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Explore Alfred Stieglitz's impact on American avant-garde photography & his collaboration with Georgia O'Keeffe, including their unique styles & influential works. Learn about Stieglitz's transition to Straight Photography & O'Keeffe's evolution from controversial to established artist, focusing on key pieces like "The Steerage" & "Black Iris." Dive into the Jack-in-the-Pulpit series, mirroring nature's essence through abstraction & form refinement. Discover the dynamic relationship between art, photography, and nature in early 20th-century American Modernism.
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O’Keeffe & Stieglitz Photography and Early American Modernism
Alfred Stieglitz • Stieglitz begins as one of the Pictorialist leaders in America • By the beginning of the 20th century converts to support Strait Photography. • He was instrumental in opening the doors to America for the avant-garde. • He Published a magazine ( Camera works,1903-17). • He also ran his own gallery ( Gallery 291, 1905-17) which showcased works by modern artists (i.e. Picasso, Matisse, & Cezanne) in America for the first time. • Stieglitz arranged exhibits of O'Keeffe's works, helped sell her works.
The Asphalt Paver, 1892/1913 Pictorialism - A style of soft focus photograph, originating in Europe, which attempts to imitate painting.
Monet, Saint-Lazare Train Station 1877 Pictorialism attempted to be accepted as an art form by trying to look like the accepted gallery styles like Impressionism.
The Steerage, 1907 Strait Photography • Resulting from a call to "let photographs look like photographs," it was the first distinctly American style. • Unlike Pictorialism it contains sharp focus, detail, and carefully planed compositions.
The Steerage, 1907 • One of Stieglitz’s hallmark photographs, The Steerage (1915), produces a very different effect. • This is a photograph of working class people crowding two decks of a transatlantic steamer. • The subjects are in sharp focus and the composition is inclined toward geometric elements.
Georgia O’Keeffe • Her relationship with Stieglitz started out as an affair, but they eventually married. • Stieglitz took over 300 photos of O’Keeffe. • She established her reputation at 291, after America was introduced to the avant-garde at the famous 1913 Armory Show.
Georgia O’Keeffe • At this time in America her work was considered by the establishment controversial & shocking. • Eventually modern works like these in America became the new establishment, and N.Y would become the new center of the art world after Paris.
Black Iris, 1926 • Forms are always from nature no matter how distorted. • Swooping forms of petals and stamen fill the entire canvas.
Black Iris, 1926 • Size heightens the importance of the otherwise traditional subject. • Influenced by close-up photography.
The compositions contain bold line, pure colour, and subtle tone. • Images like these take on the power and scope of a landscape.
Jack-in-the-Pulpit Series, 1930 • In 1930, Georgia O'Keeffe painted a series of six canvases depicting a jack-in-the-pulpit. • The series begins with the striped and hooded bloom rendered with a botanist's care in naturalistic detail. • It continues with successively more abstract and tightly focused depictions, and ends with the essence of the jack-in-the-pulpit. • In this image a haloed black pistil stands alone against a black, purple, and gray field.
Jack-in-the-Pulpit, No.IV, 1930 • This work represents a midpoint in this process of concurrently increasing detail and abstraction. • O'Keeffe consistently found her strongest inspiration in nature. • She believed that the essence of nature could be discovered in and through the refinement of form.
Jack-in-the-Pulpit, No. IV, 1930 • In the jack-in-the-pulpits, abstraction becomes a metaphor of, and an equivalent for, knowledge. • The closest view of the flower yields an abstract image. • The most profound knowledge of the subject reveals its abstract form.
Her series was influenced by the European artist, Mondrian’s series of trees that contain a continuous evolution into abstraction.