Great Black and White Photos Part II


          Alfred Stieglitz was a very skilled photographer that took photos in black and white. Stieglitz was born in Hoboken, New Jersey in 1864. He went to school in Germany for engineering in 1881 and went to Technische Hochschule in Berlin for photochemistry in 1882. When Stieglitz got back to New York in 1890, he got in a partnership with a photogravure company and took photos of streets. 
          He then went back to Europe in 1894 and joined a pictorialist society called The Linked Ring located in London. Eight years later, Stieglitz tries to tell the world that photography could show as much artistic expression as painting and sculpture. In 1903, which was a year later, he became the director and publisher of Camera Works, a magazine with its graphic section worked on by Edward Steichen. Steichen and Stieglitz opened the "Little Galleries of the Photo Secession" also known as "291" on Fifth Avenue in New York City in 1905. The gallery involved Stieglitz's greatest works like The Steerage and From the Back Window. The two photographers stopped operating the gallery in 1907. Stieglitz met Georgia O'Keeffe in 1916 and started taking many photos of the painter. He then married her in 1924. 
          Stieglitz founded the Anderson Galleries in 1921, the Intimate Gallery in 1925, and the American Place in 1929. As Stieglitz's health and energy was dimming, he started taking photos outside the windows of his galleries. Stieglitz died in 1946 in New York City, New York.

The Terminal, New York taken in 1892.














Snapshot, Paris taken in 1911.















Georgia O'Keeffe taken in 1922.















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