The
Flatiron Building had been inaugurated in 1902 and would become one of the most iconic buildings of
New York. Its wedge-shaped design and prime location in the
Photo District (now the
Flatiron District) made the building highly distinctive. According to Mary Woods, it became a trademark of new American culture by "[breaking] free from the plat of nineteenth-century Manhattan." It soon attracted the attention of photographers like
Alfred Stieglitz and
Edward Steichen, who were trying to create photographs in the
Pictorialist style, which emulated painting. Woods also asserted that Steichen, taking after Stieglitz, wanted to show the building as a "collision of the present with the past and future...neither inert nor fixed". Having experimented with multiple vantage points to accomplish this, he eventually settled on the angle from the west side of
Madison Square Park. Woods described the image from this view as "the Flatiron at twilight on rain-slicked streets" with a branch coming in from the upper-left to pay homage to the popular Japanese
ukiyo-e woodprints Steichen had seen during his recent trip to
Paris. Meanwhile, Malcolm Daniel related Steichen's coloristic choices to the color range of
James McNeill Whistler's
Nocturnes paintings to create rather "moody woodland scenes". Despite the presence of both foreign and domestic influences, Steichen's photographs were decidedly modern for their time and unique to the American feel. == Printing process and dating ==