Masters of Photography (Art Ebook)
Masters of Photography (Art Ebook)
Masters of Photography (Art Ebook)
iwros aPHOTGGMPHY
dv
Mtfrreisof
PHOP3GMPHV
EDITED, WITH
AN INTRODUCTION BY
first
time
in
unpublished material,
Jacket Design by
ROBERT CUEVAS
2011
http://www.archive.org/details/mastersofphotogrOOnewh
MASTERS OF PHOTOGRAPHY
MASTERS OF PHOTOGRAPHY
Castle Books,
New York
Braziller, Inc.
All rights in this book are reserved. For information address the publisher,
George
Braziller, Inc.,
New York
3,
N.Y.
CONTENTS
introduction
14
22
Nadar
32
38
Julia Margaret
Cameron
46
54
Alfred Stieglitz
60
Edward Steichen
76
Eugene Atget
92
Paul Strand
102
Edward Weston
118
Erich Salomon
134
Dorothea Lange
140
Walker Evans
150
Henri Cartier-Bresson
160
Ansel Adams
172
note on techniques
188
selected bibliography
189
sources of quotations
190
INDEX
191
The
appear
in the titles.
the photographer.
Where no
collection
is
made;
available
their
was
names
lent by
INTRODUCTION
For more than a century, certain extraordinary men and women have worked
photography with
in
once or twice, but again and again, and often throughout the change and evolution of a lifetime.
Each
is
like
It is
through such
as a
medium.
In the
main body of
that
this
stands by himself, in the full scope and character of his work, so far as the brief compass of one
own approach,
his
his
way
to
medium. One
in
we
photography, of
its
it
and
known and
felt
experience of working
vital
presents.
From
different
from the casual and rather stereotyped impressions most of us have held
my
when
My
eyes are no
switch
film
me
more than
scouts
focusing cloth
am
to record,
and
So
hope as
sensitive.
And
me
today as when
it."
idea
is
there,
and com-
my
eye." Through
its
world:
In photography there
movement
of the subject.
motion are
in balance.
librium of
it.
new kind
is
Photography must
Sometimes
it
seize
upon
is
this
stall,
made by
one moment
moment and hold immobile
the
the equi-
makings of a picture
except
thing that seems to be missing. But what one thing? Perhaps someone suddenly walks into your
range of view.
finally
You
very
discoverer, seeing a
pletely revealed.
first
is
now.
him:
to
till
it
is
on which
about their
You
the shutter
was released
at the
decisive
moment
lifeless.
of shooting
it
3
.
"work out
to
the geometric
plan from some of your photographs, which are so exact as to appear calculated," replied, "No,
Jean, to stop and calculate would be to miss most of them."
explodes
at
"When
my
up what
instant
eye,
stopped there."
"Composition
is
Weston summed
the strongest
way
of
seeing.
when
In the instant
is
transfixed
.
all
the
and transitory
means
instant.
We
reveals
is
is
We
photographers deal
there
is
is
who
is
photographer.
.
to unfold.
You
in things
is
photography
crucial, for
an instrument for
is
is
truth,
and
in front of
it.
it:
the camera machine cannot evade the objects which are in front of
wards.
going
how
of expression, photography
there
made
... Of
is
You cannot
the exposure
He can choose
Your photography
is
it.
No more can
who
the
after-
really sees. 6
Cartier-Bresson:
I
us.
...
A
us.
is
made concurrently
As
the
And
challenge that holds the photographer: the two realities within and
without, both limitless, for which he and his camera are a bridge.
Such a goal cannot be attained by merely factual recording. As Edward Weston wrote:
How
it
little
can only be
in a very
broad consideration of
life,
is
any symbolism
in
my
work,
symbols, the understanding of relativity everywhere. All basic forms are so closely related as to
have had a back (before close inspection) taken for a pear, knees
and rocks
7
for almost everything imaginable!
at
Weston, accused of being "theatrical" in his photographs of the natural forms of the West,
replied: "Everything in the
my
West
is
neighbors,
on a grander
my
friends.
When
power of Alfred
the
and
matter
I
his
do not
lie
intense,
more
my
job."
was attributed
extraordinary person-
to the
effect"
dramatic.
vital,
well, that's
Stieglitz's portraits
own "hypnotic
more
scale,
new
entirely
subject
clouds.
wanted
to
photograph clouds
Through clouds
to put
what
to find out
down my philosophy
not
or
there
everyone no tax as
on them
was great excitementdaily for weeks.
to subject matter
show
to
in
that
my
clouds were
clouds and
to special trees,
for
had learned
of life
yet
free.
So
began
to
it
He
I'm most curious to see what the 'Clouds' will do to you. About six people have seen them
all
graphed.
know
know
exactly what
have photo-
in this series
felt
He proved
to crystallize
what
photographer
that the
expanding, compressing our visual connotations, he works with light and time as the musi-
way
to a
and pictures
way
that goes
just
the
image or
series of
its
current form of the photo essay, words launch a line of thought into
images and then carry the impulse developing forward. Good writing
speaks
it
first.
Something of
this
Words
Many
ence of a symphony
all.
The wealth of
by the lens
to
music than
to
it
is
both as a race
When
itself.
they try to
appreciation of
Adams,
is
by no means
Weston
still to
really power-
is
meaning
It
." 10
When
And
can
feel a
Stieglitz,
Bach fugue
my
in
planning his
work,
know
have arrived. 11
and
first
hilltops,
which he called
knew
exactly what
was
and
flutes,
Man, why
that
How
music!
is
what
And when
said
finally
wanted
And
to
would
he would point
I
my
had
series
happen, happened
verbatim. 8
By now
common
it
base.
must be apparent
that
itself a
is
the roof of the Sistine Chapel, adds to that delight with every
He
transient actuality.
augment.
To Edward
moment
He
photography. One
of reality just as
how
is
shutter.
conquer
to
.
Every
light.
The other
man must
is
learn to
how
to
work out
Many
many
To a
few, the
mediums
are for a few years like right and left hands. But one or the other eventually dominates.
Attempts
to
fail.
And
at heart
On
this
point the masters are unanimous: the photographic image must not be tampered with. For them,
the
is
cropping not envisaged before exposure an admission of weakness. In the darkroom these photographers use controls, but only those which enhance conviction, which help convey the truth behind
the illusion. This conviction, this truth,
man
destroyed
if
negative or print
photography
is
there
is,
is
retouched.
as Stieglitz put
it,
no
is
has yet found: conception and realization occur almost simultaneously, and
the
is
to
art,
own
capacity to create.
artists in other
mediums bear
to the
to
world
And
the
and Orozco hailing Edward Weston as one of the few authentic masters of 20th century
art,
and
Picasso exclaiming over Stieglitz's Steerage, which his colleagues had dismissed as a split
image, "This
man
is
working
To non-photographers
10
in the
that
is,
same
direction
am!"
13
wmnechanical
And by
it.
to
neophytes, the
It is
it is.
have mastered
and
It
surprise in photography
first
it
to see until
new and
just discovered a
how
is
you
to see
photographic, which challenges every resource of mind, heart, eye, spirit and body you possess.
but
that is too
weak
word
is
is its
most frightening delusion, and one which lures millions into an abyss they do not know how
climb out
Where
vision
is
You must
is
and arduous as
there
in
no short
The
Adams
in the style of
as long
is
cut.
