Halama by Seymour in 1937

Maurice Seymour, Chicago :: Loda Halama, aktorka-tancerka (Leokadia Halama), 1937
Maurice Seymour, Chicago :: Loda Halama (Leokadia Halama), aktorka-tancerka, 1937 | src Narodowe Archiwum Cyfrowe
Maurice Seymour, Chicago :: Actress and dancer Loda Halama (Leokadia Halama), 1937 | src Narodowe Archiwum Cyfrowe
Maurice Seymour, Chicago :: Actress and dancer Loda Halama (Leokadia Halama), 1937 | src Narodowe Archiwum Cyfrowe
Maurice Seymour, Chicago :: Loda Halama, aktorka-tancerka, 1937 (Leokadia Halama)
Maurice Seymour, Chicago :: Actress and dancer Loda Halama (Leokadia Halama), 1937 (DETAIL) | src Narodowe Archiwum Cyfrowe
Maurice Seymour, Chicago :: Loda Halama (Leokadia Halama), aktorka-tancerka, 1937 | srcaNarodowe Archiwum Cyfrowe
Maurice Seymour, Chicago :: Loda Halama (Leokadia Halama), aktorka-tancerka, 1937 | src Narodowe Archiwum Cyfrowe

Verwandlungen durch Licht

Helmar Lerski :: Verwandlungen durch Licht # 604, 1935-1936. Nachlass Helmar Lerski; Museum Folkwang, Essen & Albertina Museum
Helmar Lerski (1871–1956) :: Metamorphosis Through Light (572), Tel Aviv, 1936. | src Christie’s
Helmar Lerski :: Untitled # 592, from Metamorphosis Through Light, Tel Aviv, 1936. | src Christie’s
Helmar Lerski (1871–1956) :: Metamorphosis Through Light (572), Tel Aviv, 1936. | src Christie’s
Helmar Lerski :: “Aus dem Werk” (“From the Factory”), from the “Verwandlungen des Lichts” (“Transformations of Light”) series, No. 540, 1936. Nachlass Helmar Lerski; Museum Folkwang, Essen
Helmar Lerski :: Verwandlungen durch Licht # 537, 1935-1936. Nachlass Helmar Lerski; Museum Folkwang, Essen & Albertina Museum
Helmar Lerski :: Verwandlungen durch Licht # 536, 1935-1936. Nachlass Helmar Lerski; Museum Folkwang, Essen & Albertina Museum
Helmar Lerski :: Verwandlungen durch Licht # 885, 1935-1936. Nachlass Helmar Lerski; Museum Folkwang, Essen & Albertina Museum

Faces. The power of the human visage (2021)

Starting from Helmar Lerski’s outstanding photo series Metamorphosis through Light (1935/36), the exhibition Faces presents portraits from the period of the Weimar Republic.

The 1920s and ’30s saw photographers radically renew the conventional understanding of the classic portrait: their aim was no longer to represent an individual’s personality; instead, they conceived of the face as material to be staged according to their own ideas. In this, the photographed face became a locus for dealing with avant-garde aesthetic ideas as well as interwar-period social developments. And it was thus that modernist experiments, the relationship between individual and general type, feminist roll-playing, and political ideologies collided in—and thereby expanded—the general understanding of portrait photography.

Faces. Die Macht des Gesichts (2021)

Die Ausstellung Faces in der ALBERTINA präsentiert Porträts der deutschen Zwischenkriegszeit. Ausgangspunkt dafür ist Helmar Lerskis herausragende Fotoserie Verwandlungen durch Licht (1935/36).

In den 1920er- und 30er-Jahren erneuern Fotografinnen und Fotografen das Verständnis des klassischen Porträts radikal: Ihre Aufnahmen dienen nicht mehr der Darstellung der Persönlichkeit eines Menschen, sondern fassen das Gesicht als nach ihren Vorstellungen inszenierbares Material auf.

