Atelier Manassé (active between 1922–1938) ~ ‘Studie’ (Posing with an artificial leg), ca. 1926 | src Ostlicht
Studio’s signature “Manassé Wien” in the negative, with a vintage paper label with typewritten mention “Zensuriert”. “Foto-Salon ‘Manassé'” copyright stamp, “Wiener Foto-Kurier” agency stamp as well as “Ag. Schostal” agency label, and annotated “Studie” in pencil on the reverse.
Atelier Manassé ~ ‘Studie’ (with a paper label with typewritten mention “Zensuriert”), ca. 1926. Vintage silver print | src OstlichtAtelier Manassé (active between 1922–1938) ~ ‘Studie’. Art Deco dance pose, ca. 1927 | src Ostlicht
Photographer’s copyright stamp with handwritten number “4949” in pencil, annotation “Tanzgruppe Trude Goodwin” and handwritten numbers in pencil on the reverse.
Madame d’Ora (1881–1963) ~ Hedy Pfundmayr in ‘Tanz der Salome’ (Richard Strauss), Vienna, ca. 1924 | src Ostlicht
On verso: “Wiener Foto-Kurier” agency stamp, label with text: “Hedy Pfundmayer (sic), Primaballerina de l’opera a Vienne comme ‘Salome'”. Also, several annotations in pencil on the reverse, as: “Berhümte Solo Tänzerin […] die Tänzerin Pfundmaier (sic)”.
Photographe anonyme. Etude de Nu, France, vers 1865. Tirage albuminé. | src galerie lumiere des roses~ Paris photo 2023Photographe anonyme. Étude de nu, France, vers 1920. Tirage argentique. | src galerie lumiere des roses~ Paris photo 2023Jean-Baptiste Igout (1837-1881) ~ Étude de nu pour peintre, France, vers 1870. Tirage albuminé. | src lumiere des rosesMary Willumsen (1884-1961) ~ Baigneuse à Helgoland, Danemark, vers 1920. Tirage argentique. | galerie lumiere des rosesJacques de Lalaing (1858-1917) ~ Nu au chevalet, Belgique, vers 1910. Tirage argentique. | src galerie lumiere des roses~ Paris photo 2023
A balloon vendor runs across a street with a trailing mass of balloons in Buenos Aires, November 1921. Photo: Newton W. Gulick; for National Geographic | src 125 Years of National Geographic Photography · Christie’s
Margaret Watkins (1884-1969) ~ Still Life – Bathtub, New York, 1919 | src The Revolutionary Gaze at The GuardianMargaret Watkins (1884-1969) ~ ‘Phenix Cheese’, 1924 | src El País CulturaMargaret Watkins (1884-1969) ~ Lamp and Mirror, 1924 | src El País Cultura
Watkins was likely influenced by Arthur Wesley Dow, a Columbia University professor of fine arts who was closely associated with the White school. Dow wrote about the beauty of compositions that use curved and straight lines, and alternating light and dark masses. Dow also promoted the ideas of Ernest F. Fenollosa, who believed that music was the key to the other fine arts since its essence was “pure beauty.” Watkins herself used music as a metaphor for visual patterning in an essay about the emergence of advertising photography out of painting: “Weird and surprising things were put upon canvas; stark mechanical objects revealed an unguessed dignity; commonplace articles showed curves and angles which could be repeated with the varying pattern of a fugue.” / Quoted from: Margaret Watkins: Of Sight and Sound (National Gallery of Canada)
Margaret Watkins (1884-1969) ~ Design – Curves, 1919 | src The Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art
Margaret Watkins was a student at The Clarence H. White School of Photography in New York City. The school emphasized the principles of design that were common to all modes of artistic expression. This aesthetic, as seen here, resulted in works that merge realism and abstraction. Watkins received particular praise for her artistic transformation of the most common things: in this instance, the contents of her kitchen sink. / Quoted from The Nelson-Atkins Museum (x)
Margaret Watkins (1884-1969) ~ Design – Angles, 1919 | src MutualArtMargaret Watkins (1884-1969) ~ Domestic Symphony, (1919), palladium print | src Of Sight and Sound at NGC
In 1919 Watkins made her first ground-breaking domestic still lifes, taking as her subject such mundane scenes as a kitchen sink and bathroom fixture. In Domestic Symphony, the graceful curve of the porcelain recalls the fern-like scroll of a violin. Again, the composition is striking: the lower three-quarters of the image is in darkness, anchoring the forms and volumes in the upper portion. / Quoted from: Margaret Watkins: Of Sight and Sound (National Gallery of Canada)
The Norwegian actress Sofie Parelius Krohn began her career as a dancer in 1911 at the Norwegian National Theatre. She trained with her mother, who was a choreographer and ballet teacher, and for a time with Michel Fokine. She took leading roles in Max Reinhardt’s productions in Berlin, including Prima Ballerina and Sumurun. Married to Tancred Ibsen, film director and screenwriter and grandson of Henrik Ibsen, she later became one of Norway’s most distinguished stage actresses, appearing in many works by Shaw, Wilde, Shakespeare and Ibsen.
Marguerite Agniel performing physical exercises. Process print after photographs by Edwin F. Townsend, 15 February 1930Marguerite Agniel performing physical exercises. Photographs by Edwin F. Townsend, 15 February 1930Good Form in Figures : Exercise V – Exercise VI (1930) | src Wellcome collection
Laura Gilpin (1891-1979) ~ White Iris [Colorado Springs, Colorado]; May 7, 1926. Hand-coated platinum print. | src Amon Carter Museum P1979.141.27Laura Gilpin (1891-1979) ~ White Iris [Colorado Springs, Colorado]; May 7, 1926. Gelatin silver print. | src Amon Carter Museum P1979.141.23Laura Gilpin (1891-1979) ~ [Iris]; 1920’s-1960’s. Platinum print. | src Amon Carter Museum of American Art (P1979.141.47)Laura Gilpin (1891-1979) ~ White Iris [Colorado Springs, Colorado]; May 7, 1926. Handcoated platinum print. | src Amon Carter Museum of American Art P1979.141.24