Look
it.
making essays
third surprise
who master
to
the inanimate."
now
is
is
at the three
who begin
this
They are
in Paris.
all
Adamson
in
to those
Edinburgh, South-
to the task of recording the leading figures of their time and place. Contrast the kindly nobility,
the sunlit
shimmer of
Hill and
14
light, the
Julia Margaret Cameron, in the idyllic and pre-Raphaelite England of the 1860s, using blur
Steichen as a young
man
in the
the
in the
living, breathing
in
impact
approach:
in his maturity,
genius.
Compare
the Far
it
was unknown
War
battlefields;
Mathew
B.
Brady
is
lyric freshness
Compare
war on men
in their
and
history:* Gardner and O'Sullivan calling the world to witness the impact of
photographs of Civil
making believable
is
Greek
Americans
omitted because evidence quite clearly points to him as a pictorial historian, collector and publisher,
rather than as a photographer. As early as 1851 the professional Photographic and Fine Art Journal noted that he was "not
an operator himself, a failing eyesight precluding the possibility of his using the camera with any certainty, but he is an excellent artist nevertheless
understands
in all
first
talent to be found."
And
management
He had
already shown his historical interests in 1850, with the publication of a series of lithographic porAmericans. When the Civil War broke out he organized teams of photographers. "I had men
parts of the Army," he said, "like a rich newspaper." 15
in his business."
traits.
is
The Gallery
of Illustrious
11
to witness the
And
Cartier-
Bresson, using the instant to lasso with a line like Daumier's, the weird, or witty, or heart-
Compare what,
tools:
to
whom
light
light
moment when
is
whom
silver, a grass
splintered sunlight, he
have been
last light
master.
is light's
light
Adams,
any
light
whom
light
for
the
moment when
both past
shadow or
Bach; he will travel hundreds of miles, he will return again and again, until
to
moment
melody and
make
moment;
itself,
whom
light
if
wood has
it,
who
the basic
chisel; Strand,
mood he can
of miracle, the
at
take like a
to
universe.
Of
that, in their
majestic maturity, the masters one and all resign their individuality.
more he
the
my
tude has in
because
This
16
is
it
without evasion
kills everything.
death.
It
there's nothing."
wood and
my
aim was
more he becomes
in spirit or technique
18
And
Stieglitz
it
my
work,
more
would say
upon
it
is
my
To Cartier-Bresson: "Cynicism
that
is
This
atti-
is
his
spirit.
Others come
passion.
it
significant presentation of
is
photographic beauty."
summed up
"Photography
12
Now
with
trying to summarize
tear
kills creation.
17
They
is
interpretation.
it
is that,
greatest
truth
my
means as a
obsession."
19
life
work:
MASTERS OF PHOTOGRAPHY
ROBERT ADAMSON
and
David Octavius Hill, born Perth, Scotland, 1802. Painter of roin new techniques and movements in
the arts. At 19, used the then still strange technique of lithography
was an adventure
to
Academy
into the
new world
of
Arts; in 1830,
optics,
and particularly
in the
in the
new technique
of photography,
of his parishioners,
and who
perhaps
photography for a
1848. Hill
left,
lives
Andrews;
was cam-
is
to St.
Andrews and
reported to have
made
pears to have tried his hand at making a few calotypes in the early
1840s.
Free Church of Scotland was not finished until 1866, and only then
Then
in
because,
it
is
urged
it
as his duty.
Hill,
fitted
out a
made
in
During
Hill's
long final
No
died.
illness, his
Newington where,
From 1870
at least
its
14
their
a friend of Hill's,
who had
in
to execute
40 seconds; they
hands propped up on
interests
Thomas Annan,
and
to 1872,
his second
Hill
still
Rembrandt's
at
as greater than
in 1870. Hill
etchings.
Even
shows no such
as partner.
It
and professions.
It
fine
to
Whistler and
the
Crystal
Hamburg:
in
London;
Palace,
in
in
Camera Work by
New
monograph on
Stieglitz. In
1931,
a photographer.
Hill,
earlier.
15
16
earlier. Collection R. 0.
earlier.
17
18
House, Rochester, N. Y.
Mrs. Rigby and her daughter, Lady Elizabeth Eastlake. Calotypt, before 1848. George Eastman
George Meikle
Kemp,
Rochester, N. Y.
Eastman House,
19
20
in
at left.
21
Boston the
in
first
how
learn
to
to
Samuel
assisting
B. Morse,
F.
first to
describe
"Suffice
it
time, that
all
the
wonders of
to say that
was
in
New York
this
Pennell,
painter,
sister.
to
repre-
is
and
our care
"We
take
to
and Miniatures
Portraits
make
in
Cabotville
month we
in a
perfection."-
to
managing
(now
shall be
By Sep-
it
requires three
minutes sitting and we know positively that we can have an apparatus that will not require
to
be seen at
Moved
to Boston, 1841.
at present flattering.
probably
in the
Southworth
Our miniatures
to sister:
to
poses,
it
shall
and
in their unity
It is
produce
is
and
artist-
finest
from truth
in
the
is to be no departure
and representation of beauty, and
delineation
2:i
ting;
As
sit-
a result
Took landscapes,
each and
first, in
combinations. ...
20
thirty seconds."
more than
sitter
sight;
first
the Daguerreotype
the re-
"What is to be done is obliged to be done quickly," Southworth wrote. "The whole character of the sitter is to be read at
and
in
is
the day.
ever saw." 20
of our Likenesses
photographer
in the
sented light and shade, nicer by far than any Steel engraving you
Opened
"The superiority
sitter personally.
sult of
its
Champion of the Seas "under all sail by the wind;" the operating
room of the Massachusetts General Hospital; a schoolroom full of
girls.
Pioneered
in
America
in
On
landscapes,
etc.,
daguerreotypes in
seeing Gouraud's
painting and
my
books," he recollected. 21
Boston,
commenced daguerreotypy. As
in the business,
field
1840, "gave up
before me."
21
first
business card
who
when
the style
was changed
sister
to
Joseph
"Southworth
Nancy, who
special-
the firm not only operated a gallery, but ran an extensive business
daguerreotype
in
supplies:
To
22
the Southworth
little
dependence
to be
replied:
"Mr. Hawes
wants
to
know whether
if
you had
make
it
more
profitable at the
mines?" On returning
1
to Boston,
same
which he patented
until
is
put upon the future in any particular," 1 he wrote his wife in 1850.
& Co."
in
of the
as "A. S. Southworth
inch) daguerreotypes.
8%
whole-plate (6V2 x
plate
in 1855.
by photographers the country over who had long used similar devices; patent rendered invalid
Hawes continued
studio at
same
and
&
the
Hawes
Shaw
of the Massachusetts
family, 1937).
1851.
of Art,
New York
(Gift of
I.
N. P.
23
24
Mrs. James R. Vincent, Boston actress. Daguerreotype, about 1855. Society for the Preservation of
New England
Antiquities. Boston.
