A rare analog photograph of New York City, captured in 1904 by Edward Steichen has become the second most expensive ever sold, reaching a figure of $11.8 million dollars.
Steichenโs masterwork The Flatiron sold for $11.8 million at Christieโs auction house on Wednesday, a figure five times that of his previous highest sale, The PondโMoonlight also captured in 1904, which sold for US$2.9 million in 2006 (at the time, the highest price ever paid for a photograph at auction).
There are just three Flatiron prints in existence, (the other two are held in the Met Museum of Modern Artโs collection), each of which โ thanks to Steichenโs creative printing method- is completely unique and one of the artistsโ most iconic works.
Born in Luxembourg, Edward Steichen is widely regarded as one of the most important practitioners in the mediumโs illustrious history. He was a key figure, alongside the likes of Alfred Stieglitz and Clarence H. White, in the Photo-Secession movement (an influential group of US-based photographers who were instrumental in the mediumโs eventual acceptance as a form of fine art).
One of the most iconic images ever captured, Steichenโs masterpiece, Flatiron, depicts its eponym (just two months after it was built), looming imposingly against New Yorkโs crepuscular sky. By layering pigment, suspended in a light-sensitive solution of gum arabic and potassium bichromate, Steichen added color to the platinum print that forms the photographโs base, achieving a striking, painterly aesthetic that demonstrated, with great potency, the artistic potential of photography.
A number of experts had predicted that the photograph would become the most expensive ever sold, but it failed to surpass the $12.4 million figure achieved by Man Rayโs Le Violon dโIngres, back in May of this year. Taken in 1924, Rayโs most iconic image depicts his muse, Kiki de Montparnasse, nude but for a turban, a pair of violin-style f-holes transcribed on her back.
Before the sale, the auction record for the most expensive photograph had been held by Andreas Gurskyโs โRhine II,โ which was sold by Christieโs for $4.3 million in 2011.
All images ยฉ their respective owners