Wednesday, October 2, 2019
Alfred Stieglitz and Gallery 291 :: Armory show Art essays
Alfred Stieglitz and Gallery 291 A Modern Art Revolution Before the Armory Show ââ¬Å"Quite a few years agoâ⬠¦there got to beââ¬âa placeâ⬠¦. The place grewââ¬âthe place shiftedâ⬠¦the place was where this man wasâ⬠¦. ââ¬âShiftââ¬âis something that cannot be tiedââ¬âcannot be pigeonholed. It jumpsââ¬âit boundsââ¬âit glides ââ¬âit SHIFTSââ¬â it must have freedomâ⬠¦. It seems those who do that worth the doing are possessed of good eyesââ¬âalive eyesââ¬âwarm eyesââ¬â it seems they radiate a fire within outward. The places they inhabit have a light burningââ¬â a light seen from near and far by those who need this lightââ¬â and this light sometimes dimââ¬âsometimes brilliantââ¬ânever outââ¬ââ⬠¦. To realize such a placeââ¬â a very tangible place was and is this manââ¬â¢s dream.â⬠John Marin about Alfred Stieglitz[1] On February 17, 1913 the International Exhibition of Modern Art, or the Armory Show, opened to the public. It is unlikely that the some 4,000 guests milling around the eighteen rooms of the 69th Regiment Armory in New York that night could have realized the extent to which the artwork displayed would set off a revolution that would sweep the nation. Response to the Armory Show, however, was sensational. During the month long exhibition the, Armory Show became the talk of the town. The galleries were constantly full of people who came to gape at the spectacle, artists who came to study or deride, and celebrities and socialites who came to see and be seen. Former President Teddy Roosevelt even made a visit to the show praising the spirit of modernity present in the venture, but distrustful of the so called ââ¬Ëradicalââ¬â¢ art of the European avant-garde. In his response to the show published in Outlook, Roosevelt commented: ââ¬Å"It is vitally necessary to mov e forward and to shake off the dead hand of the reactionaries; and yet we have to face the fact that there is apt to be a lunatic fringe among the votaries of any forward movement.â⬠[2] In this statement Roosevelt summarized the public reactions to the show.
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