Edward Steichen (American, born Luxembourg, 1879–1973)
Upon moving to Paris to pursue an artistic career, Steichen befriended Auguste Rodin. Created from two negatives, this print shows the sculptor with two of his works. Steichen combined an image of the silhouetted Rodin in front of his Monument to Victor Hugo with another, separate exposure of Le Penseur (The Thinker). This print depicts Monument to Victor Hugo in reverse, but it seems Steichen preferred this composition despite the fact that it was not true to Rodin’s sculpture.
The many graphite inscriptions on the mount verso are nearly invisible under regular light. Infrared photography reveals notations relating to the work’s exhibition history (“Dresden”) and framing decisions.
Alfred Stieglitz twice reproduced this photograph in Camera Work, once in 1905 and again in 1906, in a “Steichen Supplement” featuring 16 photogravures of Steichen’s works.
Additional resources related to this object are to the right. Comprehensive material analysis can be found in the Object Research PDF.
Artists
As a teenager growing up in Milwaukee, Edward Steichen first encountered art photography in the read more
Processes
Although employed largely by Pictorialist photographers between the 1890s and the 1930s, gum printing was read more
Galleries
The Little Galleries of the Photo-Secession—later known as 291—began as a place to display and read more
Galleries
At his last gallery, An American Place, Stieglitz welcomed a stream of visitors who wanted read more
Journals
Stieglitz had edited two previous publications—The American Amateur Photographer and Camera Notes—before deciding in 1902 read more
Themes
The international movement known as Pictorialism represented both a photographic aesthetic and a set of read more
Themes
Following the model of other artistic secessions in Europe around the turn of the century—notably read more
Themes
As part of the research related to this site, forty-four photographs from the Art Institute’s read more