Alfred stieglitz the hand of man
This photograph, taken from the back of a moving train, was published in the first issue of Camera Work , in January Additional resources related to this object are to the right. Through his own photographic work over the course of a half century, the journals he read more. After being introduced in the s, gelatin silver printing grew to dominate amateur and professional read more.
The Little Galleries of the Photo-Secession—later known as —began as a place to display and read more. With the closure of the gallery in , Alfred Stieglitz found himself without a read more. At his last gallery, An American Place, Stieglitz welcomed a stream of visitors who wanted read more. Stieglitz had edited two previous publications—The American Amateur Photographer and Camera Notes—before deciding in read more.
For Alfred Stieglitz, as for the other members of the Photo-Secession, a high-quality photographic print read more.
The Hand of Man is a black and white photograph taken by Alfred Stieglitz in This is one of the pictures he took concerning urban life.
Beginning when he was a young man newly returned from studying in Germany and continuing read more. Object Research Recto Verso. Recto of print. Photomicrograph showing print surface under raking light scale bar is in millimeters. Photomicrograph showing print surface under raking light scale bar is in micrometers.