Hiển thị các bài đăng có nhãn Alfred Stieglitz. Hiển thị tất cả bài đăng
Hiển thị các bài đăng có nhãn Alfred Stieglitz. Hiển thị tất cả bài đăng

Edward Steichen: Fashion and Function


A couple of weeks ago, Edward Steichen's photograph The Pond-Moonlight was featured as one of the most expensive photographs ever sold. While the image itself is worth the attention, much of the photographer's work actually involved more than just picturesque landscapes. Indeed, Steichen was one of the 20th century's leading fashion photographers, helping to revolutionize the function of photography and elevating it to the highest levels of artistic expression.


Edward Steichen was a Luxembourgian-born American photographer highly regarded as one of the pioneers of fashion photography. From around 1910, he experimented with photography and fashion at first on a dare, but soon refined it to an art form.

For 15 years starting in 1928, he worked as the official photographer of the fashion and high society Conde Nast publications Vogue and Vanity Fair.


Steichen actually studied to become an artist and painter, and much of his earlier work reflects this training. His self-portrait (at the end of this article), shows the kind of pictorialism that was popular during the very early years of the 20th century. As photography developed, he abandoned this type of style, although many of his works dating back to this period already show the kind of artistic genius he was.

One of these pictorialistic photographs previously mentioned, The Pond-Moonlight, fetched a record-setting $2.9 million in a 2006 auction, the highest amount paid for a photograph at that time.


In between his years with Conde Nast, he served in the US Army in both the 1st and 2nd World Wars as a war photographer, and also tried his hand in the advertising industry. He was a staunch supporter of photography as an art form, and worked in many publications and exhibitions to promote this ideal.


His advocacy for photography developed when he met another influential photographer, Alfred Stieglitz. Steichen was involved in the publication of Stieglitz's Camera Work, an early journal featuring the best in photography at that time. He also helped Stieglitz in the establishment of the 291 Art Gallery which also featured the works of pioneering photographers of the early 20th century.

Steichen's most famous photographs were done in black and white, but he also experimented with other forms of photo reproduction processes such as the early color photography process called Autochrome.


His skill as a portrait and fashion photographer is undisputed; he continuously evolved his style, but always succeeded in capturing images with distinctive character, even with high profile celebrities, such as the actors and models that you see here. His glamour work was also highly esteemed, as the models in his pictures carried a high sense of credibility and functionality.


One of his finest works had very little to do with fashion, but helped to cement photography as the seminal technological achievement of the period. In 1955, he organized the Family of Man, an exhibit of over 500 photographs from 273 photographers all around the world. The exhibit showcased the commonality of being human, celebrating images of different cultures in their highest and lowest points as only photography could capture.

The catalogue of pictures was later published in the book The Family Of Man which is still in print, and is now on permanent display.


Although Steichen worked mainly with models for his advertising and editorial work, he photographed many celebrities and Hollywood personalities in his time. His time with Conde Nast produced over 2,000 prints, many of them now iconic and presented in this post.

For those who are unfamiliar with the stars of yesteryear, the portraits include (from the top) actresses Gloria Swanson, Norma Shearer, Mary Heberden, Joan Clement, actor Gary Cooper, and actresses Joan Bennett and Helen Menken.  The group photo above of unnamed models was done for Vogue Magazine shoot. Below, the photographer himself poses as a painter in an early self-portrait.


Anyone looking to learn more about this iconic photographer and his fashion and function sense should get Edward Steichen: In High Fashion - The Conde Nast Years, 1923-1937. Another great text on the photographer is Edward Steichen: Lives in Photography. Although not entirely about Edward Steichen, The Family Of Man is a great photography book for any occasion.




The Most Expensive Photographs Ever Sold!


What would you do if you had $1 million? Buy a house? Splurge on a sportscar? For some people, they spend it all on a photograph. In some cases, they spend over $3 million for a single print. If you want to find out more about these multi-million dollar pictures, keep reading to see the world's most expensive photographs ever sold.

