Alfred Stieglitz war ein US-amerikanischer Fotograf. Er war eine der wichtigsten Personen, der er die Fotografie förderte, und sie als Kunstform legitimieren wollte.
Жүктеу.....
Пікірлер: 172
@TheStockwell3 жыл бұрын
I forget who said it, but a writer who had interviewed many people who we'd consider to be geniuses said they all had one thing in common: an ability to keep working on one thing long past the point most people would find it tedious, boring, or frustrating.
@robertafierro5592
10 ай бұрын
That's what Art is about! The person that said that is absolutely right! Whe t comes to some abstract art, the subjects have been worked down to their core.
@401xyz
5 ай бұрын
and they entered the system
@LINDAOZAG
3 ай бұрын
Eliot Porter told me to keep sweeping and my friend Mark to keep editing. hahah I still do. Cleaning and sweeping until only the every best are shown. That's the kind of photographer Stieglitz wanted to have in his gallery. :) Still sweeping!!!!!
@frogsoda9 жыл бұрын
If I ever needed a reason to never go out and take another photo, it would be that I am too busy sitting here watching all of the great content on KZread about photography and the great photographers of the past.
@LetArtsLive
9 жыл бұрын
frogsoda its a way to learn
@Velocitygrl34
5 жыл бұрын
what an adorable comment :)
@MatteoPreziosoPH
4 жыл бұрын
One hell of a good point.
@gargoyle38
4 жыл бұрын
That sounds like about half the guys of the MFT FB group: they are so worried they have the perfect gear combination they aren't shooting any....
@suzannabienkowski2033
4 жыл бұрын
Unfortunately, as I write this, we are in full Covit19 swing, and are in lockdown mode. The nursing home where I reside, does not let anyone out, and visits are limited to 15 min only. By this I mean, that I have pretty much exhausted my shooting options.
@robertafierro559210 ай бұрын
This is one of those docus I will watch over and over again! Thank you.
@michaelsittig986011 жыл бұрын
What an inspirational video. The story of Stieglitz and Georgia is what inspired me to fall in love with photography as a young man 55 years ago.
@Mrbluesplayer434 жыл бұрын
What a marvelous and thoroughly enjoyable documentary.
@axeldurman52244 жыл бұрын
Stieglitz's narrative made me weep ....so much passion!!
@larydixon48244 жыл бұрын
I have watched this over and over again and each time that I come back to it, for a Fresh Perspective, the inspiration that is triggered is simply Phenomenal.. This is a Great Piece of Work and the cognitive effect can easily make your head spin.. Well Done ! ! Lary
@issis6667 жыл бұрын
Wonderful documentary ... so grateful that it is available via KZread
@melanietruth8 жыл бұрын
Marvelous video! Stieglitz has a prophetic flash of insight while on holiday and in his portraits of O'Keefe, he practically deifies the artist's hands - positively other worldly - must see!
@RenateMilenaFindeis4 жыл бұрын
A complex character with visions! Thanks for that documentation.
@steffenbjoern11 ай бұрын
Incredible documentation! Thanks a lot for the publication of this great work!
@kellyfrost10523 жыл бұрын
Absolutely a glowing film...so seldom artist portraits show the wonder...this does. Thank you.
@Speendrift4 жыл бұрын
Wonderful documentary. Thank you very much for sharing!
@suzannabienkowski20334 жыл бұрын
Exquisitely researched, compiled, and edited. Thank you. This is something to watch over and over. Learn something new every time.
@patrickhicks98803 жыл бұрын
i love all that old footage
@moraeller54164 жыл бұрын
What an amazing documentary! Thank You
@chrismartindale21394 жыл бұрын
I saw this documentary on PBS many years ago... with NO commercials. It is highly disappointing that after 13 minutes of the film it has been stopped twice for advertisements.
@hurdygurdyguy1
4 жыл бұрын
Geez, here's how to stop the ads (this works for all KZread videos)... scroll to just up to the end, let it play out, click the "replay" , voila, watch with no ads!!
@danc3693
Жыл бұрын
Umm.. THAT’S the deal with KZread, how they make money- surely you get that? Otherwise, pay $15.99/month for a premium YT.
@donaldgibson4459 Жыл бұрын
I saw this video a while back. Thanks for sending it. It's great. :)
@carolking63553 жыл бұрын
I can’t believe I nearly bypassed this. I love Georgia O’KEEFFE and felt she had been treated badly but this helps to put a new perspective on the situation. He was certainly a brilliant man.
