Stieglitz A Legacy of Light Katherine Hoffman

Format:
Hardback
Publication date:
14 Jun 2011
ISBN:
9780300134452
Dimensions:
400 pages: 270 x 220 x 43mm
Illustrations:
200 black-&-white illustrations + 80 colour images

In "Stieglitz: A Beginning Light," Katherine Hoffman presented an account of the early years of the career of Alfred Stieglitz (1864-1946) and of his European roots. Now, she offers a compelling portrait of his life and his art from 1915 to 1946, focusing on his American works, issues of identity, and the rise of modernism in America. Hoffman explores Stieglitz's roles as photographer, editor, writer, and gallery director; how they intersected with his personal life - including his marriage to artist Georgia O'Keeffe - and his place in the cultural milieu of the twentieth century. Excerpts from previously unpublished correspondence between Stieglitz and O'Keeffe reveal the fervour and complexity of their relationship as well as his passion for photography and modern art and his ongoing struggle to have photography recognized as an established artistic medium. These letters, along with his work as an editor and writer of short articles, illuminate Stieglitz's literary side. Hoffman also discusses some of his lesser-known photographs, giving a new perspective on his total oeuvre. "Stieglitz: A Legacy of Light" is generously illustrated with 300 images, among them Stieglitz's final photos of Lake George and New York City and also Hoffman's own pictures taken in the places where he worked. This intriguing, beautifully written book separates the photographer's true personality from the myths surrounding him and highlights his lasting legacy: the works he left behind.

Katherine Hoffman is Professor of Fine Arts, St. Anselm College, and the author of several previous books, including two on Georgia O'Keeffe.

"Essential reading"—Lucy Davies, The Sunday Telegraph

"Stieglitz was one of the most vivid, idealistic, stubborn, and thorny characters ever to appear in American culture. He was a moralist, an unstoppable advocate for the artists he loved, and a connoisseur of the erotic, and one of the greatest photographers who ever tripped a shutter." -Robert Hughes

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