
State Street, Jewelry Shop
<p>A student and later a faculty member at the Institute of Design, where he taught on and off for three decades, Arthur Siegel was known for photographs that combined avant-garde experimentalism with documentary practice. Beginning in the late 1940s, he worked almost exclusively in color—a highly unconventional choice for the time. In 1951, shortly after undergoing Freudian psychoanalysis, he began the series <em>In Search of Myself</em>, which captured anonymous shoppers on Chicago’s State Street as a means to explore the relationship between identity and consumerism. In this image, Siegel took advantage of the repeated reflections in shop windows to blend shoppers, commodities, and the streets in a dizzying urban bustle.</p>
Catalogue
- Year
- 1946
- Medium
- Dye imbibition print
- Dimensions
- Image/paper: 16.7 × 25.4 cm (6 5/8 × 10 in.); Mount: 30.5 × 38.1 cm (12 1/16 × 15 in.)
- Collection
- Art Institute of Chicago
- Artist
- Arthur Siegel
Artist

Photography
Arthur Siegel was an American photographer active in the postwar period, known for experimental work in color photography and photographic abstraction. Working primarily from the 1940s onward, he explored the formal and material properties of the photographic medium itself, moving beyond documentary toward constructed and manipulated imagery. His practice engaged with modernist principles of abstraction and composition adapted to photography's unique technical possibilities.
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More by Arthur Siegel
Untitled
1966 · Gelatin silver print, from the portfolio "Institute of Design Student Independent, 1971"
State Street, Chicago
1965 · Dye imbibition print
Marina City Under Construction (bridge up)
1961 · Chromogenic print
Marina City Under Construction (lower stories)
1961 · Chromogenic print
Untitled
1960 · Dye imbibition print
Untitled
1955 · Gelatin silver print
Record
Verified by WattsOS- Artist
- Arthur Siegel
- Year
- 1946
- Medium
- Dye imbibition print
- Dimensions
- Image/paper: 16.7 × 25.4 cm (6 5/8 × 10 in.); Mount: 30.5 × 38.1 cm (12 1/16 × 15 in.)
- Watts ID
- WW-1946-053693
Source
- Collection
- Art Institute of Chicago
- Source
- aic
- Reference
- View at source
- Status
- verified





