Alfred Stieglitz Biography, Age, Weight, Height, Friend, Like, Affairs, Favourite, Birthdate & Other

Alfred Stieglitz Biography, Age, Weight, Height, Friend, Like, Affairs, Favourite, Birthdate & Other

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This Biography is about one of the best Photographer Alfred Stieglitz including his Height, weight, Age & Other Detail…

Biography Of Alfred Stieglitz
Real Name Alfred Stieglitz
Famous as Photographer
Nationality American
Personal life of Alfred Stieglitz
Born on 01 January 1864
Birthday 1st January
Died At Age 82
Sun Sign Capricorn
Born in Hoboken
Died on 13 July 1946
Place of death ew York City
Family Background of Alfred Stieglitz
Father Edward Stieglitz
Mother Hedwig Ann Werner
Siblings Flora
Spouse/Partner Emmeline Obermeyer(1893-924- divorced) Georgia O’Keeffe (1924-1946)
Children Katherine
Education City College of New York
Personal Fact of Alfred Stieglitz

Alfred Stieglitz was a photographer who promoted the modernist movement in art and almost single-handedly altered how photography was perceived as an art form. Although the rise in quality and availability of technology means that almost everyone is an amateur photographer today, the medium was still relatively new and unexplored when Stieglitz began his career.

His extensive writings, gallery showings and artistic efforts, put photography on the map of fine art and turned photographs into something worthy of being hung in an art gallery, rather than a mere inartistic way to preserve images. Obsessive and driven in his personal life as well as his career, he had a reputation for being consistently infatuated with younger women and had several affairs, including a late in life marriage to famous painter Georgia O’Keefe.

His own photography often focuses on the softer and more natural ephemera of the hard and brutal rise of American industry, using subjects like snow and steam to quite literally soften the hard edges of industrial scenes. Although his own photography is respected as meaningful art in itself, his most enduring legacy is the effort he put towards changing public perception of photography and clearing a path for photography to be viewed as fine art.