Luminous-Lint - for collectors and connoisseurs of photography Register
Subscribe
Login
Photographers:
Connections:
Getting around...
| Home > Contents > Images
See astonishing photographs and connections.
Register and see for yourself...
LL/95210
Edward Steichen
1899
Self portrait

Platinum print
19.8 x 9.2 cm. (7 13/16 x 3 5/8 ins)
 
Metropolitan Museum of Art
Alfred Stieglitz Collection, 1933, Accession Number: 33.43.1
 
Description (Accessed: 11 December 2019)
Steichen made this self-portrait in Milwaukee, shortly before leaving for Europe to seek his fortune as a "painter-photographer." En route to Paris, he stopped by the New York Camera Club to show his work to Alfred Stieglitz, the reigning dean of art photography. That day, Stieglitz bought this photograph, along with two other platinum prints, for five dollars apiece, telling his young visitor, "I am robbing you at that."
 
In this eccentric self-portrait of the artist as a young dandy, Steichen seems poised at a threshhold, hovering half-in and half-out of the frame. Much like Whistler, Steichen used the portrait as a vehicle for exploring abstract elements of design, cleverly punctuating the white wall behind him with a tiny empty picture frame.
 
LL/95210


 

Terms and conditions • Copyright • Privacy • Contact me
Contributors retain copyright over their submissions
In using this website you agree to the Terms and Conditions
© Alan Griffiths - Luminous-Lint 2025