Freeman by Stieglitz, 1921-1922

Alfred Stieglitz :: American stage actress Helen Freeman (1886 – 1960), 1921. Palladium print. | src NGA (The Key Set · National Gallery of Art)
Alfred Stieglitz :: American stage actress Helen Freeman (1886 – 1960), 1921. Palladium print. | src NGA (The Key Set · National Gallery of Art)
Alfred Stieglitz Key Set

In 1949, Georgia O’Keeffe and the Alfred Stieglitz Estate donated 1,311 photographs by Alfred Stieglitz to the National Gallery of Art and placed on deposit an additional collection of 331 portraits of O’Keeffe, which were later given to the Gallery in 1980. This collection, known as the Key Set, is an unparalleled selection of Stieglitz’s photographs, containing at least one print of every mounted photograph in his possession at the time of his death. It remains one of the most important photographic collections in existence. Carefully selected by O’Keeffe to include the finest examples, the Key Set traces the evolution of Stieglitz’s work, from its inception in the 1880s to its rich maturation in the 1930s, and thoroughly documents all aspects of his decisive contribution to the art of photography.

Previously available only in print, the Alfred Stieglitz Key Set online Edition represents the definitive publication on the artist’s work. Incorporating updated scholarship, including recent conservation findings, as well as overviews of the major periods in his art, robust search functionality, and advanced image viewing and comparison tools, the Online Edition opens up new avenues for researching—and being inspired by—Stieglitz’s work.

Explore highlights of the Key Set, browse by subject or person, or search the Key Set to view all Key Set photographs and filter results by Key Set number, negative date, photographic process, or other criteria. [permalink]

Alfred Stieglitz :: Helen Freeman, 1921. Palladium print. Alfred Stieglitz Collection · NGA
Alfred Stieglitz :: Helen Freeman, 1921. Palladium print. Alfred Stieglitz Collection · NGA

A dancer, actress, and writer, Helen Freeman (Corle) probably met Stieglitz and O’Keeffe in the early 1920s through her friendship with Mitchell Kennerley, owner of the Anderson Galleries.

The photographs and Key Set numbers 711-716 were made on at least two separate occasions between late November 1921 and Fall 1922.

“My Dear Miss. Freeman: The exposures have been developed. And there are proofs.—I have been thinking them over.—Some I feel are acceptable.—At least as a beginning. Early next week, should you find time, I’ll make another series.—And when you come, you’ll see the proofs” (Stieglitz to Helen Freeman, 1 December 1921 [Sotheby’s, auction catalogue, 17 April 1991, lot 123A])

quoted from NGA

Alfred Stieglitz :: Helen Freeman, 1921. Palladium print. Alfred Stieglitz Collection · NGA
Alfred Stieglitz :: Helen Freeman, 1921. Palladium print. Alfred Stieglitz Collection · NGA

Freeman by Stieglitz (hands)

Alfred Stieglitz :: Helen Freeman, 1921. Palladium print. Alfred Stieglitz Collection · NGA
Alfred Stieglitz :: Helen Freeman [hands], 1921. Palladium print. Alfred Stieglitz Collection · NGA
Alfred Stieglitz :: Helen Freeman, 1921. Palladium print. Alfred Stieglitz Collection · NGA
Alfred Stieglitz :: Helen Freeman [hands], 1921. Palladium print. Alfred Stieglitz Collection · NGA

A dancer, actress, and writer, Helen Freeman (Corle) probably met Stieglitz and O’Keeffe in the early 1920s through her friendship with Mitchell Kennerley, owner of the Anderson Galleries.

The photographs and Key Set numbers 711-716 were made on at least two separate occasions between late November 1921 and Fall 1922.

“My Dear Miss. Freeman: The exposures have been developed. And there are proofs.—I have been thinking them over.—Some I feel are acceptable.—At least as a beginning. Early next week, should you find time, I’ll make another series.—And when you come, you’ll see the proofs” (Stieglitz to Helen Freeman, 1 December 1921 [Sotheby’s, auction catalogue, 17 April 1991, lot 123A])

quoted from NGA

Alfred Stieglitz :: American stage actress Helen Freeman (1886 – 1960), 1921. Palladium print. | src NGA (The Key Set · National Gallery of Art)
Alfred Stieglitz Key Set

In 1949, Georgia O’Keeffe and the Alfred Stieglitz Estate donated 1,311 photographs by Alfred Stieglitz to the National Gallery of Art and placed on deposit an additional collection of 331 portraits of O’Keeffe, which were later given to the Gallery in 1980. This collection, known as the Key Set, is an unparalleled selection of Stieglitz’s photographs, containing at least one print of every mounted photograph in his possession at the time of his death. It remains one of the most important photographic collections in existence. Carefully selected by O’Keeffe to include the finest examples, the Key Set traces the evolution of Stieglitz’s work, from its inception in the 1880s to its rich maturation in the 1930s, and thoroughly documents all aspects of his decisive contribution to the art of photography.

Previously available only in print, the Alfred Stieglitz Key Set online Edition represents the definitive publication on the artist’s work. Incorporating updated scholarship, including recent conservation findings, as well as overviews of the major periods in his art, robust search functionality, and advanced image viewing and comparison tools, the Online Edition opens up new avenues for researching—and being inspired by—Stieglitz’s work.

