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During the early decades of the 20th Century the New York
avant-garde struggled to define an aesthetic that would be
both modern and American. Led by photographer, connoisseur,
and entrepreneur Alfred Stieglitz, they sought to reevaluate
traditional European theories and attitudes, and adopted an
outlook of change, renewal, experiment, and hope. The media
they embraced–photography, watercolor, drawing, and
avant-garde journals–were prized for their freshness,
mobility, and authenticity, becoming vehicles for the expression
of a new American tradition and innovation. These works on
paper, favored by some of the best-known artists of the Stieglitz
circle including Paul Strand, John Marin, Stuart Davis, Marsden
Hartley, and Charles DeMuth, spoke aggressively of a uniquely
American modern art.
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