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  1. Dorothy Norman (née Stecker; 28 March 1905 – 12 April 1997) was an American photographer, writer, editor, arts patron and advocate for social change. Biography. Born Dorothy Stecker [1] in Philadelphia to a prominent Jewish family, she was educated in arts and languages from her youth. [2] .

    • Dorothy Stecker, March 28, 1905, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
    • American
    • April 12, 1997 (aged 92), East Hampton, New York
  2. Dorothy Norman (1905-1997) was a student and lover of Alfred Stieglitz, and a portraitist of many artists and writers. She also documented the social changes in India and Japan, and wrote books on Stieglitz and other topics.

  3. Dorothy Norman, a photographer, writer, editor, arts patron and advocate for social change, died yesterday at her home in East Hampton, L.I. She was 92 and also had a home on the Upper East...

  4. Dorothy Norman (1905-1997) was an American photographer, writer, and activist who worked with Alfred Stieglitz and supported the Indian independence movement. She took photographs between 1931 and the mid-1950s, mainly of still lifes and portraits, and published a book on Stieglitz in 1973.

  5. Dorothy Norman (1905–1997) was a photographer who captured portraits of Henri Cartier-Bresson and other artists. She exhibited her works at MoMA in 1940 and 1943, and was featured in a 2016 publication.

  6. 4. Dez. 2017 · She was only just beginning to get well when Stieglitz met 21-year old Dorothy Norman. The girl who incessantly hung around Alfred's gallery, asking question after question, was married to the son of the founder of Sears. Edward Norman was a deeply disturbed person who was mentally, physically and sexually abusive to his wife ...

  7. Dorothy Norman (1905-1997) was a photographer, writer, and social activist who documented the artistic and cultural community in New York City. She learned from and portrayed Alfred Stieglitz, her mentor and friend, and donated a large collection of his and her photographs to the Philadelphia Museum of Art.