Details
EDWARD STEICHEN (1879-1973)
Road Into the Valley – Moonrise, 1904
gelatin silver print with applied media, on a layered mount
signed and dated in roman numerals in yellow pencil (recto)
image/sheet: 612 x 8 in. (16.5 x 20.3 cm.)
primary mount: 678 x 838 in. (17.5 x 21.3 cm.)
secondary mount: 814 x 12 in. (20.1 x 30.5 cm.)
Provenance
William L. Schaeffer Collection;
acquired from the above by the present owner.
Literature
Alfred Stieglitz, Camera Work, no. 14, April 1906.
Marianne Fulton Margolies (ed.), Alfred Stieglitz Camera Work: A Pictorial Guide, Dover Publications, New York, 1978, fig. 16, p. 45.
Exhibition catalogue, Edward Steichen: Lives in Photography, Foundation for the Exhibition of Photography, Minneapolis, and the Musée de l'Elysée, Lausanne, 2007, pl. 108, p. 152.
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Lot Essay

Originally trained as a painter, Edward Steichen was an early champion of the Photo-Secession movement, a group of notable artist who sought to elevate photography into the world of fine art. Founded in 1902 under the leadership of Alfred Stieglitz, Photo-Secessionists rejected the prevailing notion of photography as a merely mechanical or documentary medium by employing elaborate techniques in the darkroom like platinum printing, bromoil transfer, and hand-tinting. The resulting photographs possess a likeness similar to oil paintings with rich tonality and textured surfaces. Each print from this era was unmistakably unique, reflecting each artist’s unique vision and craftsmanship.

Printed as a gelatin silver print, Steichen applied hand-coloring to the present lot to create the blueish-green hue in the image. The formal elements of this romantic scene – the road receding into shadow, the silhouetted trees, the softly glowing moon – epitomize the aesthetic vision and goals of the Photo-Secession. A master print maker with an exacting eye, the artist insisted on personally hand-tinting each individual print to be published in the Stieglitz’s seminal photo-journal Camera Work as part of the Steichen Supplement in 1906. A tribute to Steichen’s immense contributions to the medium, the present lot is an ideal representation of the innovation in photography at the turn of the century.

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