Edward Jean Steichen, 27 Mar 1879 - 25 Mar 1973 Search this
Sitter:
Martha Graham, 11 May 1894 - 1 Apr 1991 Search this
Medium:
Gelatin silver print
Dimensions:
Image: 24.3 x 19.7cm (9 9/16 x 7 3/4")
Sheet: 25.1 x 20.1cm (9 7/8 x 7 15/16")
Mat: 55.9 x 40.6cm (22 x 16")
Type:
Photograph
Date:
1931
Exhibition Label:
Born Allegheny City, Pennsylvania
A pioneer of modern dance in America, Martha Graham brought dance into the vortex of the Machine Age. The idea of motion and dynamism were fundamental tenets of modernism, as was the quest to “make it new.” In this spirit, Graham saw herself as both “a dancer and an inventor.”
She studied at Ruth St. Denis and Ted Shawn’s Denishawn School from 1916 to 1923 and then worked as a solo dancer at the Greenwich Village Follies. She also taught at the Eastman School and, with some of her students, established the Martha Graham School for Contemporary Dance in 1926.
In her 1944 signature piece, Appalachian Spring, she presented a “quintessentially American” scenario that conveyed “a dance of hope.” It was a perfect vehicle for Graham, who once described dancing as “an affirmation of life through movement.”
National Portrait Gallery, Smithsonian Institution; acquired in memory of Agnes and Eugene Meyer through the generosity of Katharine Graham and the New York Community Trust, The Island Fund