The Strange Career of Stieglitz's `The Steerage' by Deborah Dash Moore Director, The Frankel Center, and Frederick G.L. Huetwell Professor of History University of Michigan In 1907 Alfred Stieglitz boarded a steamship heading to Europe. He had already made a name for himself as a talented photographer and outspoken proponent of photography as an art form. His gallery on Fifth Avenue in New York City and his magazine Camera Work promoted pictorialist photographs, noted for their soft focus and dreamy qualities. Mist, snow, smoke, and their effects appealed to pictorialists, even when they pictured New York's dynamic cityscape. Stieglitz had yet to proclaim his credo: "I was born in Hoboken. I am an American. Photography is my passion. The search for truth my obsession." But at 43, with a wife and daughter accompanying him, his trip back to Europe, where he had first studied photography, provided the setting for perhaps his most famous photograph. "If all my photographs were lost, and I would be remembered only for 'The Steerage,'" he once said, "I would be satisfied."' Stieglitz traveled first class, appropriate for his station as a son of wealthy German Jewish immigrants who supported his photographic ambitions. But after a couple of days at sea, he grew bored with the amusements available and wandered away to peer at how less prosperous passengers traveled. Looking down at the steerage and across at other travelers on the `tween deck, Stieglitz had an epiphany. His epiphany had nothing to do with social class differences or even immigration. As he later recounted his experience, he saw "a new picture of shapes, and underlying it, the new vision that held me." Rushing back to his stateroom for his camera, Stieglitz used the one unexposed negative he had to capture a picture that, were anyone to move, "would no longer exist."2 The photograph justly deserves its reputation as an iconic image. It is visually complex, requiring no manipulation to achieve its power. Stieglitz often pointed to the man's round straw "boater" hat as what caught his eye. The tilt of the man's body contrasted to the slant of the stairs and the thrust of the triangle-shaped mast, while echoes of his hat's circle reappeared on the links of the 1 Quoted in Hans-Michael Koetzle, "The Steerage," in Photo Icons: The Story Behind the Pictures, 1827-1926 (Köln: Taschen, 2002): 138. 2 Quoted in Joel Smith, "How Stieglitz Came to Photograph Cityscapes," History of Photography 20:4 (Winter 1996): 322. gangplank. The photo captures a moment—what Stieglitz would call "the living moment" and the goal of all of his subsequent photography— as well as a historically freighted situation. During the preceding year, 1906, record numbers of immigrants had entered the United States; Jewish immigration was at its peak, with over 150,000 arriving. Despite Stieglitz's later accounts of the taking the photograph and its importance, he did not print The Steerage until 1911. Yet once it entered into visual commerce with his other photographs, The Steerage occupied a critical place, pointing to a shift in photography away from pictorialism toward vernacular modernism, marking perhaps a new Alfred Stieglitz. "The Steerage" © 2010 Georgia O'Keeffe Museum/ vision appropriate for the 20th century. Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York Stieglitz lived a long life, dying in 1946 at the age of 82. His most extensive comments on The Steerage came four years before his death. With the rise of New York City as the center of the western art world after the end of World War II, Stieglitz attained posthumous prominence as one of the most influential American photographers. But at some point after his death, interest in The Steerage shifted focus from the white straw boater on the young man on the `tween deck to the white shawl with a black stripe worn by a woman in steerage. That shift accompanied a new interpretation of the photograph, one that emphasized its title and its connection to the photographer's Jewish identity. American Jews laid claim to The Steerage. Not looking too closely at the photograph, people have routine misrecognized the shawl as a tallit, even failing to notice that it covered the head of a woman, not a man. Noting the date of the photograph and its correlation with peak years of Jewish immigration to America, viewers have disregarded the purpose of the voyage. Jews have imagined that the ship was bringing immigrants to the United States, instead of taking them back home. In short, Stieglitz's iconic photograph did not only capture "the living moment" as Stieglitz termed it (or "the decisive moment" as the famous French photographer Henri Cartier-Bresson called it), in spite of itself, the photo also came to represent an historical moment, incapsulating decades of mass immigration that reshaped Jewish history in the 20 century.' The Steerage now occupies such a powerful place in Jewish narratives about America that it is unlikely to be dislodged. The photograph graces the cover of the Columbia History of Jews and Judaism in America (2008) and it introduces the exhibit devoted to immigration from 1880- 1945 in the National Museum of American Jewish History that just opened in Philadelphia. In these contexts, The Steerage now epitomizes arrival: of pious Jewish immigrants who suffered to reach the golden shores of the new world and of talented Jewish artists like Stieglitz who innovated and transformed photography into a powerful means of creative expression. It's not a bad career for a 103-year-old photograph, but it sure is a strange one. 3 Conversation with Jonathan Boyarin. For information about University of Michigan's Frankel Center for Judaic Studies, call 734.763.9047, email judaicstudies@umich.edu , or visit www.lsa.umich.edujudaic. UNIVERSrrY OF MICHIGAN