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Alfred Stieglitz 
Am Strom / p.5: Die Photographie in Amerika 
[Die Kunst in der Photographie (p.5)] 
1898 
  
Halftone 
Photoseed 
Photograph courtesy PhotoSeed.com 
  
 
LL/16414 
  
Authors Franz Goerke and Richard Stettiner write about the American School of Photography in the first issue art folio for the year 1898. The following is an abstract of this text running from pages 5-8:
 
"It is difficult for us in Europe to get a clear picture of what is going on in America in the field of art photography. For that reason one should judge with leniency what we are here saying about the characteristic features of the American photographs that have been compiled for this book by Alfred Stieglitz. In this country R. Eickemeyer has been known the longest. He is a representative of the old school, as opposed to the new one to which Stieglitz belongs. C. J. Berg (New York), Miss Farnsworth (Albany), E. Lee Ferguson (Washington), Miss Zaida Ben Yusuf (New York) and F. Holland Day (Boston) could be considered as one group. Their taste in photography is "of a feminine kind, almost leaning towards a certain mellowness and occasionally bordering on sweetness." F. Holland Day, however, is an exception, even though he also places the naked or semi-naked human body in the centre. "The sharpness and greatness of his perception is sometimes reminiscent of the Pre-Raphaelites". Alfred Stieglitz belongs unconditionally to the modern movement. Today he is probably at the top of everything that has to do with photography in America, and he is an artist in portraiture as well as in landscape photography. Even if someone's initial reaction when looking at his pictures might be: "like Liebermann', he is certainly more than just a skilled copyist. However, future developments are not likely to begin with Stieglitz. There is still no one who will achieve what is lacking today: an American school of photography."
 
Rolf H. Krauss: Die Kunst in der Photographie, the German Camera Work. Part 2: Texts in Abstract History of Photography, Volume 11, Number 1, January-March 1987 (p.4)
 
The photograph was taken in 1894 by Alfred Stieglitz and is also known as: "Decorative Panel" or "On the Seine-Near Paris" or "Goats Along the Seine".
 
Letterpress: Julius Becker-Publisher (Berlin) 
 

 
  
 
  
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