue and Broadway. I stood spellbound as I saw that building in that storm. I had watched the building in the course of its erection, but somehow it had never occurred to me to photograph it in the stages of its evolution. But that particular snowy day, with the trees of Madison Square all covered with snow, fresh snow, I suddenly saw the Flat-Iron Building as I had never seen it before. It looked, from where I stood, as if it were moving toward me like the bow of a monster ocean steamer, a picture of the new America which was in the making. So day after day for several days, while the snow was still covering Madison Square Park, I made snapshots of the Flat-Iron Building.

“One of these pictures I enlarged. That is, I had a photogravure made from the original negative, in fact, two photogravures, different sizes, both enlargements of the original negative, and proof pulled under my direct supervision. One enlargement was to be inserted into Camera Work; the other one was larger, about 11 × 14. This larger photogravure was one of a series of large prints I had in mind to be made for a portfolio, to be called Fifty Prints of New York. This series that I had in mind was never completed.”

As recorded by Dorothy Norman in “Alfred Stieglitz: Six Happenings. I: Photograph the Flat-Iron Building—1902–1903,” Twice a Year 14–15 (1946–1947), 188–189.

Lifetime Exhibitions

A print from the same negative—perhaps a photograph from the Gallery’s collection—appeared in the following exhibition(s) during Alfred Stieglitz’s lifetime:

1904, Washington (no. 131, as The Flatiron, N.Y.)
1904, Pittsburgh (no. 222, as The Flatiron, New York)
1904, Paris (no. 669, as The “Flat Iron,” platinum)
1904, London (no. 165, as The Flat-iron)
1910, Buffalo (no. 432, as The Flatiron, New York, 1902–1910, photogravure)
1913, New York (no. 14, as The Flatiron, 1902)
1924, New York (no. 59, as The Flatiron Building, 1901)
1932, New York (no. 41, as The Flatiron, 1901)
1944, Philadelphia (no. 16, as The Flatiron, 1902)

Lifetime Publications

A reproduction of this work appeared in the following publication(s) during Alfred Stieglitz’s lifetime:

Camera Work 4 (October 1903): pl. 1 (ill., The “Flat-iron”)

Joseph Keiley, “American Pictorial Photographers. Alfred Stieglitz,” Photography 17 (20 February 1904): 151 (ill., The Flat Iron)

Note

Image courtesy of the Philadelphia Museum of Art


You may be interested in

Loading Results