Explore highlights of the Key Set, browse by subject or person, or search the Key Set to view all Key Set photographs and filter results by Key Set number, negative date, photographic process, or other criteria. [permalink]

Kitty Stieglitz by Alfred Stieglitz

Alfred Stieglitz Kitty Stieglitz, 1915-16. Autochrome. Alfred Stieglitz Collection  src National Gallery of Art
Alfred Stieglitz :: Kitty Stieglitz, 1915-1916. Autochrome. Alfred Stieglitz Collection. | src National Gallery of Art
Alfred Stieglitz :: Kitty Stieglitz, 1915-1916. Autochrome. Alfred Stieglitz Collection. | src National Gallery of Art
Alfred Stieglitz :: Kitty Stieglitz, 1915-1916. Autochrome. Alfred Stieglitz Collection. | src National Gallery of Art (DETAIL)
Alfred Stieglitz (1864 – 1946) :: Untitled [Kitty Stieglitz], 1907; Autochrome. | src The J. Paul Getty museum
Alfred Stieglitz made this portrait of his eight-year-old daughter Katherine (Kitty) while on vacation in Europe. Kitty sits on a park bench, clutching a bouquet of vibrant purple blossoms in one hand and holding a butterfly net in the other. (quoted from source)

Dreamy portrait by Stieglitz

Alfred Stieglitz :: Unknown Woman, 1907. Autochrome. Alfred Stieglitz Collection | src National Gallery of Art
Alfred Stieglitz :: Unknown Woman, 1907. Autochrome. Alfred Stieglitz Collection | src National Gallery of Art
Alfred Stieglitz :: Unknown Woman, 1907. Autochrome. Alfred Stieglitz Collection | src National Gallery of Art
DETAIL
Alfred Stieglitz :: Unknown Woman, 1907. Autochrome. Alfred Stieglitz Collection | Detail

Georgia OʹKeeffe fixing hair

Alfred Stieglitz :: Georgia OʹKeeffe (fixing hair), 1919-21. From: Photo-Secession: Painterly Masterworks of Turn-of-the-Century Photography at D'Amour Museum of Fine Arts · Springfield Museums
Alfred Stieglitz :: Georgia OʹKeeffe (fixing hair), 1919-21. From: Photo-Secession: Painterly Masterworks of Turn-of-the-Century Photography at D’Amour Museum of Fine Arts · Springfield Museums

Stieglitz by Stieglitz

Alfred Stieglitz (1864 – 1946) :: Untitled [Kitty Stieglitz], 1907; Autochrome. | src The J. Paul Getty museum
Alfred Stieglitz made this portrait of his eight-year-old daughter Katherine (Kitty) while on vacation in Europe. Kitty sits on a park bench, clutching a bouquet of vibrant purple blossoms in one hand and holding a butterfly net in the other. (quoted from source)
Alfred Stieglitz · Mrs. Selma Schubart [Selma Stieglitz Schubart wearing Fortuny gown], 1907 Autochrome. | src The Met
Alfred Stieglitz · Mrs. Selma Schubart [Selma Stieglitz Schubart wearing Fortuny gown], 1907. Autochrome. | src The Met

The subject of the photograph above is Stieglitz’s flamboyant youngest sister, Selma, wearing a Fortuny dress. Authorship of the image is uncertain: this plate was donated by Georgia O’Keeffe to the Metropolitan in 1955 as a work by Stieglitz; a nearly identical plate was donated to George Eastman House in 2001 by Edward Steichen’s widow as a work by her husband. [image below]

Edward Steichen · [Selma Stieglitz Schubart wearing Fortuny gown]; 1907–1909. Color transparency. | src Eastman Museum

Experiment 27 and 28, 1907

Clarence H. White and Alfred Stieglitz :: Experiment 27 (lady in white with crystal ball), 1907. From Camera Work: A Photographic Quarterly nº 27, July 1909. | src Brown University Library
Clarence H. White and Alfred Stieglitz :: Experiment 28 (lady with crystal ball in hand), 1907. From Camera Work: A Photographic Quarterly nº 27, July 1909. | src Brown University Library

The Torso (Miss Thompson)

clarence h. white, pictorialism, female nude, 1900s, photosecessionism, american pictorialism
Clarence H. White & Alfred Stieglitz :: Torso, ca. 1907. From Camera Work: A Photographic Quarterly nº 27 (1909-07), July 1909. | src Brown University Library
Clarence H. White (1871-1925) & Alfred Stieglitz (1864-1946) :: Torso, 1907 {printed later, 1909}. Hand pulled photogravure. | src NSW
Clarence Hudson White :: Untitled (Miss Thompson), 1907. Platinum print. | src Princeton University Art Museum
Clarence Hudson White :: Untitled, 1907. Platinum print. | src Princeton University Art Museum
Clarence Hudson White :: Untitled [Miss Thompson], 1906-07. Platinum print. | src Princeton University Art Museum
Clarence Hudson White :: The Torso, 1907. | src Princeton University Art Museum