@alexmurray65154 жыл бұрын
Excellent document! Georgia O'Keeffe survived by 40 years to Alfred Stieglitz.
@durango-CODEBUILDER2 жыл бұрын
If anyones wondering. The Picassos that were on at the 291 in 1911 would've cost $1.1k today. $60k for all of the works. (2021)
@richardcox792610 ай бұрын
Looks great! Extra things that you built work out well. Look forward to the next makeover. Nice photography work. 👍.
@sherryedwards597810 ай бұрын
Fascinating documentary. Thank you.
@George-zq9hy9 ай бұрын
Fabulous documentary, thank you!
@Eris1234512 жыл бұрын
Despite the obligatory walk-ons, (far too many,) by the all usual self important windbags, (blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.....) this has been a wonderful and clear exposition of Stieglitz's life and work and an almost unique opportunity for me to have finally got to grips with it insomuch as anyone can ever really to grips with a lifetime's work in just over an hour; not just by seeing so many of his best pictures displayed and somewhat explained but it also lends to them a context and an additional perspective that is certainly, "helpful," if probably not indispensable. I've been as it were tripping over Stieglitz for many years now simply because of his association with Georgia O'Keeffe, but I never previously, "got," what he was about or why she so obviously regarded him so highly and as a kindred spirit. So, he was not overrated after all; not a bit.
@Eris123451
Жыл бұрын
@M M Well I suppose that's reasonable if as you say I, "knew the background," I might feel differently about him but I don't and you haven't explained it so three points. 1: There's nothing new in this as long as I can remember being interested in art Alfred Stieglitz has always been regarded as having been a pioneer of photography. 2. Georgia O'Keeffe, who was an important, talented and original artist herself and in her own right rated him highly. 3. Having now looked more closely and with a bit more insight at his photographs, some I which I've always admired I agree with her.
@evelynellison6242 жыл бұрын
Ones passion and love leaves little time for anything else.
@eleanorbell39628 жыл бұрын
Wonderfull scenes with Georgia OKeeffe
@griccioli4 жыл бұрын
Extraordinary documentary!
@2tearo3 жыл бұрын
Thank you for posting this video.it is absolutely amazing.
@NewbieNewfie12 жыл бұрын
Wow, awesome video!!! I first heard about Stieglitz when reading about Ansel Adams. Adams went to New York, cowboy hat & all, and showed his prints to Stieglitz. Stieglitz looked at the prints, Adams standing there hat in hand, his 1st real critic and a leader in NY. Handed the pictures back to Adams and said simply "Your photographs are welcome here anytime". For Adams, if was like God pronouncing his life worthwhile.
@maryloiskokesh4128
7 жыл бұрын
My understanding is that Stieglitz reject Ansel Adams photographs when O'Keeffe presented to him
@SandeepPillai9 күн бұрын
Amazing documentary, really enjoyed it , thanks :)
@marcofilm10011 жыл бұрын
An excellent documentary.
@henrywalton64649 жыл бұрын
An art form from the beginning. A message that cannot be expressed in words but is a strong visual message that hits the soul.
@bluesque9704
8 жыл бұрын
photography is not art. they who are not artists say photography is an art or they who are making a name or career from photography. An artist instinctively feels alien to photography. A genuine artist will say that Photography is the antithesis of high arts. I will tell you this, there is God given talent to be able to draw. And then every stroke that leaves a mark on a surface becomes unique and significant in its own existence. photography is completely different process, perhaps neurotic but never artistic.
@twihardlover1
8 жыл бұрын
+bluesque wow. get over yourself. seriously.
@bluesque9704
8 жыл бұрын
+katarzyna olszewska if you have ever painted a portrait of someone and if its not too bad.. and if it is not one of those random things where strangers will pay a little to get their portrait done on a whim.. rather especially if you know them and if there is something lovely or worth admiring.. then take a photograph with your most refined/matured processes employed.. and gift both of your works to them. You will see a difference in their reaction. They will not just see that you got their eyes right or their hair right, but rather if there is something of life in those eyes and how you were considerate, gave them your time, saw every feature and your skill traced the exact curves which they cant visualize with their eyes closed.. every brush stroke is vital, nothing is random.. It becomes all about the artist, how much they could assimilate of their subject and express poetically.
@bluesque9704
8 жыл бұрын
+katarzyna olszewska in photography the whole assimilation is done by a tool. therefore it's more like reporting or at its creative best quickly deteriorates into neurotic.. something vacuous.
@bluesque9704
8 жыл бұрын
+Katie Ferrell think about it.
