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From the Viaduct, New York

Paul Strand American

Not on view

What to make of this strange and unexpected photograph by Paul Strand from 1916, the earliest work in the exhibition? It looks more like a Robert Rauschenberg Combine or collage from the 1950s or 1960s than an American work of art in any medium from the 1910s. Nearly twice the size of most photographs by Strand’s contemporaries and composed of velvety black tones and bright white highlights, it arrests the eye. Strand’s mentor and gallerist, Alfred Stieglitz, reproduced the photograph in the final issue of his deluxe quarterly, Camera Work, in June 1917. There, he described his protégé’s work as "brutal" three times in one short paragraph.

From the Viaduct, New York, Paul Strand (American, New York 1890–1976 Orgeval, France), Platinum print

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