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190019362
Woods Twilight

Woods Twilight

Edward J. Steichen (American (born Luxembourg), Bivange 1879–1973 West Redding, Connecticut)

Date:
1899
Medium:
Platinum print
Dimensions:
15.2 x 20.1 cm (6 x 7 15/16 in.)
Classification:
Photographs
Credit Line:
Alfred Stieglitz Collection, 1933
Accession Number:
33.43.14

Description

Steichen's twilight and moonlight photographs of the late 1890s were deeply influenced by the atmospheric effects of Whistler's London nocturnes and by the landscapes of the American Tonalist George Innes. In 1901 Steichen wrote of the visual magic of the woods at dusk: "What a beautiful hour of the day is that of the twilight when things disappear and seem to melt into each other, and this great feeling of peace overshadows all."

190011847
Broadway at Night

Broadway at Night

Alvin Langdon Coburn (British, Boston, Massachusetts 1882–1966 Denbighshire, Wales)

Date:
ca. 1910
Medium:
Photogravure
Dimensions:
20.2 x 14.9 cm (7 15/16 x 5 7/8 in. )
Classification:
Photographs
Credit Line:
The Elisha Whittelsey Collection, The Elisha Whittelsey Fund, 1972
Accession Number:
1972.603.3

Description

Coburn was mesmerized by the electrified arc lamps of Midtown Manhattan. "It is only at twilight," he wrote in 1911, "that the city reveals itself to me in the fulness [sic] of its beauty, when the arc lights on the Avenue click into being. Many an evening I have watched them and studied carefully just which ones appeared first and why. They begin somewhere about Twenty-sixth street, where it is darkest, and then gradually the great white globes glow one by one, up past the Waldorf and the new Library, like the stringing of pearls, until they burst out into a diamond pendant at the group of hotels at Fifty-ninth street. Probably there is a man at a switchboard somewhere, but the effect is like destiny, and regularly each night, like the stars, we have this lighting up of the Avenue."

190013005
Selectman and Wife

Selectman and Wife

Frances S. Allen (American, 1854–1941)

Artist:
Mary E. Allen (American, 1858–1941)
Date:
ca. 1899
Medium:
Platinum print
Dimensions:
20.7 x 15.7 cm. (8 1/8 x 6 3/16 in.)
Classification:
Photographs
Credit Line:
The Elisha Whittelsey Collection, The Elisha Whittelsey Fund, 1975
Accession Number:
1975.527.7

Description

After progressive hearing loss forced them to give up their chosen careers in teaching, Frances and Mary Allen took up photography in the mid-1880s. Influenced by the social and aesthetic reforms of the Arts and Crafts movement, the sisters specialized in views of their native Deerfield, Massachusetts, and posed genre scenes of life in colonial times. Around the turn of the century, their idealized pictures of country folk became popular with book and magazine publishers capitalizing on Colonial Revival interests. This photograph served as an illustration for the story "The Knuckling Down of Mrs. Gamble," in the January 1900 issue of Good Housekeeping magazine.

190017910
Prichod Noci

Prichod Noci

Josef Sudek (Czech, 1896–1976)

Date:
1948–64
Medium:
Gelatin silver print
Dimensions:
28.8 x 38.8 cm (11 5/16 x 15 1/4 in.)
Classification:
Photographs
Credit Line:
Purchase, The Horace W. Goldsmith Foundation Gift, through Joyce and Robert Menschel, 1989
Accession Number:
1989.1073
Rights and Reproduction:
© Josef Sudek, courtesy of Josef Sudek Estate

Description

Although he trained as a commercial photographer and produced modernist-inspired still lifes during the 1930s, after World War II Sudek returned to the moody chiaroscuro that had characterized his early work. For the series Remembrances, to which this photograph belongs, he surveyed the garden of his friend, the architect Otto Rothmayer, producing dramatic images haunted with familiar objects from his studio-fragments of classical sculpture, masks, glass vessels, and mirrors. In this photograph, Sudek conjures an otherworldly nimbus hovering over a marble head atop an abandoned table and empty chairs, casting an aura of recent departure that identifies the scene as the materialization of memory.

190017389
Soho Bedroom

Soho Bedroom

Bill Brandt (English (born Germany), Hamburg 1904–1983 London)

Date:
1936
Medium:
Gelatin silver print
Dimensions:
23.2 x 19.6 cm (9 1/8 x 7 3/4 in.)
Classification:
Photographs
Credit Line:
Ford Motor Company Collection, Gift of Ford Motor Company and John C. Waddell, 1987
Accession Number:
1987.1100.77

Description

The success of Brassaï's Paris by Night (1932) prompted the French publisher Arts et Métiers Graphiques to commission a companion volume from Brandt. A Night in London appeared in 1938 and featured sixty-four black-and-white photographs, including this one. Although the pictures appear to be candid, Brandt frequently staged scenes for the camera, recruiting his family and friends as models. Here, the male figure is the artist's younger brother Rolf.

190035321
Tenth Street at Night

Tenth Street at Night

John Cohen (American, born 1932)

Date:
1960
Medium:
Gelatin silver print
Dimensions:
34.1 x 23 cm (13 7/16 x 9 1/16 in.)
Classification:
Photographs
Credit Line:
Purchase, The Horace W. Goldsmith Foundation Gift, through Joyce and Robert Menschel, 1998
Accession Number:
1998.154
Rights and Reproduction:
© John Cohen

Night Vision: Photography After Dark

April 26–September 18, 2011

At the turn of the last century, night photography came into its own as an artistic genre. In the early years of the medium, capturing images under low-light conditions was nearly impossible, but by the early twentieth century, faster films, portable cameras, and commercial flashbulbs freed artists to explore the graphic universe of shimmering light and velvety darkness that reveals itself in the hours between dusk and dawn. Modern camera artists were captivated by the many moods of electric light: the softly shining globes of street lamps, glittering skyscraper facades, dazzling neon signs, the intimate chiaroscuro of lamplit rooms. Night photographers were also particularly fond of rain, snow, ice, and fog—for both aesthetic and practical reasons. Wet pavement and rising mist can lend pictures an atmosphere of lush poetic reverie; they also reflect and diffuse the available light, shortening exposure times.

In the 1930s, inspired by the pioneering work of Brassaï in Paris and Bill Brandt in London, photographers began to turn their attention to the social life of the city at night, from the convivial hubbub of Little Italy's Feast of San Gennaro to the top-hatted elegance of opening night at the opera. Others were drawn to the gritty underworld of nocturnal outlaws or to lone figures on the margins, picturing the night as a shadowy realm of pleasure, danger, and transgression. More recently, artists have delved even deeper, adapting techniques of police and military surveillance (hidden cameras, searchlights, infrared film) to pry into hidden corners of the night, driven by an ageless desire to make darkness visible.

This installation surveys the ways in which modern photographers have used the camera to explore the visual and symbolic potential of the nocturnal image. Among the featured works are moody Pictorialist nocturnes by Edward Steichen and Alvin Langdon Coburn; shadowy street scenes by Brassaï, Bill Brandt, and Robert Frank; electric light abstractions by Italian Futurist Giuseppe Albergamo; and aerial views of suburban Los Angeles at night by contemporary artist David Deutsch. Drawn entirely from the Metropolitan's collection, the installation includes approximately forty photographs, ranging from the late 1890s to the present.

190019362

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