@terryjones60492 жыл бұрын
Excellent video, I learned so much..thank you
@annagregnanin687 жыл бұрын
Thank for sharing!
@franciscosanchez-vegas58139 жыл бұрын
Outstanding! I appreciate my photography professor @elfotovoyeur @RMTF for suggesting it!
@nizarwolf12 жыл бұрын
Magnifique vraiment ... c'est à partager !!
@jenchau33642 жыл бұрын
Excellent program
@dkcorderoyximenez338210 ай бұрын
A truly brilliant video bio-essay...thank you for posting...
@donnawolman150
10 ай бұрын
Brilliant
@WilliamBaranowski4 жыл бұрын
What years those must have been.
@imanesaib12 жыл бұрын
Intéressant, Merci Nizar pour le lien ;)
@whattuan5 жыл бұрын
Ya girl Georgia O'keefe is a straight up SAVAGE comin in w/ a roast at 19:22
@oliverdarrennix3559
3 жыл бұрын
honestly killed me when i hear her say that XD
@AxmedBahjad10 жыл бұрын
Obsession, passion or call it another name is a dream.
@TheStockwell
3 жыл бұрын
I forget who said it, but a writer who had interviewed many people who we'd consider to be geniuses said they all had one thing in common: an ability to keep working on one thing long past the point most people would find it tedious, boring, or frustrating.
@LINDAOZAG
3 ай бұрын
Keep sweeping, editing, show only the best!@@TheStockwell
@moukaouame2 жыл бұрын
Extraordinaire.. J'adore...
@svetlanagolba65354 жыл бұрын
Unfortunately there is an error. Painting "Men of the Docks"(pictured on about 11th minuite), belongs to George Bellows, not to Everett Shinn.
@beverlykandraceffinger3764
2 ай бұрын
I miss them all-- thanks for noticing, and supplying a correction for the attribution... the creative circle to which Bellows, Shinn and others belonged- all the students of Robert Henri, and the founding energy behind the Art Students League in NY- were an influence quite alive for the man who'd taught me painting. And from him I'd learned that creative work thrives on good friendships and an exchange of ideas...not on isolation and unhealthy competition. Artists come to maturity in gatherings. Stieglitz was a visionary in the private world of his own work, but he'd also enriched the greater gathering of artists within his times. At best we can manage both, and follow his example.
@braxtonolita4 жыл бұрын
soooo gooooddddd please post more
@cicladi110 жыл бұрын
AMAZING !
@davalenelivingston33528 ай бұрын
The religion of culture and art is the best religion to be a part of.
@centaurofeliz12 жыл бұрын
Thank you very much!
@bigkingsha9 жыл бұрын
Don't you wished you could take a Hassleblad or a Horseman back in time? Heck, a Polaroid Land camera! Imagine carrying around an Arri Alexa recording the images of everyday life back in those times. I will say as a photographer and an artist, that photography did put A LOT of mid-century artists and illustrators out of work!
@suz567
2 жыл бұрын
And recently cell phone cameras have put many professional photographers out of business.
@waindalton85753 жыл бұрын
Some good stuff here. I wish the deification had been dialed back a couple of notches, though. Within minutes the hyperbole gets really irksome. Stieglitz didn't "open the eyes of America to the 20th century," and he was no more "intensely human" than the next guy or gal.
@Cope393
3 жыл бұрын
After watching the Tate’s documentary on O’Keeffe I looked into backstories of his relationships to his wife, daughter, some of the other significant people in his life….pretty much an ambitious, opportunistic jerk … (love how the narrator editorialized his first wife as “prudish” in the first few minutes of the thing.)
@danc3693
Жыл бұрын
@@Cope393 it isn’t unusual for highly creative people to be very self absorbed. I am not painting all of them that way. Stieglitz lived at a time where many - most? - men believed their wife should follow him in whatever he chose to do. O’Keefe eventually went her OWN way. I don’t mean to be overly simplistic. Stieglitz and his wife likely had basic compatibility issues so many other couples experience.
@JB-3794
Жыл бұрын
@@Cope393 Yes, why is it so hard to understand that a woman might become 'prudish' towards a man who pays less and less attention to her, yet expects great ador? Or when he marries a woman for money? Or convenience? When I was young, the word was frigid. Now I don't hear remarks like this. This documentary said he had little time or taste for family life. So no surprise his wife lost that loving feeling for him over time.