Sleeping baby. Daguerreotype, about 1850. Collection Ansel Adams, San Francisco.
25
(bottom
26
P. Stokes
Museum
of Art,
New York
Harriet Beecher Stowe, tuthor of Uncle Tom's Cabin. Daguerreotype, about 1850. The Metropolitan
&
the
Hawes
family).
Museum
of Art,
New York
(Gift of
I.
N.
1853.
27
28
John Quincy Adams. Daguerreotype, about 1848. The Metropolitan Museum of Art,
New York
(Gift of
I.
Hawes
family, 1937).
Museum
of Art,
New York
(Gift of
I.
Hawes
family).
29
Hm^H^HMflMi^B$i
^\
i \ v^
^"1
V^dnC^--*
.-L.
riL^
'
^*JL
1\
'Ipwj
n\
...,4
Iff
Js
'
^|
'
'a
:n
in
drydock, Boston. Daguerreotype, about 1850. Collection Richard Parker, Marblehead, Mass.
31
NADAR
Born
in Paris,
1820: real
were made
in
1858.
Became
spent in Lyons, where his father had a publishing house, and Paris,
49 men
failed.
To make
"Nadar." Settled
in Paris,
in
its
On
Champ
de
fields.
Nadar
broke both legs; his wife badly injured. Gave up ballooning, except
by
his
friend Henri
shocked by
friends,
this suggestion,
his artist
as
the
32
aerial
in
in
later
made
About 1886
his son
came
be-
scientist,
each caption with the words he spoke at time exposure was made;
published in four pages of Le journal
Illustre,
artists
taken
earliest
existing
examples
Throughout
his career
Quand
'fetais etudiant,
Monde
Was
The Nadar
better
known
oil
satirical
in Paris, 1910.
collection,
and
theatrical world,
is
now
pre-
33
34
Sirot, Paris.
in the
35
36
in
From
37
ALEXANDER GARDNER
Born in Paisley, Scotland, 1821. Trained in physics and chemistry;
became accomplished photographer. Believing in Robert Owen's
labor reforms
trade unions, education, socialist communities
came to United States in 1849 to found ideal community on the
Mississippi in Iowa. Returned to Glasgow to lecture, write, and enlist other settlers. Brought own family, 1856; on landing in New-
many
learned
Mathew
hired by
Opened
of
B. Brady.
famous
Civil
War
photographs: Lincoln
Antietam, the
at
In 1863 opened
own
At the outbreak of
hostilities
became so popular, and were so frequently pirated, that copyrighting them became essential. Brady maintained that the work of any
photographer in his employ was his to copyright in his name;
Gardner insisted that what a photographer did on his own time
with his own equipment belonged to him; he should copyright and
profit from the sale. On this they split; Gardner resigned.
Joined headquarters staff of General George McClellan as Official
Photographer to the Army of the Potomac; attached to U. S. Topographical Engineers, made copies of maps and documents. As "the
only artist who had free access to the Army and its Headquarters
at all times as well in active movements as in camp,"- he and the
best of the photographers who had worked under him at Brady's
O'Sullivan, Barnard, Woodbury, Foux, Gibson, his own brother
James, among others traveled with the army in their darkroom
wagons; the glass plates had to be flowed, sensitized, exposed and
News
and
also
to
At war's end,
Brady.
fifty
H.
two
published
10
views,
idea
the
at the
of furnishing
four
petition
days
in
later,
it,
Photographic
consecutive
collection.
Without wish-
is
.".
'
is
so advised
now
Financed
trip of
Peru; made
to
made stereographs
of prairies,
wagon
trains,
Made
rogues'
lost interest in
photog-
Washington
police, 1873.
Gradually
O'SULLIVAN
Born in New York City, probably around 1840. Learned photography at Brady's New York gallery; then worked as cameraman under
Alexander Gardner in Brady's Washington gallery. During Civil
War, served six months as First Lieutenant on Gen. E. L. Viele's staff;
ent of
Illus-
original 8 x
'
after
War Views
Washington for Brady, 1858; ran it so effihelped support more lavish New York gallery.
gallery in
TIMOTHY
last portrait
listed as official
in 1871.
Yet
who may
first
Picture,"
crew,
and
instructions to
"The
photograph independently,
down by
In 1867, '68, '69, photographed for the Surveys along the 40th
300 negatives. Wheeler declared, "A more unique series have hardh
been produced on this continent."-' Nearly all the negatives, including
those of the Grand Canyon itself, were ruined during the long journey
back down the Colorado, around to San Francisco and thence to
shell fragments.
graphic Sketchbook of
led
commanded
by
the
brilliant
side explorations
on his own,
Joined
Commander Thomas
to
0. Selfridge on the
first
38
brother of
Thomas Moran
New
now
nomad and
strange
cliff
Clarence King,
ury,
its
is
nearly
Washington.
lights.
the painter,
made
of his sur-
him
to the Treas-
at the
house of a relative
in Staten Island,
January, 1882.
O'Sullivan: Gen. U.
S.
Grant and
staff officers,
Massapomax Church,
Virginia.
May
21, 1864.
From
Congress, Washington, D. C.
39
40
Gardner:
Home
O'Sullivan:
41
42
Gardner: Ruins of arsenal, Richmond, Virginia. 1863. George Eastman House, Rochester, N. Y.
O'Sullivan
Quarters of
men
in
known
43
44
Camp
Canon de
Chelle,
New
45
MARGARET CAMERON
JULIA
Born
in Calcutta,
Pattle,
high
in India."-
official in
Her
wit, generosity, a
high hand
ascribed
to her.
Hay Cameron,
Educated
in
France and
of
to
her Annals of
ardour. ...
My
photograph.
."'
.
all
less
my
...
women;
into a
."'
.
by rushing
as
thus
of the
my
camera,
my
."-"
Of
I
man
taken
has
been
almost
portraits
finest
of
great
men and
style."'
man. The
embodiment of
the
"amateur
is
beautiful
absolutely
1870-75: illustrations
to poetry, includ-
theatricals."-
'
tourists
were safe
in a
Madonna. "Even more than photography," wrote an undoubted eyewas Mrs. Cameron's passion. Her household
staff was a dream of fair women.
She herself was charmingly,
hopelessly, pathetically plain and knew it."- 8 Dominated friends into
sitting for hours in rugs and berets. Tennyson, her most frequent
East,
46
suddenly the
if
In
as
is
and woebegone.
its
1866-70:
prayer."''
is
glory.
do
to
photograph
may
I'll
alive
first
longed to arrest
oured
you.
who had
many
to Freshwater, Isle
tells
2!>
of you."
Carlyle,
his portraits
is left
of
of the Pre-Raphaelite
became leader
see what
the most
liar
till
now.
and
their
in
denly decided they should leave for Ceylon; embarked with a cow
and two
to
coffins, in case
there.
Returned
briefly
types.
last
in
1879.
47
48
49
50
Mrs. Herbert Duckworth (later Mrs. Leslie Stephens), mother of Virginia Woolf. 1867. George Eastman House, Rochester, N. Y.
L*
4'r
4>h
of
51
52
Thomas
Carlyle. 1867.
