An Exhibition Organized By The Mark Twain House & Museum

 

Alvin Langdon Coburn’s unconventional approach to photography helped define modernism. His photographs become iconic images of the 20th Century, from the cityscapes of New York and London to the landscapes of the American West, to the most famous people of his time. In 1913, his hand-printed book, Men of Mark, captured in richly styled prints the images of 33 of the most influential artists, writers, critics and thinkers of the early 20th Century. Among them artists Rodin, Matisse, and Sargent, playwright George Bernard Shaw, novelists Henry James and Mark Twain, and President Theodore Roosevelt.
 
A.L. Coburn’s Men of Mark: Pioneers of Modernism recaptures the beauty of Coburn’s lavishly detailed photographs and presents the sculpture, artwork, personal letters and great works of the visionaries who bridged the 19th and 20th centuries and advanced the revolution of the literary and visual arts, philosophy, criticism, and politics.
We would like to thank our sponsors:



Webster Bank

The Edward C. and Ann T. Roberts Foundation

The Ensworth Charitable Foundation, Fleet Bank Trustee
 
With additional support from:
Connecticut Commission on Arts, Tourism, Culture, History and Film
 
We are also grateful for the support from the Exhibition Committee of Honor:
Anna and David Clark, Claire and Millard Pryor, Michael J. Dury,
and Nancy and Robinson Grover

 

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