![alfredcover All photography by Alfred Stieglitz. Courtesy of National Gallery of Art and Skira/Rizzoli.](http://www.planet-mag.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/alfredcover.jpg)
All photography by Alfred Stieglitz. Courtesy of National Gallery of Art and Skira/Rizzoli.
![alfred_title alfred title ALFRED STIEGLITZ](http://www.planet-mag.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/alfred_title.jpg)
The word “ambitious” barely covers the life and work of Alfred Stieglitz. He was a photographer, a gallery owner, a magazine editor, and probably the man most responsible for bringing photography to the art world. Along the way, he also found time to marry a young Georgia O’Keefe and seal her reputation as a painter.
As a photographer, Stieglitz experimented with many subjects, from New York street scenes to cloudscapes to sultry portraits of O’Keefe. Behind all of his images was the driving philosophy of “pictorialism”, a belief that photographs should look like paintings. His most celebrated image is The Steerage, a picture of poor immigrants on a steamship. Where another photographer might have focused on faces and gestures, Stieglitz makes it a Cubist-like study of form and light.
New York, and its teeming street life, was a subject Stieglitz returned to throughout his career. In Alfred Stieglitz New York, the city is shown over a period of five decades, but always filtered through Stieglitz’s unique personality. Beauty and desolation are given equal weight. As Georgia O’Keefe once said of her husband, it was as though “something hot, dark, and destructive was hitched to the highest, brightest star”.