Über das fotografierte Gesicht werden sowohl ästhetische Überlegungen der Avantgarde als auch gesellschaftliche Entwicklungen der Zwischenkriegszeit dargestellt. Experimente mit neuer Formensprache, das Verhältnis zwischen Individuum und Typ, feministische Rollenspiele und politische Ideologien treffen aufeinander und erweitern damit das Verständnis der Porträtfotografie.

Quelle : Albertina Museum

Carola Neher by Mahrenholz

Rolf Mahrenholz :: Carola Neher in “Chicago”. Published in Uhu magazine 5/1928. Foto: Rolf Mahrenholz. | src Getty Images
Schauspielerin Carola Neher in einem Kleid mit weissem Kragen. Foto: Rolf Mahrenholz. erschienen Die Dame 6/1930/31
Schauspielerin Carola Neher in einem Kleid mit weissem Kragen. Foto: Rolf Mahrenholz. erschienen Die Dame 6/1930-31. | src Getty Images

Bloeiende bloemen (Mol, 1932)

Gif from a time-lapse animation of flowers and plants : Filmwerken Bloeiende bloemen en plantenbewegingen [NL, 1932]
Time lapse animation of flowers and plants. Fragment from Filmwerken Bloeiende bloemen en plantenbewegingen [NL, J.C. Mol, Multifilm (Haarlem), 1932]
Capture from a time-lapse animation of flowers and plants : Filmwerken Bloeiende bloemen en plantenbewegingen [Mol, 1932]
Gif from a time-lapse animation of flowers and plants : Filmwerken Bloeiende bloemen en plantenbewegingen [Mol, 1932]
Time lapse animation of flowers and plants. Fragment from Filmwerken Bloeiende bloemen en plantenbewegingen [NL, J.C. Mol, Multifilm (Haarlem), 1932]
Time lapse animation of flowers and plants. Fragment from Filmwerken Bloeiende bloemen en plantenbewegingen [NL, J.C. Mol, Multifilm (Haarlem), 1932]
Time lapse animation of flowers and plants. Fragment from Filmwerken Bloeiende bloemen en plantenbewegingen [NL, J.C. Mol, Multifilm (Haarlem), 1932]

All fragments are extracted from an educational Dutch film : Bloeiende bloemen en plantenbewegingen (1932) Director: J.C. Mol | Production Country: Netherlands | Year: 1932 | Production Company: Multifilm (Haarlem) | Film from the collection of EYE (Amsterdam)

Accelerated frame-by-frame shots (time-lapse, or “Zeitraffer”) of budding flowers and moving plants and mushrooms. This is part of the episodic film “WONDERS OF NATURE”, which is also shown in separate parts.

website of Eye Filmmuseum (Amsterdam) : also, link to catalog

see also the youtube channel of the museum @eyefilmNL : https://www.youtube.com/@eyefilmNL

Here is the link to the whole movie : https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LuN08inNVgE&t=1365s

In case you are interested, here we add the links to related films:

Uit het rijk der kristallen [From the realm of crystals (J.C. Mol; 1927)] : in website, on their youtube channel (the advantage of the youtube version is that it is divided in chapters by chemical product. There are different versions of Uit het rijk der kristallen: the original silent film was given a soundtrack in the 1930s and is longer.

Uit het rijk der kristallen is one of the scientific films made ​​by Mol. Several versions of this film exist. In the film, the crystallization processes of various chemicals are shown and there is a colour version of the film which was made ​​using Dufay colour.

Take a glimpse, here is a clip:

https://youtube.com/clip/UgkxcuOvxC6cMz3sx6TcqY1ahbC4GtwIN4wb

Porträt eines Mädchens, 1930s

Trude Fleischmann :: Untitled (Portrait of a Young Woman), ca. 1930. Silver gelatin print on baryta paper. | src Städel Museum
Trude Fleischmann :: Untitled (Portrait of a Young Woman), ca. 1930. Silver gelatin print on baryta paper. | src Städel Museum
Trude Fleischmann :: Untitled (Portrait of a Young Woman), ca. 1930. Silver gelatin print on baryta paper. | src Städel Museum
Trude Fleischmann :: Untitled (Portrait of a Young Woman), ca. 1930. Silver gelatin print on baryta paper. | src Städel Museum