@Kerwin-Kendell
10 ай бұрын
I don't think there was any "deification" towards him - not sure where you get that. But to each his own (often people hear or perceive differently). I find what he did & what was inspiration. As for his marriage - clearly it got in the way of what he had to do. Though his wife probably did help by being exactly who she was, which inadvertently pushed him into his goals even more.
@Kerwin-Kendell
10 ай бұрын
@@Cope393your view point describes almost every person in history who did anything worth remembering (even if recorded history doesn't remember them at all).
@normaokun21807 жыл бұрын
thanks for sharing
@Nietzsche_K_Gote2 жыл бұрын
thanks for posting this.
@Johnconno10 ай бұрын
He had a good Tailor. Probably the same one as his Father.
@nikonrulz11 жыл бұрын
Thank you for this.
@donaldgibson4459 Жыл бұрын
There is no way that you could known that I am a big admirer of Georgia O'Keefe. How did you do that. I needed to see that picture. Thanks
@greggorypeccary111 жыл бұрын
great,thanks.
@franek_izerski Жыл бұрын
In which country is this?
@pablomarquezimages9203 жыл бұрын
Teally you have to put adds?
@anthonyfowler86349 ай бұрын
In my photography schooling we had a visual discourse on famous people in photography. Alfred Stieglitz was forefront. We were told this photographer was psychic and that few of us were able to make it creatively without this ability. I do not know if the teacher who knew a family friend. A famous female photographer who knew my destiny.
@judyann47934 жыл бұрын
Would love to see the whole video but the constant interruptions for ads are worse than tv. No thank you.
@channinghuskey5265
4 жыл бұрын
it's well worth it
@hurdygurdyguy1
4 жыл бұрын
Here's how you stop the ads (on all KZread videos)... scroll to the end, let it play out, click on the "replay", voila, watch the whole thing with no ads...
@rulistening77773 жыл бұрын
Why the seperation between head hands arms. And torso of georgeia o Keefe ?
@suz567
2 жыл бұрын
Influence of modern painting of the time - Picasso etc and forward
@harveysherman21238 жыл бұрын
Excellent
@ebola38603 жыл бұрын
How much money do you think a copy of that would cost
@SpamSloNINja66896 жыл бұрын
Truly transcendent....
@sputumtube7 жыл бұрын
Inspiring. Thanks for posting.
@franckfi3716
6 жыл бұрын
a
@squiggmonster14954 жыл бұрын
I am but a fool...a mere nothing.... in the shadow of these great people.....my only hope is that someday....in the future.....someone will come upon my work and wonder.....who I was.
@snqhyan912 жыл бұрын
Some enlightening glimpse of Trans-Atlantic history of Photography & art at the beginning of last century!
@TRamone017 жыл бұрын
Absolutely wonderful.
@lifetimesofamultiplemediam10035 жыл бұрын
Very very interesting…
@dadautube4 жыл бұрын
great video ... pity it's in low 480 resolution and very little tone depth!
@rdhphoto14 жыл бұрын
Thanks for posting this bio fantastic he’s such a historic influence on photography if your a photog you should know who and what he is to photography. And this does just that. Now all we need is a Helmut Newton bio?
@dont-want-no-wrench10 ай бұрын
the various factions of photographers were pretty rabid about their way being the only way, there was a lot of that going around in many fields back then.
@shannonbloom41339 ай бұрын
My favorite part is the fact that no one in the great unwashed public forgets Georgia O'Keefe and her art, but now, in 2023, the average person scratches their head and says, "Alfred Who?" And even the thumbnail is of O'Keefe, not Stieglitz.
@MarttiSuomivuori4 жыл бұрын
Always skip the first three minutes of any American clip if you have a blood pressure.
@petergoeman77364 жыл бұрын
How to stuff up a wonderfull documentary; insert 11 add breaks! Shame on you!
@markos33964 жыл бұрын
We all live in America...
@ray.shoesmith10 ай бұрын
Any relation to Hugo Stiglitz?
@drcringe7873
9 ай бұрын
I wonder the same.
@christoohunders53164 жыл бұрын
5 coupures de pub pour un doc de 1h30, ça devient compliqué yt ...
@shuddupeyaface10 ай бұрын
Well. I liked it.
@barrycohen3114 жыл бұрын
Insane.
@renhan225 ай бұрын
I wish You could do documentary about cubism and photography
@stevenedwards44704 жыл бұрын
I was hoping the Inglorious Basterds guy was real.
@MrPhotographerDude5 жыл бұрын
The painters of the day were threatened by photography the same way film photographers were or are threatened by digital. Some things never change.