The above image just manages to join the list as it was sold for an even $1 million. The  picture, entitled One,  was made by photographer Peter Lik by capturing the reflections made around a riverbank in 2010. It would have made the top ten if it weren't for a recent addition just a few weeks ago. So, without further ado, here are the top ten most expensive photographs sold.


10) Nautilus by Edward Weston


Edward Weston was a pioneering photographer in the early 20th century, helping to advance the field with his works which ranged from portraits to landscapes to still lifes. In April 2010, a signed print of the above 1927 photograph of a seashell (which was hailed as an important photograph in the modernism movement and was originally sold for only $10) fetched a price of a little more than $1.082 million at a Sotheby's New York auction.


9) Dovima with elephants by Richard Avedon


Richard Avedon tops the list of most important fashion photographers of the 20th century. His influence on the style of editorial photography can still be seen in today's fashion magazines. The image of model Dovima in a Yves Saint-Laurent dress (designed for Christian Dior) against a herd of elephants as captured by Avedon made it into one of the most recognized photographs after it was made in 1955. It was sold for more than $1.151 million at a November 2010 auction at Christie's.


8) Untitled (Cowboy) by Richard Prince


Richard Prince is an artist famous for his rephotographed works wherein he photographs existing photos and alters them slightly (or sometimes not at all). The above image was originally taken by Sam Abell for the Marlboro Man campaign. Prince rephotographed and appropriated it in 1989. It sold for $1.248 million in a November 2005 auction at Christie's.


7) Georgia O'Keeffe Nude by Alfred Stieglitz


Alfred Stieglitz was another pioneering photographer who advocated for photography as an art form. This 1919 image shows the posed hands of artist Georgia O'Keefe (whom the photographer later married) sold for $1.360 million in Sotheby's New York in February 2006.


6) Georgia O'Keeffe (Hands) by Alfred Stieglitz


In the same auction as the preceding photograph, this image of Georgia O'Keeffe's posed hands also taken by Alfred Stieglitz fetched a price of $1.472 million.

5) Nude by Edward Weston


It seems that nudes are bigger sellers than still lifes, judging from this sale from the same photographer as the Nautilus which comes in at number 10 of this list. The above photograph of a nude taken in 1925 by Edward Weston sold for $1.609 million at Sotheby's in April 2008.


4) Kremlin of Tobolsk by Dmitry Medvedev


Yes, that Dmitry Medvedev. Aside from being the current President of the Russian Federation, Mr. Medvedev is also an amateur photographer. The 2009 aerial photograph of the kremlin (or stone fortress) in the town of Tobolsk, Russia sold for $1.7 million at a charity auction last year. You can find more of the President's photographs over at his personal website.


3) The Pond-Moonlight by Edward Steichen 


Edward Steichen is better known for his outstanding portraiture work and fashion photographs (mostly for Vanity Fair) in the early 20th century, but his early experimental photographs are apparently worth more. This pictorialist landscape image was made in 1904 using autochrome, an early color photograph technique. It sold for $2.9 million at a Sotheby's New York auction in 2006, setting the record price for a photograph at that time.


2) 99 Cent II Diptychon by Andreas Gursky 


Andreas Gursky is probably the best known contemporary artist who primarily uses large format photography. His trademark style is his huge reproductions of natural and manmade scenes. This record setting picture is a quintessential Gursky, being 6.79 feet x 11.07 feet when it was printed. When it was sold for more than $3.346 million at Sotheby's London to a private collector in 2007, it was the first photograph to fetch a price of over $3 million.


1) Untitled #96 by Cindy Sherman


Some might call this photograph of Cindy Sherman a self-portrait, although others might contest that designation. That is because most of Ms. Sherman's photographs feature herself as the model, each series featuring the photographer as a different person in order to convey a different message. This photograph taken in 1981 sold for $3.89 million at Christie's only a few weeks ago, making it the most expensive photograph ever sold (as of this post).


All told, these top ten most expensive photographs are valued at close to $20 million, most of which were sold only in the last decade. Of course, it's still half way through the year, and there are numerous old and new photos waiting to be auctioned off, so there's still a chance that this list will be modified. So the next time you think an old picture by some long dead photographer isn't worth much, just remember that some of the most expensive photographs ever sold fit that bill.