Sir
53
in
Boyhood
English.
father's
educated
cine. Settled in
lives
medi-
in
Skimming through
art history
dis-
began
and
of the peasants
prints"
crowded from
made
floor to ceiling
life,
by "art photographs"
Started
senti-
"combination
slick
to
horrified to discover
costume.
in
based not on
it
With a painter
and
human
actual
to
fidelity
in real life
and
art.
Photographed
principle
real people
real landscape.
medals with
first
according to Helm-
vision,
his photographs,
and
into the
it
other graphic
be perfected,
medium;
let
in fact,
pendent
"should photography
any
to
in colours ever
frame, hung on
mended two new
and a long
and
installed
by
picture per
artists.
Recom-
photographer's
photography as an
supervision,
as
printing
mediums worthy
of
art.
bigger
bombshell:
Naturalistic
"To you
and
him
then,
is
states that
doubt nature as a
to
who
"conversations with a
scientific first principle
ask an explanation of
not nature
Driffield,
came a still
The Death of
in 1890,
black-bordered pamphlet.
Photography he
as Whistler said
of Hurter
In
my
conduct, art
fatally limited.
."
all-vital
to
doubt
powers of selection
He withdrew
all
remaining
and
for art:
one
to be exhibited
inde-
tography
art: 1. Simplicity of
as scientists use
of the landscape in
which such
life
is
lived." 31
Its
forty
But even he could not stop what he had started. The idea of photography as an art
and
in its
own
photographers
to
and
"uncrowned king"
of
com-
in
raphy, and
literary fallacies
Competition, awarded
Died, 1936.
first
in
its
The
54
Stieglitz.
mentalizing peasant
Life,
Germany, Alfred
is
hibitions
the
in
now
at
phibian
cousin to Ralph
first
Massachusetts. After
in
artistic
photog-
his photographs.
known or unknown:
the
it
list
Brassi".
Worked on
55
56
Slippery
PathWinter
Scene, Norfolk. Photogravure in East Anglian Life, 1888. George Eastman House, Rochester, N. Y.
Gunner Working Up
to
Museum
of
Modern
Art,
New
York.
57
nr'rit
iiJi
print, 1886.
Norfolk Cottages. Photogravure in East Anglian Life, 1888. George Eastman House, Rochester, N. Y.
"
!
58
Waiting
Platinum
print. 1886.
59
ALFRED STIEGLITZ
Born of German immigrants
in
1864. Father achieved a fortune modest but sufficient for six chil-
1,
dren;
retired;
home
the
at
brownstone
built
in
artists,
where
Europe for
five years.
to
photograph
in sheer
Hermann
Vogel,
rooms next
own
to his
at
known
galleries.
as "291,"
Stieglitz
raphy as an
Hill
To
art.
credulous
until
nevertheless, to push
work
Earliest
thetic.
frontiers of
related
to
Was
see
P. H.
made
in
es-
and
1887 the
Italy in
first
photo-
"amateur"
an
(or
"creative
and disinterested")
shocked,
in first
and
last
labor
Marin, Hartley,
first
Loved
Stein.
Dada-Surrealist
first
manifestation.
1890;
re-
Alone,
he poured
into
his
own photography
Made
last
conditions
made
mem-
spectacular lantern
slides
tographer. Scandalized publisher by sending out rejection slips reading, "Technically perfect; pictorially rotten!"
Stieglitz
to eye.
In
1896,
when
Made
its
center of
local
clubs into
photography
in
in
the
America. Discovered
brilliant
un-
phenomenal
projects and
in
portraits
on
the
twenty years
just recovering
series
watercolors
in
younger photographers
in
the
New York;
was
now
mature
medium
of
great
Some
unusual
60
for
sitters;
at
first,
sometimes
later,
adding equally
common and
available
equivalents of complex
Meanwhile,
in
making
experiences.
making exhibitions
An American
Place
1925, opened
The
In-
high corner in an
Adams and
artists the
photographers Ansel
"How much
hit
his
by club members,
in
power,
withdrew
Ex-
of a relationship.
portrait
in
he made hun-
in
Recognized, in the
photography
Worked
time,
first
magazine "291,"
in
Zayas on
years.
the
for
satire;
Found American
amateur photography flourishing but vapid. Would have fled back
to Europe if a friend had not challenged him to try one of the new
hand cameras, then advertised as "detective" and despised as
signed, 1895; thenceforth lived on small income.
in-
sent
starting
movement
his
later
Emerson was
art,
unattainable. Continued,
is
New
asked,
all
in
turn.
are you
frail,
came
a kind of shrine.
He was
few days
later,
he died.
1907. George
61
62
Venetian Boy. 1887. George Eastman House, Rochester, N. Y. (Alfred Stieglitz Collection).
1893.
The Museum
of
Modern
Art,
New
York.
63
*.
~~
y*
J^T
64
The Ferry
If.
Y.
The
65
66
Museum
of Art,
New York
New
York.
67
68
print, 1918.
Stieglitz Collection),
Museum
of Art,
69
70
Equivalent. About 1931. George Eastman House, Rochester, N. Y. (Alfred Stieglitz Collection).
Georgia O'Keeffe. Palladium print, 1922. George Eastman House, Rochester, N. Y. (Alfred Stieglitz Collection).
71
72
Stieglitz Collection).
Apples and Gable, Lake George. 1922. George Eastman House, Rochester, N. Y. (Alfred
Stieglitz Collection).
73
74
Hands
Dorothy
of Art,
75
EDWARD STEICHEN
Born Luxembourg, 1879; christened Eduard. Parents came to U. S.
in 1881
settled in Hancock, Michigan. Father worked in mines,
mother made hats. Sent to school in Milwaukee at 9; first attempts
at drawing excited such praise from his teacher that his mother
;
moved
family
artist;
to
Milwaukee.
was producing
it.
We
high
pulled
all
new world
me." 1 Locked
to
was apprenticed to lithography company; continued in spare time to paint and to photograph portraits, picnic
groups, etc. Organized and was first president of Milwaukee Art
to designing posters.
His paintings
of a photography
show
Chicago Art
at the
Institute,
Day included
hung most
New
London, The
each the
at
$5
first
my
I
get
to the jury,
ing personalities
his
New York
return to
in
raphy
Work No.
2 devoted
to
process, Autochrome. Stieglitz helped Steichen obtain then unheardof fees for reproductions.
Went back
art
France
to
movement;
in
in a
new
"291" drawings by
designs
stage
at
1911:
first
break of World
and
Stieglitz,
threw out
all
War
el
New
York. In 1917, he
On
...
If
monstrous
Army
Refused by
I,
Air Service as
in
The
55
officers,
command
of all
from
Returned to Voulangis.
When
his gardener
felt
that the
get obsolete.
." 34
Road to
1944, Power
command
Placed in
Supervised
of
Museum
all
film,
became
director,
in the Pacific
on U.S.S. Lexing-
photography
Museum
department,
of
tive
getting supplies.
that
and sources
in
to get life
entered
photograph war as
men never
of Art, 1938.
pretty
War
Army; assigned
Museum
Commissioned Lieutenant Commander, organized aviation photographic unit of 7 young men; stressed "the importance of photographing the men
the ships and planes, they would be obsolete
making
S.
retired." 34
When America
really
actuality,
Art.
the U.
in
...
alive.
of photographs, Baltimore
we could
1947:
in
1938] and
1,
photography.
in color
".
