Photo-Secession Movement
The earliest photography was devoted to its scientific and technical uses. But by the late 1890s and into the turn of the 20th Century, photographers became more interested in photography as an art in itself.
In 1902 Alfred Stieglitz formed the Photo-Secession Movement. As opposed to Dadaism, the Photo-Secessionist movement was VERY concerned with form and the aesthetic rules of photography.
Thirds, Corners & Lines Edward Steichen, Milk Bottles 1915
Vertical versus Horizontal Alvin Langdon Coburn, Broadway 1909
Clarence White, Columbia College 1910
Alfred Stieglitz, Apples and Gable 1922
Found Framing Alvin Langdon Coburn, Cadiz1908
Angle / Point of View Edward Steichen, George Washington Bridge 1931
Clarence White, Ship Construction 1917
Use of light Alvin Langdon Coburn, Smoke Stacks 1910
Abstract design Alvin Langdon Coburn, Vortograph 1917
Alfred Stieglitz, Back Window 1915
Alfred Stieglitz, Equivalent 1926
Clarence White, Raindrops 1902
Edward Steichen, Time Space Continuum 1920
Repetition and Pattern Edward Steichen, Wheelbarrow with Flower Pots 1920
Edward Steichen, Matches 1925
Edward Steichen, Heavy Roses 1914
Alfred Stieglitz, Hands and Thimble 1920