
Look Inside
Which art books, prints and posters are available by and about this artist? Here is a sample of items of interest to a typical collector:
Princeton and MET
Princeton and MET
This was the first and most comprehensive posthumous monograph about of Steichen's photographs, spanning seven decades: the landscapes, the haunting studies of flowers, the portraits of friends and family, the still lifes and New York cityscapes. Here are fashion photographs taken during the fifteen years Steichen worked for Vogue. And here too are the breathtaking portraits he made for Vanity Fair: Colette, Greta Garbo, William Butler Yeats, Henri Matisse, George Gershwin, Franklin Delano Roosevelt (taken when he was governor of New York--a standard pose, the decisive leader in his chair, but later, when FDR was president, cropped by Steichen to show the sad, serious face of a visionary acquainted with suffering).
In a personal and illuminating text, Joanna Steichen writes about her husband's passionate views on photography; about how he moved away from painting (his understanding and support of modernism helped bring the movement to this country); about his experiments with abstraction; about the repercussions of commercial success in his life as an artist; about how he and Joanna first met (through the mischievous intervention of Steichen's brother-in-law, Carl Sandburg) and how their relationship changed as they became lovers, man and wife and, finally, artist and assistant.
Joanna Steichen writes about Steichen's days as a colonel in World War I, in charge of aerial photography for the Air Force in France, and then as a captain in the Navy, past the age of retirement, in World War II, in charge of combat photography in the Pacific. She writes about his years as the European art scout for his friend Alfred Stieglitz, and of how Steichen later designed the gallery for the Photo-Secession's 291 and arranged exhibitions of the work of Matisse, Cézanne, Picasso and Brancusi, long before these names were known in America. And she writes about the couple's farm in Connecticut, which Steichen landscaped out of woods and rocks and hollows and photographed over the years, as well as the new hybrid of delphinium Steichen produced and the sunflowers he raised and studied through his lens.
Steichen's Legacy, Knopf, 2000, plate 200.
Steichen, A Life in Photography, Doubleday, 1963.
Other impressions of this photograph are in the permanent collections of MOMA, New York, Object 229.1961 and SFMOMA, ST1998.0433.
Steichen's Legacy, Knopf, 2000, plate 152.
Steichen's Legacy, Knopf, 2000, plate 198.
Steichen, A Life in Photography, Doubleday, 1963.
Other gelatin silver prints of this image are in the collection of MOMA, NY (objects 140.1962, 420.1997 & 486.1964) and the ICP, NY (Accession No. 781.1984).
Steichen's Legacy, Knopf, 2000, plate 206;
Steichen, A Life in Photography, Doubleday, 1963.
Other impressions of this photograph are included in the collections of the ICP, New York, Accession No. 768.1984 and the MOMA, New York, Object No 244.1961.
Steichen, A Life in Photography, Doubleday, 1963.
Other gelatin silver prints of this image are in the collection of MOMA, NY (Object 255.1961) and the ICP, NY (Accession No. 782.1984).