Modern
more time
First Lieutenant
76
management
It was turnsame thing to the point where it became merchanjust couldn't handle the thing any more so I closed up
Made
One-man show
photographer." Camera
Fair.
level.
shop [January
work. Founded with Stieglitz the Little Galleries of the PhotoSecession ("291") and designed the decor. In 1907 he and Stieglitz
first
new
to
photographers
to his
Chaplin.
lest
by
human
dise.
hailed
accepted them.
in
publications,
fashion photographs
On
Conde Nast
who
New York;
Returned to
for the
bloodstream.
made
tion in
of
...
approach.
abroad,
opened
greatest
pictures, or technically
felt
I
.
that
."'
photography
perfect
itself
pictures,
going out
was producing a
at
posi-
home and
of Man, which
Modern Art, January, 1955. Hailed as the
photographic show ever made, it brought tears and ac-
at
Museum
of
was
when
it
print, 1923.
77
78
Rodin
Le Penseur. Gum
Hammarskiold, Stockholm.
J.
Museum
of Art,
New York
79
80
The
of Art,
New York
Museum
of Art,
New York
81
82
Museum
of
Modern
Art,
New
York.
Museum
of
Modern
Art,
New
York.
83
84
The Empire
The Museum
of
Modern
Art,
New
York.
fe
HT*j
HKJ
~\WJ MJ^'vJXttf'r'l'
Homeless
";
i." 1
Women The
'
!!
fl
B* <
"tf-
?"
j|
C-V^--V".*i^M
85
86
Isadora Duncan
House, Rochester, N. Y.
Qk
V^P^^l
^^VMMF-T^
ffl
K&-
Lotus. 1922.
87
89
90
for Vogue.
91
EUGENE ATGET
showing
Born Jean Eugene Auguste Atget in Bordeaux, France, 1856. Parwhen he was very young; an uncle, a stationmaster, hrought
him up. Bordeaux being a port, going to sea was logical; the young
after
found his eye for the strange and accidental so astonishing he published four of them in La Revolution Surrealisle, 1926. Sometime
ents died
life
thick, Atget
and the outskirts of Paris until, when he was about 40, he realized
companion could live by the stage any longer.
to adopt;
had a
papers as
official
photographer
'.
and painters, and did some painting, rather primitive, himself. Decided finally, around 1898, according to Andre Calmettes, actor and
could not be saved. For twenty years he had lived on nothing but
pher of
which,
Paris or
its
ambition was
Im-
mense subject." 3 Atget got a camera, and, bag on back, heavy with
plates, set forth. Selling was difficult; finally he sold a print for
15 francs. "Atget encouraged was Atget saved."" He came to know
architects, historians, editors, and painters such as Braque and
Utrillo. Being shown paintings which men like Utrillo based on his
photographs doubtless gave him pleasure. The playwright Victorien
Sardou told him what ancient mansions, churches, shops, streets
were doomed to destruction; Atget, with his old view camera, 18 x 24
centimeters, and the slow lens that didn't cover the plate when he
raised the front, got there in early dawn; even so people passing left
''
out.
He was making
World War
I;
room whose
Then came
or nothing, and when
little
all
photo-
monuments
stroyed or
de-
a connoisseur
the
brothels;
Atget found the job annoying. Once he was arrested, and freed only
92
these
was absolute.
This intransigence
and from
it
came marvels.
personage a
la
more
that strange
Balzac, always in
hat, his
hands rough-
ened and stained by acids. He was one of the most curious men
have met ... a strong and courageous
maker." 3
artist,
last
an admirable image
"'
life,
Man
Berenice Abbott,
Ray's technical
its
primitive
came
out of her
all
graphs relating
still,
bits of
that several times she climbed the four flights to his small atelier-
and
milk, bread
own
of
made on the old printing-out paper. More than anyshe has made what Atget saw available to the world.
toned prints he
else,
New
one
his
Uniforms, Les Halles, Paris. About 1910. George Eastman House, Rochester, N. Y.
93
94
Fruit Stall,
Rue Mouffetard,
Paris.
Women, Rue
Asselin, Paris.
95
96
Brothel, Versailles.
The
97
JH*****^
\
ECOLOIUTIOM
OU CMMIUX
Kwocurrt oi.u
98
Coiffeur,
Avenue de
l'Observatoire, Paris.
Cafe "La Rotonde," Boulevard Montparnasse, Paris. About 1920. George Eastman House, Rochester, N. Y.
99
100
Lampshade Peddler,
Paris.
The
101
PAUL STRAND
Born in New York City, 1890; of Bohemian descent. Given first
camera at twelve. At Ethical Culture School, studied photography
under Lewis Hine, then just beginning to photograph the immigrants arriving at Ellis Island. Went with Hine and group to "291,"
where Stieglitz was exhibiting work of the Photo-Secession; found
beauty and variety of photographs a revelation; decided, at seven-
in little
the bay of
Plains, directed
own work
comment; learned
accept
its
same dynamics
to use the
to Stieglitz for
photography and
in
to
symbols
and cinematographer
new
Eisenstein with
cameraman
Moscow
to
USSR
film; refused.
for U. S.
documentary
in
to U. S.; worked as a
The Plow That Broke the
Returned
film,
company
to
series.
1937:
produce documentary
films,
fine
gravure
text
The work
New
"In 1915
really
is
brutally direct.
expression of today." 37
New
articles
hang exhibitions and found galleries. In personal work was photographing machines and the impact of New York City on suburb and
By 1926 could
for Hollywood.
forms
proach: "I do not seek the special moment, the special expression
or activity." 1 Avoided monuments; lingered in
little
towns and
re-
to
open as a
and
afford a
summer
1927-28,
forces.
in
in
Colorado; realization of
Maine,
worked
close
to
his
Italian
gested
is
one thing
described
by
critic
poetry."
moment
of perfect balance
what he
is
clouds,
expressed.
later described
1930-32: to
New Mexico;
Un
the
film
scenarist
photograph people;
it
is
another to
make
others
summer Strand
started
work
as collaborator, on
"Land
of Bent Grass")
Paris,
working on
of what
do,
title,
now
lems which
deeper realization of earth and sky
it
to
the
he
in the
collaborator,
Luzzara, where
Strand found
bock,
102
New
inter-
room
men, waves,
in
Art,
book
series
New England
in
natural
Modern
of
preting
farmland.
man
photography.
still
Museum
S.
with Stieglitz, battled for art ideals in the press, lectured on "pure"
photographed
civil
photography, wrote
for Frontier Films by Strand, released. 1943: small films for war-
and face up
life itself
to the
presents.
my own
is
it
last,
living near
"...
be ever more
haven't
critical
Wall
Street,
New
103
104
Blind
Woman. Platinum
print, 1915.
of Art,
New York
1916. George
105
106
The
Lathe. 1923.
107
108
109
New
Mexico. 1931.
Ill
112
Town
Hall,
New
England. 1946.