An alternative rendition of this photograph titled: ‘Porträt eines Mädchens, Wien’ and dated between 1930-1940 is hosted at Wien Museum: permalink

Trude Fleischmann :: Ohne Titel (Porträt einer jungen Frau), ca. 1930. Silbergelatine-Abzug auf Barytpapier. | src Städel Museum
Trude Fleischmann :: Ohne Titel (Porträt einer jungen Frau), ca. 1930. Silbergelatine-Abzug auf Barytpapier. | src Städel Museum
Trude Fleischmann :: Untitled (Portrait of a Young Woman), ca. 1930. Silver gelatin print on baryta paper. | src Städel Museum
Trude Fleischmann :: Ohne Titel (Porträt einer jungen Frau), ca. 1930. Silbergelatine-Abzug auf Barytpapier. | src Städel Museum
Trude Fleischmann :: Untitled (Portrait of a Young Woman), ca. 1930. Silver gelatin print on baryta paper. | src Städel Museum
Trude Fleischmann :: Untitled (Portrait of a Young Woman), ca. 1930. Silver gelatin print on baryta paper. | src Städel Museum
Trude Fleischmann :: Untitled (Portrait of a Young Woman), ca. 1930. Silver gelatin print on baryta paper. | src Städel Museum
Trude Fleischmann :: Ohne Titel (Porträt einer jungen Frau), ca. 1930. Silbergelatine-Abzug auf Barytpapier, auf Karton kaschiert. | src Städel Museum

Eleanor (Buchla) Danced

Eleanor Danced! A live show that tells the amazing story of Eleanor Buchla Kubinyi, pioneer of modern dance © Cleveland Public Library | src cleveland.com
Eleanor Danced! A live show that tells the amazing story of Eleanor Buchla Kubinyi, pioneer of modern dance © Cleveland Public Library | src cleveland.com (for higher resolution see image on bottom of this post)

Eleanor Buchla (1910–1972) the first local dancer to gain a large audience, who began, c. 1931, performing her own choreography. Buchla’s dances,  reportedly acclaimed by dance critics throughout the country, were a mixture of modern dance and Hungarian folk dance. She was the featured performer at the State of Ohio’s first dance symposium, hosted in 1933 by Ohio University, that drew students and devotees of modern dance from Ohio State, Wesleyan, Oberlin, Cincinnati, Kent State, the University of Virginia and the City of Detroit. Set to the music of Debussy, Chopin, Kodaly and the beloved Hungarian violinist and composer Jenö Hubay (1858–1937), her dancing evoked for Athens critic Forest Hopkins by turns the simplicity of Greek sculpture and the “severe and stylized [spirit of] Egyptian art. In some art circles,” said Hopkins, “Miss Buchla’s dancing is called modern, perhaps because of its free use of the entire body, particularly the torso, yet it is classic in conception. It carries refinement of form and simplicity of design molded successfully with the music.” She had studied ballet as a young girl and then in the late 1920s discovered modern dance.

“Buchla’s work as a whole merits high praise,” Cleveland Plain Dealer music critic Herbert Elwell wrote, “and there is no doubt about her success in her concert here, for the spectators lingered in their seats and clamored for more.” He praised “the subtle grace, the objectivity, the persuasive and suggestive immobility characteristic of [her] style.” Her physical beauty evoked for him “classic models,” while her arresting “personality made what she does seem important and interesting. Her dancing is sculpturesque in slow motion, and a sense of beauty is created in every line, which shows grace of movement. The impression at any moment is one of sculpture liquified and flowing with life.”

