Fragmentary Glimpses: Alfred Stieglitz and David Vestal in New York, on view at Robert Mann Gallery from February 5 to March 21, 2026, brings together two distinct yet resonant visions of a city defined by perpetual change. New York has long been a proving ground for photographers, a place where speed, density, ambition, and reinvention collide. Through the eyes of Stieglitz and Vestal, the city emerges not as a fixed portrait but as a series of fleeting impressions—moments suspended between permanence and disappearance.
Alfred Stieglitz’s photographs capture New York at a pivotal moment in the early twentieth century, when industrial progress reshaped both the skyline and the rhythm of daily life. His images from
Camera Work No. 36 reveal a city in motion: ferries slicing through fog, crowds dissolving into rain, iron structures rising against shifting skies. Often described as “snapshots,” these works are anything but casual. Through daring compositions and tonal subtlety, Stieglitz transformed modern infrastructure and urban weather into expressive forces, positioning photography as a medium capable of poetic insight as well as documentation.
David Vestal’s New York, photographed decades later, reflects a quieter yet no less charged atmosphere. Working in the postwar period, Vestal turned his attention to the city’s inhabitants and overlooked corners, where light grazes faces and architecture bears the weight of recent history. His background in painting and his association with the Photo League informed a practice rooted in observation and restraint. While less overtly celebratory than Stieglitz’s work, Vestal’s images register the psychological texture of urban life, revealing beauty and unease in equal measure.
Together, these photographs trace a lineage of modern vision. The exhibition’s title, drawn from a 1911 essay describing New York as a vision that briefly glimmers before fading, feels especially apt. Stieglitz and Vestal understood that the city can never be fully grasped—only encountered in fragments. Their work reminds us that photography does more than record change; it shapes how change is remembered, offering lasting glimpses of a city forever becoming itself.
Image:
David Vestal
Flatiron Building, 1963
Vintage silver print © David Vestal