Alfred Stieglitz

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Print Pictures

Old and New New York (from Camera Work XXXVI), 1910

Edition:
Original photogravure printed in 1910 under Stieglitz supervision for the Camera Work issue XXXVI.
Condition:
Very Good
Image size:
Sold Out
Print size:
203 x 158 mm
Framed size:
Provenance:
Camera Work XXXVI
Year of work:
Printed in
1910
Poster

Beginning when he was a young man newly returned from studying in Germany and continuing until the last years of his life, Alfred Stieglitz photographed the city of New York. These images document the city’s transformation from a roughshod port to a sleek metropolis. As he wrote, “My New York is the New York of transition—The Old gradually passing into the New. . . . The Spirit of that something that endears New York to one who really loves it—not for its outer attractions—but for its deepest worth—& significance. —The universal thing in it.”

Stieglitz’s early photographs capture everyday life on the sidewalks of the rapidly modernizing city. Instead of manipulating the prints or negatives, he let snow and rain—and often the steam and smoke of industry—create the soft, atmospheric effects valued by Pictorialists. In his 1897 photogravure portfolio, Picturesque Bits of New York and Other Studies, Stieglitz juxtaposed scenes from the city alongside those from Venice and Paris, placing New York in the pantheon of the world’s great scenic cities.

The same photogravure presented here is in the MOMA and Art Institute Chicago Collections.

Literature & Collections:

The Key Set, Abrams, 2002, Vol 1, Plate 344.

Alfred Stieglitz

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Copyright ©
Alfred Stieglitz
or applicable right holders.

Old and New New York (from Camera Work XXXVI), 1910

Edition:
Sold Out
Signed
Image size:
Print size:
203 x 158 mm
Frame size:
Provenance:
Camera Work XXXVI
Year of work:
Original photogravure printed in 1910 under Stieglitz supervision for the Camera Work issue XXXVI.
Printed in:
1910
Print Pictures
No items found.

Beginning when he was a young man newly returned from studying in Germany and continuing until the last years of his life, Alfred Stieglitz photographed the city of New York. These images document the city’s transformation from a roughshod port to a sleek metropolis. As he wrote, “My New York is the New York of transition—The Old gradually passing into the New. . . . The Spirit of that something that endears New York to one who really loves it—not for its outer attractions—but for its deepest worth—& significance. —The universal thing in it.”

Stieglitz’s early photographs capture everyday life on the sidewalks of the rapidly modernizing city. Instead of manipulating the prints or negatives, he let snow and rain—and often the steam and smoke of industry—create the soft, atmospheric effects valued by Pictorialists. In his 1897 photogravure portfolio, Picturesque Bits of New York and Other Studies, Stieglitz juxtaposed scenes from the city alongside those from Venice and Paris, placing New York in the pantheon of the world’s great scenic cities.

The same photogravure presented here is in the MOMA and Art Institute Chicago Collections.

Literature:

The Key Set, Abrams, 2002, Vol 1, Plate 344.