Skip to product information
1 of 2

Gary Saretzky Photo Books

Steiglitz, Alfred. Stieglitz on Photography: His Selected Essays and Notes.

Steiglitz, Alfred. Stieglitz on Photography: His Selected Essays and Notes.

Regular price $35.00 USD
Regular price Sale price $35.00 USD
Sale Sold out
Shipping calculated at checkout.

Aperture, 2000. Edited with annotations by Richard Whelan with extensive Alfred Stieglitz bibliography by Sarah Greenough. 286  pages. First edition, first printing.  47 pieces of writing by Stieglitz.  Illustrated, including some in color. Near fine in hardcover with near fine protected dust jacket. Summary:

Stieglitz on Photography: His Selected Essays and Notes is a curated collection of writings by Alfred Stieglitz, one of the most influential figures in the history of photography. This volume brings together his most important essays, articles, and personal notes—many of which had not been published in a single book before—offering direct insight into his thinking about photography as both an art and a craft.

Purpose and Scope:

  • The book is a compilation of Stieglitz’s key writings from a wide range of sources, gathered and annotated to show how his ideas evolved over decades. These texts trace his views on the aesthetic, technical, and philosophical dimensions of photography.

  • Included are essays on the development of fine-art photography, pictorialism (the movement that advocated photography as art), and the formation and activities of the Photo-Secession group, which Stieglitz founded to promote artistic photography in the United States.

  • Alongside critical commentary are personal notes, darkroom “recipes,” and technical reflections from Stieglitz’s experiments with processes like platinum printing, photogravure, and early color photography.

Content and Style:

  • The essays are presented in their original layout in many cases and illustrated with over 75 black-and-white photographs by Stieglitz and his contemporaries. There’s also a color insert featuring rare hand-tinted and autochrome images.

  • Selections range from practical discussions—such as Stieglitz’s thoughts on night photography, compositional simplicity, and specific photographic techniques—to broader theoretical pieces advocating for photography’s legitimacy and expressive potential as a fine art.

Significance:

  • Through these essays and notes, readers gain a portrait of Stieglitz not just as a practitioner but as a central voice in defining the philosophy and aesthetics of modern photography. He articulates why photography deserved recognition on par with painting and sculpture and reflects on its unique qualities as a medium.

  • For students and enthusiasts of photography and art history, the book is both an historical document and a source of foundational ideas about photographic art, creative intention, and visual expression.

View full details