113
114
*-
-*rV
Italy. 1953.
115
117
EDWARD WESTON
Born Highland Park,
Illinois,
New England
escape into
Dreamed
business.
instead
becoming a
of
trackstar,
Mary
sitters
him
in
to
errand
sister
visit
themes
panied by statements on pure photography and the "straight" approach. In 1931, with Ansel Adams and Willard Van Dyke, founded
Group f.64, of photographers dedicated to the same ideals.
in
California.
he longed
to
Stayed. Surveyed for railroads, bogus and real; then got postcard
face.
rapher and so earn a living with tools he could use for his personal
May
own
In 1911 opened
now
studio in Tropico,
Glendale, California.
Very successful, especially with babies, dancers. Trying to photograph his baby sons, he became entranced by possibilities of natural light. Began winning prizes, salon and professional, national
and international, for his "high-key" portraits and unusual use of
natural light
spots, shimmers, haze, dramatic shadows. Became
modern
exhibition of
painting,
To
to
New
York. Met
art.
window.
in a
photographed
set
of amazement,
who confirmed
his
new
began
own work,
these,
to
technique,
in
his day-book.
tional heights are easily attained; peace and time are not
"EmoOne
To
1941: was photographing through the South and East for Limited
Edition Club's Leaves of Grass, by Walt Whitman,
shells,
made massive
from
cities,
peppers, cabbages
he moved to Carmel
one-man retrospective
while Willard
it
also
Edward Weston,
led
in
storm-twisted
cypresses,
first
one-man
1932.
of him,
Weston
its
for opening
Modern
Art. 1947:
An American
Photog-
intricately
organized
Made
photographs
last tre-
at
Point
Presentation
of
My
in Paris
retrospectives
Brett,
Many
shown
produced 50th
him
supervision by Brett.
York, 1930,
of
New
came East
Museum
sidered
book, Art of
at the
118
Lobos, 1948.
in
first flash
to create.
first
own power
for California
steel mills in
a primitive people,
given
show
of
elemental in his
fruit.
fraction
time
who
theory
To Mexico, 1923;
to
realizing only a
test
to
close
direction.
century
ing." 1938: Fellowship renewed; final journeys, while son Neil built
Saw
difficult
mourned by fans
First landscapes
to
featuring
work; eight
sets
printed
under his
119
PULQUES o
rLAS
LOS
DE
120
121
122
Shell. 1927.
123
124
125
126
Dunes,
OceanoEvening.
1936. George
127
128
129
130
California. 1940.
131
132
133
ERICH SALOMON
Born
Berlin,
in
1886.
Early
interests:
zoology
and
carpentry.
War
it's
isn't
important
photographed by Salomon?
at all!" 35'
French during the Battle of the Marne; prisoner of war for four
odd
them
jobs, including
employment
in publicity
few months
later
1%
plates
first
Ermanox,
mini-
for glass
gadgeteer
he
devised for
which
billboards
he
Ullstein
the
all
book
Beriihmte
at
Mann and
his
fitted
who wants
to
gets his
time as a freelance.
When Holland
to
trip
Specialized
the shutter
in
photographing,
without
supplementary
lighting,
Won
to set
up his
posure
tions,
camera
134
in
deliberated:
in
unbewachten
Augenblicken
,
with candid
Zeitgenossen
for
so. When the Lord Chief Justice saw the picwas forgiven. Visited America, 1930: first European
photographer allowed to work in the White House. Published, 1931,
tures,
editor called
a constant battle, a
game only
Last heard of on
at
went
May
hunting, he
battle for
if
left
in hiding.
24, 1944
Was
en route
for Holland.
extermination
camp
Auschwitz.
After the war, his negatives found in Holland
a chicken yard
by
some
buried in
1956.
First
Y.,
Visit of
German statesmen
to
Rome:
135
(top) Fritjof Nansen, explorer and philanthropist with a British journalist. League of Nations, Geneva. 1928.
136
Amsterdam.
at his
Hunter, Amsterdam.
137
138
Hunter, Amsterdam.
to
The United
States
Justice
Hughes
presiding. 1932.
Spectators in the gallery of the League of Nations, Geneva. 1930. Collection Peter Hunter, Amsterdam.
139
DOROTHEA LANGE
Born Hoboken. New Jersey, 1895. Started
become
to
a teacher but
and Walker Evans were among the first hired. Reproduced in thousands of newspapers and magazines, these photographs roused the
and
at
for
Francisco, lost
all
her money;
got a job
a camera store
in
she stayed.
Opened a
portraits.
in
concentrat-
still
summer
middle of a thunderstorm,
failed. In the
I
had
to
people,
do was
me
to
what
that
to take pictures
all
came
"it
who
people
didn't." 41
watched
the streets;
into
One
camera down
of the streets a
enough
new dimension:
in the streets
earlier,
to take a picture of a
wanted
man
to take a picture of a
worked
".
These
include
There "her eye for the essence of a situation" caught the attention
of Paul Taylor, professor of economics at the University of Califor-
nia,
to use the
camera as
a research tool. In
The
in
jobless
in
debt,
wanted
roots were
the streets
torn from
jalopies,
all
torn out.
hard
had
silent;
to
photograph a proud
to get
my camera
listened.
"Their
man
of
stylization.
traits
how poor
they
Taylor discovered
Lange's "ear was as good as her eye," and put the bitter simple
statements she heard people say beside their photographs
report.
in
his
Security Administration)
Roy
140
(later the
Farm
Lange
photographers and
has
him
California:
in
since
They inspired
photojournalism.
to
borrowed
"I
Dorothea for
is
You do
not find
her portrait gallery the bindle-stiffs, the drifters, the tramps, the
straight
in the eye.
They have
worked
in the sun,
same report
from Lorentz, and used it as an index to visual authenticity.
In 1939, Lange and Taylor, who were now married, published a
summation of their reports in words and pictures, An American
Exodus: A Record of Human Erosion.
ing to direct John Steinbeck's Grapes of Wrath, got the
In 1941,
it
after the
into
World War
II.
Continued
to
ference
it
easy; asked,
it
"How
can a
establishing the
now on
Concentrated
relationships:
against a
were
the landless
photographed but
came across
of
of
photographer take
background
like that.
their
generation
bloodstream
the
into
the Plains,
influenced
passed
after-
it
which
in
noon
considerations. First
hands
my own
off!
people
approach
Whatever
Whatever
its
try to
show
Countryman,
New
California.
photograph
as having
dam
place.
photograph,
The
is
a sense of
41
1954. with Ansel
the past or in the present."
to
do not
I
try to
a sense of
its
position in
Mormon
Villages, essay
The Last of a
Valley, an area
site,
The
White Angel Breadline, San Francisco. 1932. George Eastman House, Rochester, N. Y.
141
142
Tractored Out, Childress County, Texas. 1938. George Eastman House, Rochester, N. Y.
143
144
Uprooted, San Joaquin Valley, California. 1936. George Eastman House, Rochester, N. Y.
145
146
California. 1955.
147
148
Field
Worker
in
Freedom
of Religion:
149
WALKER EVANS
Born
St.
Andover,
Missouri,
Louis,
at
1903.
