

(photo by Edward Steichen)
(1864–1946) was a pioneer of modern photography. A photographer, publisher, writer and gallery owner, he played a key role in the promotion and exploration of photography as an art form. He also helped introduce modern art to an American audience. In 1916 Stieglitz first saw the work of Georgia O’Keeffe (1887-1986) and was impressed by the expressive power of her large abstract drawings. The following year he hosted her first solo exhibition at his gallery 291 in New York. He also started to photograph O'Keeffe, posing her in front of her work and finding ways to fuse her body with the compositions. This was the start of an extraordinary collaboration that lasted over 20 years and resulted in over 300 photographs. Stieglitz and O’Keeffe’s artistic dialogue extended to a profound influence on each other’s work. They became lovers and married in 1924.
The Georgia O'Keeffe Foundation has recently given the Victoria and Albert Museum a group of photographs by Stieglitz. The portraits of O'Keeffe shown here were taken between 1918 and 1937. The early, sensuous images were taken in the studio and printed on platinum and palladium paper, giving a fine tonal range. Later, there is a move away from symbolically charged images to an increasingly frank record of an individual. Influenced by O’Keeffe’s paintings and by the work of Paul Strand (whose portrait of Stieglitz is also on display in the Photography gallery), Stieglitz adopted an arguably more Modernist approach in the 1920s and 1930s. He started to make small gelatin-silver prints of exquisite precision and sharp tonal contrast and to explore the artistic and spiritual potential of his everyday surroundings. The latest photograph shown here, taken the year that Stieglitz gave up photography because of ill health, shows O’Keeffe wrapped in a blanket, like a Pueblo Indian – a reference perhaps to her fascination with New Mexico, where she moved after Stieglitz’s death.




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