Tilly Losch as Princess Tea

Trude Fleischmann :: Tilly Losch as Princess Tea in Schlagobers (by Richard Strauss), 1924. | From State Opera ballerinas Tilly Losch and Hedy Pfundmayr are the focus of the exhibition at Wiener Photoinstitut Bonartes.

Edward J. Steichen :: Model Dorothy Smart wearing a black velvet hat by Madame Agnès, 1926. | src l’oeil de la photographie via haunted by storytelling

more [+] by this photographer

Bug-eyed Fortune Teller

André-Wladimir Reybas (cinematographer, uncredited) :: Portrait of Andrée Rolane in ‘L’Occident’ (An Eye for an Eye) directed by Henri Fescourt (1928). Andrée Rolane is Fathima, Hassina’s little sister, ca. 1927. Silver gelatin bromide. | image src eBay
Bug-eyed Gypsy Fortune Teller (Seer), 1920s [eBay]

The White Iris, 1921

Edward Weston :: The White Iris [Tina Modotti, nude bust portrait leaning toward iris], 1921. Platinum or palladium print. | src Johan Hagemeyer Collection at CCP

Tina Modotti by Weston ca 1921

Edward Weston ~ Ritratto di Tina Modotti nella casa di Weston a Glendale, California, 1922. Courtesy Galerie Bilderwelt di Reinhard Schult via Artribune, also on Baltimore Museum of Art
Edward Weston ~ Tina Modotti, Glendale, California, 1922 | src Minneapolis Institute of Art (MIA)
Edward Weston ~ Girl in Canton Chair (Tina Modotti), 1921 [Image of a woman (Tina Modotti) sitting in a wicker chair. Three wicker side tables surround her] | src Nelson-Atkins museum

Dances of Palucca by Kandinsky

From: Wassily Kandinsky, “Tanzkurven: Zu den Tänzen der Palucca,” Das Kunstblatt, Potsdam, vol. 10, no. 3 (1926), pp. 117-21. ph. Charlotte Rudolph. | src German Historical Institute
From Wassily Kandinsky’s “Dance Curves: On the Dances of Palucca”. Published in Das Kunstblatt arts journal in 1926. Photos by Charlotte Rudolph. | src German Historical Institute