@hurdygurdyguy1
4 жыл бұрын
Canvas artists leveled the same criticisms at photographers then as film photographers criticized digital photographers 10 or 20 years ago ("Using a digital camera and computer is cheating!! It's not 'real' photography!")
@LINDAOZAG
3 ай бұрын
If it's good---I can see it.
@jannastieglis52737 жыл бұрын
Is that family of me
@zacharyantle79402 жыл бұрын
Is it me or is Stieglitz kind of a looker? 👀
@shuddupeyaface10 ай бұрын
Kinda the modern world. When it was daring to be hopeful and optimistic.
@busybeenation4 жыл бұрын
20:08 that glass window
@jamesanonymous234310 ай бұрын
THE AGE OF OVERGROWN MUSTACHES, UNDERGROWN WIT !
@Tupapinati2 жыл бұрын
Men garnering success (and making art) at the expense of women. A tale as old as time.
@AlGreenLightThroughGlass8 жыл бұрын
wow
@JISPHOTO3 жыл бұрын
감사합니다
@AlinPurcaroiu10 жыл бұрын
canturgan ,i hope you are being funny.
@larryseals466510 ай бұрын
Stiglitz is the typical example of how being first is more important than being best. Little wonder that he became a anachronistic asshole in his latter days since he'd failed to keep up-to-date as happens when one becomes and crusty. We see it now in our sharply divided politics.
@richardpcrowe4 жыл бұрын
Some of Stieglitz' portraits are great while others are really crappy snapshots...
@hurdygurdyguy1
4 жыл бұрын
YEAH!! What was PBS thinking?! Gilbert Gottfried would've been SO MUCH BETTER!! 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
@ViaOjo Жыл бұрын
A 1/2 hour commercial. Obviously the product is not very good or they wouldn’t need to be interrupting a goo documentary with expensive digital trash
@philipp3710 жыл бұрын
Bioshock Infinite
@helenhunter454010 ай бұрын
A picture of Georgia O'Keefe & what's under it? "Alfred Stieglitz"! They couldn't have come up with a better symbol for patriarchy if they'd tried. Your negative is dried all right.
@TadRapidly11 жыл бұрын
those who can't do, criticize. lol
@canturgan11 жыл бұрын
His pictures would be much better if he used Instagram.
Пікірлер: 172
I forget who said it, but a writer who had interviewed many people who we'd consider to be geniuses said they all had one thing in common: an ability to keep working on one thing long past the point most people would find it tedious, boring, or frustrating.
@robertafierro5592
10 ай бұрын
That's what Art is about! The person that said that is absolutely right! Whe t comes to some abstract art, the subjects have been worked down to their core.
@401xyz
5 ай бұрын
and they entered the system
@LINDAOZAG
3 ай бұрын
Eliot Porter told me to keep sweeping and my friend Mark to keep editing. hahah I still do. Cleaning and sweeping until only the every best are shown. That's the kind of photographer Stieglitz wanted to have in his gallery. :) Still sweeping!!!!!
If I ever needed a reason to never go out and take another photo, it would be that I am too busy sitting here watching all of the great content on KZread about photography and the great photographers of the past.
@LetArtsLive
9 жыл бұрын
frogsoda its a way to learn
@Velocitygrl34
5 жыл бұрын
what an adorable comment :)
@MatteoPreziosoPH
4 жыл бұрын
One hell of a good point.
@gargoyle38
4 жыл бұрын
That sounds like about half the guys of the MFT FB group: they are so worried they have the perfect gear combination they aren't shooting any....
@suzannabienkowski2033
4 жыл бұрын
Unfortunately, as I write this, we are in full Covit19 swing, and are in lockdown mode. The nursing home where I reside, does not let anyone out, and visits are limited to 15 min only. By this I mean, that I have pretty much exhausted my shooting options.
This is one of those docus I will watch over and over again! Thank you.
What an inspirational video. The story of Stieglitz and Georgia is what inspired me to fall in love with photography as a young man 55 years ago.
What a marvelous and thoroughly enjoyable documentary.
Stieglitz's narrative made me weep ....so much passion!!
I have watched this over and over again and each time that I come back to it, for a Fresh Perspective, the inspiration that is triggered is simply Phenomenal.. This is a Great Piece of Work and the cognitive effect can easily make your head spin.. Well Done ! ! Lary
Wonderful documentary ... so grateful that it is available via KZread
Marvelous video! Stieglitz has a prophetic flash of insight while on holiday and in his portraits of O'Keefe, he practically deifies the artist's hands - positively other worldly - must see!
