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1879-1973, American photographer, b. Luxembourg, reared in Hancock, Mich.
Steichen is credited with the transformation of photography into an art
form. At 16, while apprenticed as a lithographer, he taught himself photography
and painted in his spare time. Studying art in Paris, he sought painterly
effects in his photography, becoming an enormously successful portrait
photographer. In New York City he was associated with Alfred Stieglitz
in the founding of the “291” and Photo-Secession galleries.
At “291” he brought works by Cézanne, Rodin, Picasso,
and Matisse to American attention. Back in Paris, Steichen made botanical
experiments, a lifelong passion; he was later to win added renown as a
crossbreeder of flowers. During World War I Steichen was instrumental
in the development of aerial photography. Fascinated by the technical
potential of the medium, he produced pictures remarkable for their clarity,
detail, and expressive use of light. From 1923 to 1938 he worked as a
portrait and fashion photographer for Condé Nast publications and
opened a commercial studio. At this time he made superb photomurals, including
those of the George Washington Bridge. During World War II, he was placed
in command of naval combat photography. Steichen was later director of
the department of photography of the Museum of Modern Art (1947-62). In
this capacity he organized the Family of Man exhibition (1955) to “mirror
the essential oneness of mankind”; it is considered the greatest
photographic exposition ever mounted. During his time at the museum, Steichen
had virtually abandoned his own work; but in his last years he filmed
the effect of the passing seasons on a flowering shadblow tree. Steichen's
creative imagination and his extraordinarily powerful imagery forged for
him and for his medium an honored place among the fine arts. |
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