Educated
at
Phillips
Academy,
to
Modern
New England:
these exhibited at
Museum
To Cuba, 1932:
New
of
The
York, 1932.
Resettlement Administration
(later
Farm
Security Administration)
homes and
times,
150
shown
comment or necessary
contemporary
unique
show
field of the
photographer. ...
It is
for
him
to fix
and
stratifications, their
contrasts.
The
its
facts
One-man
exhibition, the
Museum
of
Modern
Art,
New
York, 1938:
Now
Praise
Famous Men,
lies
it
may
seem,
left
untouched, no
Now
44
151
2M i m
ft
&
if
152
1936.
AJLVfc
New
York. 1929.
153
154
Now
Praise
Garage
in
155
156
WL-*
The Grave
157
158
Bed (1931)
Maine Pump.
1933.
The Museum
of
Modern
Art,
New
York.
159
HENRI CARTIER-BRESSON
Born
Chanteloup,
in
Had
father.
France,
Norman mother,
1908, of
for
how
to learn
only
make
to
taps to build up a rhythm and align the nail with the wood. Then,
much more
nail forcefully
Parisian
at first
in."
it
17
ously,
at
Man
by
influenced
first
by Atget. 1931,
Ray, then
to
years as prisoner of war in Germany; escaped twice, was recaptured; succeeded the third time, in 1943, and joined his wife on a
on return
to
Had
in.
contracted black-
all
pounce, determined to
'trap' life
ing.
Above
all,
found
it."
some
my
before
itself
was
situation that
eyes." 3
in the confines
1933: to
in the
company
and
him
left
close to stranded.
Walker Evans
at Julien
1936: returned
on
film, Partie
dancer.
New York;
to Life.
"What does
photo-reportage.
of stories that
a truth. This
is
an apple
slices like
We
in
a 'picture story'
have
to
pie.
There's no
as possible:
subject
have.
"Approach
is still life.
.
When
tenderly, gently
in
is
in the water.
it,
160
it.
way you
looks at
it.
it
we should
It's
as
to
interesting because
closer
and closer
contact sheets
may
little
Modern
Art,
New York;
At
sometimes on
assignment.
point,
that
still
regarded
shift
of an
automobile." 16
In
New
York,
in
owned and
"What
is
something
Magnum
not recognition,
to other people,
We
have
a great responsibility
see.
communication
It's
is
important because there is somebody who reprewhen we may be thousands and thousands of
is
is
most important
is
that a picture
which
is
In
is
China,
The
tone, the
in
in
1949 Gandhi's
Burma. Indonesia,
Iran,
"Seeing
Egypt
in slices of
one-hundredth
all
you have
wait until
My
if
of
painting,
the
if
all
with a
subject, corrects
even
see
tiptoe
these
Museum
at the
country,
funeral, for
thrown a stone
... on
the subject
man show
1946: one
intonation
to
evoke a situation,
War
war
of prisoners of
France.
to
up
exhibited with
Levy Gallery.
Made documentary
War, Return
that
U. S. Office of
film for
Information,
and Spain;
Italy
process
made
In Marseilles,
eye and
since
it
my
false
you
to a
move-
be compared to
second
Returned
{Image a
la
Europe,
Sauvette)
to Another, Paris,
New
Published
1950.
Paris and
New
1
a silkworm."
To Moscow, 1954;
Paris,
at the
161
163
164
Abruzzi. 1953.
165
)6
The
first
167
168
Rice
fields in
Menangkabau
1948.
169
170
Bargeman on Seine
River. 1957.
Lourdes. 1958.
171
ANSEL ADAMS
Born San Francisco, 1902, of New England descent. During
his
childhood, the family fortune in timber and ships lost through succession of fires and shipwrecks;
Henry Adams,
of
school;
perplexed parents
to use
and demonstrate,
to joy of exhibi-
Had
already taught
14, visited
its
my
life
light,
mood
space,
be almost painful.
to
tion
Harbor, in a book, Born Free and Equal, and an exhibiManzanar, both 1944; poetic use of environment and affirmative
In 1946, started
fession at the
first
same
Guggenheim Fellowships which enabled him
Was
services;
after Pearl
on music as profession.
with
18, decided
now
."
space for heart and imagination.
During War, served as civilian consultant to armed
country
At
of
approach.
At
he began to master
Disliked
in
tinued. Early
photograph
at their
States,
The grand
land-
which he presents
his
series of Basic
Photo-Books,
in
unusual art patron; next morning Bender planned and raised funds
System,"
for
Adams'
first
and
mountaineer;
in
Yosemite
New Mexico
1929, to
Mary
Austin, John
Taos Pueblo,
revelation.
Mary
his first
text
by
stale
trol, scientific
."
is
an attitude
a kind of vision of
what
nals,
Little
Annunciation!" In 1931,
like the
tinued
Modern
tography as an
fall
Art,
New
art; served as
York, the
first
department of pho-
1946.
In 1941,
Interior;
regions,
as
rupted by World
172
to U. S.
Department of the
War
II
New
Mexico. Project
inter-
interest con-
Northern California,
all
and-photographs: This
is
the
Information
in press
1958).
Serves as consultant on quality and performance of photographic
materials to Polaroid
Museum
Rain.
Pageant of History
text
My
My
articles,
own
My Camera in the
Camera on Point Lobos. Illustrated John Muir's jourYosemite and the Sierra Nevada, and Mary Austin's Land of
Weston's
In
Fair,
of mind.
Valley.
In
now
Brought out Portfolio One and Portfolio Two: The National Parks
much contemporary
art
"peripheral;"
believes
art
must
to see
and
means
And
faith." 10
173
174
175
176
Alfred Stieglitz in
An American
Mendocino County,
California. 1950.
177
JH^HH
Moonrise, Hernandez,
New
Mexico. 1941.
179
180
Edward Weston.
1950. George
Mono
181
Sierra
California. 1944.
183
184
185
Mt. Williamson
186
Clearing
Storm. 1944.
V
*
Sim?"**
%*
^-
A NOTE ON TECHNIQUES
From 1839
to
way
in
1850s to
the late
Around
1880
gelatino-bromide
emulsion,
invented
1871
in
by
or film.
of printing processes
variety
GUM
col-
graphic
arts
An
in
this
The process
graving.
is
reproduction
is
of
made
is
infrequent.
calotype.
Fox Talbot
COLLODION
method
in
England
COLLODION
PROCESS,
of
in
making
The
negative.
in
1851.
exposure to
practical
first
England
1851
in
col-
known
as
"gum
When
surface was
solution,
had
to
while
thus forming
light-sensitive
The
halides.
plates
to carry a
in 1839. Silvered
direct
positive
process
gum
is
for
and give
it
a second
scale,
invented
by Jacques
In-
light-sensitive
in
On
within 15 minutes,
darkroom with him wherever he went. Bewhen gelatin dry plates were perfected.
had
daguerreotype.
all
into silver-nitrate
wet;
field
made
silver
came
Louis
was plunged
with a
it
the colloid
by coating
light-sensitive
to
the
fumes of
salt solution
tone.