A complex character with visions! Thanks for that documentation.
Incredible documentation! Thanks a lot for the publication of this great work!
Absolutely a glowing film...so seldom artist portraits show the wonder...this does. Thank you.
Wonderful documentary. Thank you very much for sharing!
Exquisitely researched, compiled, and edited. Thank you. This is something to watch over and over. Learn something new every time.
i love all that old footage
What an amazing documentary! Thank You
I saw this documentary on PBS many years ago... with NO commercials. It is highly disappointing that after 13 minutes of the film it has been stopped twice for advertisements.
@hurdygurdyguy1
4 жыл бұрын
Geez, here's how to stop the ads (this works for all KZread videos)... scroll to just up to the end, let it play out, click the "replay" , voila, watch with no ads!!
@danc3693
Жыл бұрын
Umm.. THAT’S the deal with KZread, how they make money- surely you get that? Otherwise, pay $15.99/month for a premium YT.
I saw this video a while back. Thanks for sending it. It's great. :)
I can’t believe I nearly bypassed this. I love Georgia O’KEEFFE and felt she had been treated badly but this helps to put a new perspective on the situation. He was certainly a brilliant man.
Excellent document! Georgia O'Keeffe survived by 40 years to Alfred Stieglitz.
If anyones wondering. The Picassos that were on at the 291 in 1911 would've cost $1.1k today. $60k for all of the works. (2021)
Looks great! Extra things that you built work out well. Look forward to the next makeover. Nice photography work. 👍.
Fascinating documentary. Thank you.
Fabulous documentary, thank you!
Despite the obligatory walk-ons, (far too many,) by the all usual self important windbags, (blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.....) this has been a wonderful and clear exposition of Stieglitz's life and work and an almost unique opportunity for me to have finally got to grips with it insomuch as anyone can ever really to grips with a lifetime's work in just over an hour; not just by seeing so many of his best pictures displayed and somewhat explained but it also lends to them a context and an additional perspective that is certainly, "helpful," if probably not indispensable. I've been as it were tripping over Stieglitz for many years now simply because of his association with Georgia O'Keeffe, but I never previously, "got," what he was about or why she so obviously regarded him so highly and as a kindred spirit. So, he was not overrated after all; not a bit.
@Eris123451
Жыл бұрын
@M M Well I suppose that's reasonable if as you say I, "knew the background," I might feel differently about him but I don't and you haven't explained it so three points. 1: There's nothing new in this as long as I can remember being interested in art Alfred Stieglitz has always been regarded as having been a pioneer of photography. 2. Georgia O'Keeffe, who was an important, talented and original artist herself and in her own right rated him highly. 3. Having now looked more closely and with a bit more insight at his photographs, some I which I've always admired I agree with her.
Ones passion and love leaves little time for anything else.
Wonderfull scenes with Georgia OKeeffe
Extraordinary documentary!
Thank you for posting this video.it is absolutely amazing.
Wow, awesome video!!! I first heard about Stieglitz when reading about Ansel Adams. Adams went to New York, cowboy hat & all, and showed his prints to Stieglitz. Stieglitz looked at the prints, Adams standing there hat in hand, his 1st real critic and a leader in NY. Handed the pictures back to Adams and said simply "Your photographs are welcome here anytime". For Adams, if was like God pronouncing his life worthwhile.
@maryloiskokesh4128
7 жыл бұрын
My understanding is that Stieglitz reject Ansel Adams photographs when O'Keeffe presented to him
Amazing documentary, really enjoyed it , thanks :)
An excellent documentary.
An art form from the beginning. A message that cannot be expressed in words but is a strong visual message that hits the soul.
@bluesque9704
8 жыл бұрын
photography is not art. they who are not artists say photography is an art or they who are making a name or career from photography. An artist instinctively feels alien to photography. A genuine artist will say that Photography is the antithesis of high arts. I will tell you this, there is God given talent to be able to draw. And then every stroke that leaves a mark on a surface becomes unique and significant in its own existence. photography is completely different process, perhaps neurotic but never artistic.
@twihardlover1
8 жыл бұрын
+bluesque wow. get over yourself. seriously.
