Monday, December 5, 2011

Assignment 5 Virtual essay

Alfred Stieglitz (American, 1864–1946)

Stieglitz was interested in promoting photography as an art. He called his movement pictorialism and naturalism. Pictorialism meant the used the camera as a tool, as same as brush for painting. Naturalism is more about exploring the human beauty in hispictures, where he focuses on a particular object making everything else look blurring.
Stieglitz then moved his thoughts to photographs resembling more likephotographs than a work of paint brush.



 In his photographs, he focuses on themain subject, with sharp contrasts of black, white and grey. 


Stieglitz would wait for a natural environment to click his perfect picture.


Stieglitz favored a slightly different approach in his own work. Although he took great care in producing his prints, often making platinum prints—a process renowned for yielding images with a rich, subtly varied tonal scale—he achieved the desired affiliation with painting through compositional choices and the use of natural elements like rain, snow, and steam to unify the components of a scene into a visually pleasing pictorial whole


Alfred Stieglitz returned to New York in 1890 determined to prove that photography was a medium as capable of artistic expression as painting or sculpture.

Stieglitz wanted to prove that photography was a medium as capable of artistic expression as painting or sculpture

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