A strong proponent for dance in the schools, Buchla not only opened Cleveland’s first modern dance studio but also began a dance curriculum in the city’s summer playgrounds. She provided the choreography (and directed a number of  productions) for several area theaters, including the Hudson Players, the Peninsula Players and, for six years, Cain Park in Cleveland Heights, and was instrumental in cultivating the first

Modern Dance Association, which was founded in 1934. An interesting footnote: Buchla was the sister-in-law of celebrated Cleveland artist Kalman Kubinyi. In the 1960s she and her husband Julius Kubinyi joined other Ohio families in providing temporary homes for Hungarian refugees in the wake of the uprising against the communist government. Though both Eleanor and Julius were born in America, they learned Hungarian from their parents and visited Hungary. In 1943 she played a key role in founding the Peninsula Library, on whose board she served until shortly before her death in 1972. / quoted from past masters project

Eleanor Danced! A live show that tells the amazing story of Eleanor Buchla Kubinyi, pioneer of modern dance © Cleveland Public Library | src cleveland.com
Eleanor Buchla, pioneer of modern dance © Cleveland Public Library | src cleveland.com
Eleanor Buchla, pioneer of modern dance © Cleveland Public Library | src Cleveland Public Library
Eleanor Danced! A live show that tells the amazing story of Eleanor Buchla Kubinyi, pioneer of modern dance © Cleveland Public Library
Eleanor Danced! A live show that tells the amazing story of Eleanor Buchla Kubinyi, pioneer of modern dance / hi-res

Giannina Censi : portraits

Giannina Censi. Ritratto giovanile, «settembre 1928» di Camuzzi. Lomazzi. Milano, settembre 1928
Giannina Censi. Ritratto giovanile, «settembre 1928» di Camuzzi. Lomazzi. Milano, settembre 1928 | src MART · Fondo Giannina Censi
Ritratto giovanile di Camuzzi. Lomazzi. Milano, [settembre 1928] | src MART · Fondo Giannina Censi
Giannina Censi in costume da Pierrot in Il Carillon Magico di Pick Mangiagalli al teatro San Carlo di Napoli, febbraio 1933
Giannina Censi in costume da Pierrot in Il Carillon Magico di Pick Mangiagalli al teatro San Carlo di Napoli, febbraio 1933 | src MART · Fondo Giannina Censi

Pubblicata in Vaccarino E., (a cura di) Giannina Censi: danzare il futurismo. Milano: Electa; Museo di arte moderna e contemporanea di Trento e Rovereto, 1998, p.40. In verso nota ms. “Milano genn. 933”

Giannina Censi. Ritratto giovanile, «settembre 1928» di Camuzzi. Lomazzi. Milano, settembre 1928 | src MART · Fondo Giannina Censi

In verso nota ms. “Settembre 1928”, “Giannina Censi. Milano. Via P. Umberto 10”. Pubblicata in Vaccarino E., (a cura di) Giannina Censi: danzare il futurismo. Milano: Electa; Museo di arte moderna e contemporanea di Trento e Rovereto, 1998, p. 73

Ritratto giovanile di Camuzzi. Lomazzi. Milano, [settembre 1928]. In verso nota ms. “Giannina Censi. Milano. Via P. Umberto 10” | src MART · Fondo Giannina Censi

G. Censi · Le danze della jungla

Giannina Censi in costume in "Le danze della jungla" di Mauro Camuzzi. Fotografie, 1930.
Giannina Censi in costume in “Le danze della jungla” di Mauro Camuzzi. Fotografie, 1930.
Giannina Censi in costume in "Le danze della jungla" di Mauro Camuzzi. Fotografie, 1930.
Giannina Censi in costume in “Le danze della jungla” di Mauro Camuzzi. Fotografie, 1930.

Pubblicata in Vaccarino E., (a cura di) Giannina Censi: danzare il futurismo. Museo di arte moderna e contemporanea di Trento e Rovereto, 1998 | src & © MART · Fondo Giannina Censi

Giannina Censi in costume in "Le danze della jungla" di Mauro Camuzzi. Fotografie, 1930. | detail
Giannina Censi in costume in “Le danze della jungla” di Mauro Camuzzi. Fotografie, 1930. (detail)