ALFRED STIEGLITZ and JUAN C. ABEL, Editors

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ALFRED STIEGLITZ and JUAN C. ABEL, Editors

Camera Notes: Official Organ of the Camera Club of N.Y.,

New York: The Camera Club, July 1897-December 1903. 20 issues
Volume I, Numbers 1-4; Volume II, Numbers 1-4; Volume III, Numbers 1-3; Volume IV, Numbers 3,4; Volume V, Numbers 1,3,4; Volume VI, Numbers 1-4. Illustrated with photogravures, halftone plates and silver prints of images by Alfred Stieglitz, Eduard J. Steichen, Gertrude Käsebier, F. Holland Day, Clarence White and others. 4to. Green paper wrappers, all issues complete as published. (20)

Lot Essay

When Alfred Stieglitz began to study and make photographs in the 1880s his interest was that of a devoted and enthusiastic amateur. This association with the medium manifested itself in the forms available to amateurs at the time: salons, juried exhibitions and camera clubs. It wasn't until Stieglitz was to mature as an artist was he able to finally direct the course of his interests and evolve towards modernism through photography. As Christian A. Peterson, the curator and author of the forthcoming exhibition and catalogue Alfred Stieglitz's Camera Notes (W.W. Norton, 1993) points out, Stieglitz's involvement with the Camera Club of New York represented his final association with an amateur organization and in leaving he turned his back on the hobbyist. Thus, with his resignation as editior of Camera Notes and the subsequent publication of Camera Work the first coherent movement of photography as a fine art began.