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Photography by Edward C. Robison III

The Steerage

One of the most iconic images in the history of photography, The Steerage represents a shift in perception and way of seeing for the medium. Although Stieglitz was the leading advocate for Pictorialism—a trend in photography that favored soft focus, romanticized subjects, and artistic, manipulative printing practices—Stieglitz as an artist never fully practiced the methods in his own work. This image marked the official shift from his tendency toward a natural atmospheric haze, as seen in The Hand of Man, to a focus on elemental shapes, figures, highlights, shadow, and bisected visual planes. This early shift to Modernist seeing and thinking is what kept Stieglitz on the forefront of artistic trends.

ArtistaAlfred Stieglitz(1864-1946)
Fecha1907, printed before 1913
MedioPhotogravure
Dimensiones20 3/4 x 16 3/4 x 1 1/8 in. (52.7 x 42.5 x 2.9 cm)
Firmadol.l., in margin, in pencil: The Steerage 1907 / Alfred Stieglitz
Línea de créditoAlfred Stieglitz Collection, Co-owned by Fisk University, Nashville, Tennessee, and Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art, Bentonville, Arkansas
ClasificaciónPrint
ProcedenciaArtist; by bequest to Georgia O’Keeffe (Artist’s wife), New York, NY, 1946; to Fisk University, Nashville, TN, 1949; to Fisk University, Nashville, TN, and Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art, Bentonville, AR, as co-owners, 2012
En exhibiciónNo
The Steerage20.8 × 16.8 in.Tennis Ball2.7 in. diameter

This artwork's face covers about 48× the area of a tennis ball.Drawn to the same scale.