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Highlighting the museum's seaport theme, the exhibition features "The Ferry," a moody, dark picture of a ferry boat near Cortlandt Street in lower Manhattan, one of a series of harbor pictures, all taken by Stieglitz in 1910. A separate gallery contains a small presentation of Stieglitz's lantern slides, the precursor of the old-fashioned slide carousel, that never have been shown before. The slides, scanned by the museum from originals, were used by members of the Camera Club of New York, of which Stieglitz was a member, to show each other their latest work. "Stieglitz loved the medium, he thought it was beautiful to have these translucent projected images," Yochelson said. The third and last gallery of the exhibition is called "The Face of New York." It contrasts Stieglitz's personal vision with a variety of material by other artists to show the wide variety of imagery of New York that was developing during his time. "It's meant to give this sort of high temple of art feeling, which was Stieglitz's view of himself and his work, with the kind of hustle-bustle dynamic imagery and feeling of the city which was showing up by others," Yochelson said. ___ Online:
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