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A founding document of American modernism. A vivid index of art. The Catalogue of the First Annual Exhibition of the Society of Independent Artists, held at Grand Central Palace from April 10 to May 6, is a contemporaneous record of early 20th century art in New York. As an art catalogue from a landmark independent artists exhibition, it captures the experimental attitudes that fed the American modernism movement and the broader avant-garde. The text reads as an anthology of the period, names, works and institutions that shaped the New York art scene. Accessible to curious readers yet rich enough for students, curators and art historians, it functions as both historical art documentation and a museum research resource.Republished by Alpha Editions in a careful modern edition, this volume preserves the spirit of the original while making it effortless to enjoy today - a heritage title prepared for readers and collectors alike. Its historical significance is immediate: the catalogue offers primary-source insight into how independent artists organised, promoted and presented modern work in the formative years of American avant-garde activity. For casual browsers the book opens a window onto a vivid chapter of cultural life; for classic-literature collectors and specialist libraries it is a sought-after reference, a durable bridge between archive and shelf. Whether consulted for scholarly research, exhibition planning, or private study, this edition places essential material from that 1917 art exhibition back in circulation as reliable, readable documentation.Presented as a faithful period document, the catalogue is an indispensable reference for art historians and a practical museum research resource for anyone delving into provenance, exhibition history or the trajectories of modern artists. Its straightforward listings and contemporaneous commentary make it a compelling primary source for academic study and exhibition curation, while its tangible link to the Grand Central Palace art scene offers pleasurable discovery for casual readers curious about cultural life in 1917. Collectors of classic literature and archive-minded bibliophiles will value the edition for its authenticity and collectibility, and libraries and galleries will find it a useful, readable addition to research shelves.