188
it
to describe
a stereoscope
SELECTED BIBLIOGRAPHY
GENERAL
siecle. Paris:
House, 1956.
Taft, Robert.
New
York: The
Salomon. Hunter,
32-37, 47.
Safranski,
New
Gernsheim.
Press, 1948.
Art, 1947.
"First
American Masters
91-98, 168-72.
New
York: Har-
Stieglitz. Frank,
Alfred Stieglitz:
New
York: The
Museum
of
Modern
York: The
Museum
of
Modern
&
others, eds.
America
City, N. Y.:
Doubleday,
1957),
104ff.
(Jan
MONOGRAPHS
The Fountain
II
Press, 1926.
(June,
1958), 124-36.
New
Art, 1945.
of
189
SOURCES OF QUOTATIONS
1.
2.
3.
Conversation or unpublished
letter.
Not
Weston,
Edward, "Photography
XXXVII
Pictorial,"
Camera
5.
24.
25.
Strand, Paul,
of
LXX
Photography,
hall,
On
in
My
27.
28.
Stieglitz,
Alfred,
"Why
Newhall, Nancy,
VI, No.
12.
14.
ed.,
On
Newhall,
of
33.
Emerson, P.
"An
II.,
Emerson, P. H. Pictures
The Amateur
1885), 431.
II (Oct. 23,
Anglian
of East
London: Sampson
Life.
New
York: Harcourt,
Infinity,
film for
NBC. Quoted by
Photography," Photo
36.
in
Kirstein,
Taft, Robert.
Lincoln
New York:
pres-
permission.
35.
TV
"The Magazine 291 and The Steerage," Twice-AYear, Double No. VIII-IX (1942), 131-36.
Stieglitz, Alfred,
1879), 116.
7,
Photography
Photography.)
(1958), 1-50.
13.
(Mar.
XXVI
10.
Photographer,
Press, 1948.
My Camera
Fair
Photography.)
Weston, Edward.
7.
1870,"
Craft,
6.
315-23.
On Photography.)
26.
4.
),
37.
1938.
Stieglitz.
Alfred,
86, 90.
"Our
Illustrations,"
38.
Henri Cartier-Bresson.
La France de
profil.
Lausanne: La
1947.
39.
17.
"A Conversation with Henri Cartier-Bresson," PopuPhotography, XLI (September, 1957), 130-32.
Dobell, Byron,
lar
18.
Adams, Ansel. Introduction to his Portfolio One: Twelve Photographic Prints. San Francisco, 1948.
19.
tographs
in
at
Newhall,
New
Stokes,
I.
XXIII
41.
XVI (Dec,
Metropolitan
Museum
43.
1941,
I,
Camera with
a Purpose," U. S.
93-98.
Hawes, Josiah Johnson, "Stray Leaves from the Diary of the Oldest
Professional Photographer in the World," Photo Era, XVI (Feb.
44.
46.
S.,
"An Address
to the
National Photographic
York:
Museum
of
Mod-
Now
Praise
Famous Men.
Muir, John and Adams, Ansel. Yosemite and the Sierra Nevada.
Boston: Houghton Mifflin Company, 1948.
Southworth, Albert
New
News Annual
of Art, 1939.
45.
190
Photography,
Salomon, Erich. Beriihmte Zeitgenossen in unbewachten Augenblicken. Stuttgart, J. Engelhorns Nachf., 1931.
1906), 104-107.
23.
Popular
22.
Salomon,"
On Photography.)
21.
"Dr.
40.
Camera
20.
Kurt,
Safranski,
Adams. Ansel.
My Camera
in the
Mifflin
Company,
1950.
INDEX
Titles
and references
to titles of
photographs are in
italics.
Abruzzi, 165
Edinburgh, 20
Massapomax Church, 39
Antietam, 39
Mexico, D.
11,
54-59
Mariposa, 173
120
F.,
Mono
Moonrise, Hernandez,
Bargeman on Seine
Moorehouse, Marion, 91
Morgan, J. Pierpont, 79
River, 170
Worker
New
Mexico, 178-79
Baudelaire, Charles, 37
Field
Bed, 158
Fishwife, Newhaven, 21
Flatiron Building, 80
Aft.
Fort Sedgwick, 43
Bernhardt, Sarah, 36
Mussolini, 135
Nansen,
Black Canon, 44
Blind
Woman, 104
in
Nadar,
Rue Mouffetard,
Bloch, Ernest, 10
Fruit Stall,
Boston Athenaeum, 27
Garage
Garbo, Greta, 89
Mathew
Brady,
in
Paris, 94
of,
167
11,
Clearing Storm,
186-87
32-37
Fritjof, 136
Newhaven, Scotland, 21
Niagara, Steamship, 30-31
Norfolk Cottages, 58
Gardner, Alexander,
B., 11
Williamson
38-40, 42
11,
Norman, Dorothy, 74
Gaspe, 108
Brothel, Versailles, 96
Gathering Waterlilies, 55
Gautier, Theophile, 34
Cafe
"La
Rotonde,"
Boulevard
Montparnasse,
Paris, 99
Calotype, 188
Palladiotype, 188
New
Canon de
8, 11,
46-53
Chelle, 45
Grant, Gen. U.
Thomas, 52
York, 153
S.,
Parthenon, The, 86
39
Gum
Pepper No.
Chariot, Jean, 8
Harvest of Death, A, 41
Carlyle,
Penny Picture
Print, 188
Chaplin, Charles, 90
30, 123
Photogravure, 188
Pigment
Print, 188
Clay, Henry, 26
Platinotype, 188
Henning, John, 15
Hernandez, New Mexico, 178-79
Colorado River, 44
Hill,
Crane, Hart, 9
Rigby, Mrs., 18
Daguerreotype, 188
Daumier, Honor e, 34
Coiffeur,
Avenue de
I'Observatoire, Paris, 98
David Octavius,
11,
11,
22-31
14-21
Pulqueria, Mexico, D.
120
F.,
New
Richmond,
Va.,
42
Delacroix, Eugene, 35
Lange, Dorothea,
Roosevelt, Theodore, 82
Demuth, Charles, 66
Dore, Gustave, 33
11,
Lotus, 87
140^19
Mexico, 110
Va.,
42
Lourdes, 171
Sierra
191
Versailles, 96
Swanson, Gloria, 88
Terminal, The, 63
Wall Street,
Terry, Ellen, 51
Webster, Daniel, 29
Town
Stereograph, 188
Sleeping Baby, 25
Slippery Path,
56
Spiritual America, 72
11,
60-75; portrait
of, 83,
Hall,
New
8, 12,
102-117
Venetian Boy, 62
192
England, 113
176
Strand, Paul,
22-31
New
York, 103
Westchester County, N.
Farmhouse, 151
Y.,
12.
118-33; portrait
of,
180
editor of
ART
IN
AMER
is
urn's first
associated
with
some
TOGRAPHY, along
for
with
numerous
prominent magazines
in
articles written
Congress
Hall, Berlin.
CASTLE BOOKS
Distributed by
BOOK SALES,
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mras of
PHOTGCMPHY
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ATGET
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STRAND
WESTON
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STIEGLITZ
CARTIER-BRESSON
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ADAMS