Metadaten

Camera Work: A Photographic Quarterly — 1904 (Heft 8)

DOI Artikel:
Alfred Stieglitz, Some Impressions of Foreign Exhibitions
DOI Artikel:
The Royal
DOI Artikel:
Exhibition Notes [unsigned text]
DOI Artikel:
The Hague
DOI Artikel:
The London Salon
DOI Seite / Zitierlink: 
https://doi.org/10.11588/diglit.30318#0041
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not only verbally but in letters as well as in articles, is shared by a class of
art-lovers and painters who until very recently absolutely abhorred the word
photography. Among this class Camera Work has met with an approval
naturally most gratifying in view of the lack of harmony amongst pho-
tographers generally. After all, it is to the connoisseurs, the painters and to
the big men and women in photography that we look mostly for the culmina-
tion of our ambitions. The squally appearance of the photographic sea is
more apparent than real, for the recognized leaders and their friends through-
out the world are working in entire harmony toward an end which in our
next number we hope to make public. Alfred Stieglitz.

EXHIBITION NOTES.
THE HAGUE.
AT THE recent International Exhibition held at The Hague,
Holland, the Secession collection more than held its own and
received universal praise. Of the five prizes awarded by the
Jury—composed of H. W. Mesdag, the celebrated marine-
painter, Maurice Bucquet, President of the Photo-Club de
Paris; A. Horsley Hinton, editor of the Amateur Photographer, and
F. Matthies-Masuren, painter and editor of the Photographische Rund-
schau — two came to this country. Steichen's new Rodin received the prize
for the best picture in the entire exhibition and White won the prize for the
best genre picture. The exhibition was a great success and aroused much
enthusiasm and interest throughout Holland.
The following is a list of the contributors invited by the Secession:
C. Yarnall Abbott, Alice M. Boughton, Annie W. Brigman, John G.
Bullock, L. M. McCormick, Rose Clark and Elizabeth Flint Wade, Mr.
and Mrs. Norman W. Carkhuff, Alvin Langdon Coburn, J. M. Drivet,
W. B. Dyer, Frank Eugene, Herbert G. French, F. Benedict Herzog,
William F. James, Joseph T. Keiley, Gertrude Käsebier, Sarah H. Ladd,
Frank E. Marks, William J. Mullins, J. Mitchell Elliot, George Niedecken,
William B. Post, Charles Peabody, Prescott Adamson, Jeannette B. Peabody,
H. C. Rubincam, W. W. Renwick, Katharine S. Stanbery, Mary R. Stan-
bery, Edmund Stirling, Eva Watson-Schütze, Sarah C. Sears, John F.
Strauss, Eduard J. Steichen, Alfred Stieglitz, S. L. Willard, Clarence H.
White, Arthur W. Wilde, and Myra A. Wiggins.
THE LONDON SALON.
As a matter of record we note that the following Americans were
represented at the London Salon: C. Yarnall Abbott, Jeanne Bennett, Alice
Boughton, John G. Bullock, Charles E. Barr, C. Bell, Alvin L. Coburn, F.
Detlefsen, J. M. Drivet, William B. Dyer, J. Mitchell Elliot, Herbert G.
French, A. A. Gleason, William F. James, Gertrude Käsebier, Edward
Keck, Mary M. Keipp, Joseph T. Keiley, Frank E. Marks, Charles
Peabody, Jeannette Peabody, Landon Rives, Harry C. Rubincam, Margaret

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