@bluesque9704
8 жыл бұрын
+katarzyna olszewska if you have ever painted a portrait of someone and if its not too bad.. and if it is not one of those random things where strangers will pay a little to get their portrait done on a whim.. rather especially if you know them and if there is something lovely or worth admiring.. then take a photograph with your most refined/matured processes employed.. and gift both of your works to them. You will see a difference in their reaction. They will not just see that you got their eyes right or their hair right, but rather if there is something of life in those eyes and how you were considerate, gave them your time, saw every feature and your skill traced the exact curves which they cant visualize with their eyes closed.. every brush stroke is vital, nothing is random.. It becomes all about the artist, how much they could assimilate of their subject and express poetically.
@bluesque9704
8 жыл бұрын
+katarzyna olszewska in photography the whole assimilation is done by a tool. therefore it's more like reporting or at its creative best quickly deteriorates into neurotic.. something vacuous.
@bluesque9704
8 жыл бұрын
+Katie Ferrell think about it.
Excellent video, I learned so much..thank you
Thank for sharing!
Outstanding! I appreciate my photography professor @elfotovoyeur @RMTF for suggesting it!
Magnifique vraiment ... c'est à partager !!
Excellent program
A truly brilliant video bio-essay...thank you for posting...
@donnawolman150
10 ай бұрын
Brilliant
What years those must have been.
Intéressant, Merci Nizar pour le lien ;)
Ya girl Georgia O'keefe is a straight up SAVAGE comin in w/ a roast at 19:22
@oliverdarrennix3559
3 жыл бұрын
honestly killed me when i hear her say that XD
Obsession, passion or call it another name is a dream.
@TheStockwell
3 жыл бұрын
I forget who said it, but a writer who had interviewed many people who we'd consider to be geniuses said they all had one thing in common: an ability to keep working on one thing long past the point most people would find it tedious, boring, or frustrating.
@LINDAOZAG
3 ай бұрын
Keep sweeping, editing, show only the best!@@TheStockwell
Extraordinaire.. J'adore...
Unfortunately there is an error. Painting "Men of the Docks"(pictured on about 11th minuite), belongs to George Bellows, not to Everett Shinn.
@beverlykandraceffinger3764
2 ай бұрын
I miss them all-- thanks for noticing, and supplying a correction for the attribution... the creative circle to which Bellows, Shinn and others belonged- all the students of Robert Henri, and the founding energy behind the Art Students League in NY- were an influence quite alive for the man who'd taught me painting. And from him I'd learned that creative work thrives on good friendships and an exchange of ideas...not on isolation and unhealthy competition. Artists come to maturity in gatherings. Stieglitz was a visionary in the private world of his own work, but he'd also enriched the greater gathering of artists within his times. At best we can manage both, and follow his example.
soooo gooooddddd please post more
AMAZING !
The religion of culture and art is the best religion to be a part of.
Thank you very much!
Don't you wished you could take a Hassleblad or a Horseman back in time? Heck, a Polaroid Land camera! Imagine carrying around an Arri Alexa recording the images of everyday life back in those times. I will say as a photographer and an artist, that photography did put A LOT of mid-century artists and illustrators out of work!
@suz567
2 жыл бұрын
And recently cell phone cameras have put many professional photographers out of business.
Some good stuff here. I wish the deification had been dialed back a couple of notches, though. Within minutes the hyperbole gets really irksome. Stieglitz didn't "open the eyes of America to the 20th century," and he was no more "intensely human" than the next guy or gal.
@Cope393
3 жыл бұрын
After watching the Tate’s documentary on O’Keeffe I looked into backstories of his relationships to his wife, daughter, some of the other significant people in his life….pretty much an ambitious, opportunistic jerk … (love how the narrator editorialized his first wife as “prudish” in the first few minutes of the thing.)
@danc3693
Жыл бұрын
@@Cope393 it isn’t unusual for highly creative people to be very self absorbed. I am not painting all of them that way. Stieglitz lived at a time where many - most? - men believed their wife should follow him in whatever he chose to do. O’Keefe eventually went her OWN way. I don’t mean to be overly simplistic. Stieglitz and his wife likely had basic compatibility issues so many other couples experience.
@JB-3794
Жыл бұрын
@@Cope393 Yes, why is it so hard to understand that a woman might become 'prudish' towards a man who pays less and less attention to her, yet expects great ador? Or when he marries a woman for money? Or convenience? When I was young, the word was frigid. Now I don't hear remarks like this. This documentary said he had little time or taste for family life. So no surprise his wife lost that loving feeling for him over time.
@Kerwin-Kendell
10 ай бұрын
I don't think there was any "deification" towards him - not sure where you get that. But to each his own (often people hear or perceive differently). I find what he did & what was inspiration. As for his marriage - clearly it got in the way of what he had to do. Though his wife probably did help by being exactly who she was, which inadvertently pushed him into his goals even more.
@Kerwin-Kendell
10 ай бұрын
@@Cope393your view point describes almost every person in history who did anything worth remembering (even if recorded history doesn't remember them at all).
thanks for sharing
thanks for posting this.
He had a good Tailor. Probably the same one as his Father.
Thank you for this.
There is no way that you could known that I am a big admirer of Georgia O'Keefe. How did you do that. I needed to see that picture. Thanks
great,thanks.
In which country is this?
Teally you have to put adds?
In my photography schooling we had a visual discourse on famous people in photography. Alfred Stieglitz was forefront. We were told this photographer was psychic and that few of us were able to make it creatively without this ability. I do not know if the teacher who knew a family friend. A famous female photographer who knew my destiny.
Would love to see the whole video but the constant interruptions for ads are worse than tv. No thank you.
@channinghuskey5265
4 жыл бұрын
it's well worth it
@hurdygurdyguy1
4 жыл бұрын
Here's how you stop the ads (on all KZread videos)... scroll to the end, let it play out, click on the "replay", voila, watch the whole thing with no ads...
Why the seperation between head hands arms. And torso of georgeia o Keefe ?
@suz567
2 жыл бұрын
Influence of modern painting of the time - Picasso etc and forward
Excellent
How much money do you think a copy of that would cost
Truly transcendent....
Inspiring. Thanks for posting.
@franckfi3716
6 жыл бұрын
a
I am but a fool...a mere nothing.... in the shadow of these great people.....my only hope is that someday....in the future.....someone will come upon my work and wonder.....who I was.
Some enlightening glimpse of Trans-Atlantic history of Photography & art at the beginning of last century!
Absolutely wonderful.
Very very interesting…
great video ... pity it's in low 480 resolution and very little tone depth!
Thanks for posting this bio fantastic he’s such a historic influence on photography if your a photog you should know who and what he is to photography. And this does just that. Now all we need is a Helmut Newton bio?
the various factions of photographers were pretty rabid about their way being the only way, there was a lot of that going around in many fields back then.
My favorite part is the fact that no one in the great unwashed public forgets Georgia O'Keefe and her art, but now, in 2023, the average person scratches their head and says, "Alfred Who?" And even the thumbnail is of O'Keefe, not Stieglitz.
Always skip the first three minutes of any American clip if you have a blood pressure.
How to stuff up a wonderfull documentary; insert 11 add breaks! Shame on you!
We all live in America...
Any relation to Hugo Stiglitz?
@drcringe7873
9 ай бұрын
I wonder the same.
5 coupures de pub pour un doc de 1h30, ça devient compliqué yt ...
Well. I liked it.
Insane.
I wish You could do documentary about cubism and photography
I was hoping the Inglorious Basterds guy was real.
The painters of the day were threatened by photography the same way film photographers were or are threatened by digital. Some things never change.
@hurdygurdyguy1
4 жыл бұрын
Canvas artists leveled the same criticisms at photographers then as film photographers criticized digital photographers 10 or 20 years ago ("Using a digital camera and computer is cheating!! It's not 'real' photography!")
@LINDAOZAG
3 ай бұрын
If it's good---I can see it.
Is that family of me
Is it me or is Stieglitz kind of a looker? 👀
Kinda the modern world. When it was daring to be hopeful and optimistic.
20:08 that glass window
THE AGE OF OVERGROWN MUSTACHES, UNDERGROWN WIT !
Men garnering success (and making art) at the expense of women. A tale as old as time.
wow
감사합니다
canturgan ,i hope you are being funny.
Stiglitz is the typical example of how being first is more important than being best. Little wonder that he became a anachronistic asshole in his latter days since he'd failed to keep up-to-date as happens when one becomes and crusty. We see it now in our sharply divided politics.
Some of Stieglitz' portraits are great while others are really crappy snapshots...
@hurdygurdyguy1
4 жыл бұрын
YEAH!! What was PBS thinking?! Gilbert Gottfried would've been SO MUCH BETTER!! 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
A 1/2 hour commercial. Obviously the product is not very good or they wouldn’t need to be interrupting a goo documentary with expensive digital trash
Bioshock Infinite
A picture of Georgia O'Keefe & what's under it? "Alfred Stieglitz"! They couldn't have come up with a better symbol for patriarchy if they'd tried. Your negative is dried all right.
those who can't do, criticize. lol
His pictures would be much better if he used Instagram.