Am Fenster, ca. 1904

Clarence Hudson White :: Am Fenster. Die bildmässige Photographie eine Sammlung von Kunstphotographieen mit begleitendem Text in deutscher und holländischer Ausgabe, 1904. | src internet archive

Nude [Miss Thompson], 1907

Clarence Hudson White :: Untitled [Miss Thompson], 1907. Platinum print. | src Princeton University Art Museum
Clarence Hudson White :: Untitled [Miss Thompson], 1907. Platinum print. | src Flickr [click here to enlarge]

The Readers by C.H. White

Clarence H. White :: The Readers (Letitia Felix and Ada Follett), Newark, Ohio, 1897. Platinum print. (Detail)
Clarence Hudson White :: The Readers (Letitia Felix and Ada Follett), Newark, Ohio, 1897. Platinum print. (Detail)
Clarence H. White :: The Readers (Letitia Felix and Ada Follett), Newark, Ohio, 1897. Platinum print. (Detail) | src Library of Congress
Clarence Hudson White :: The Readers (Letitia Felix and Ada Follett), Newark, Ohio, 1897. Platinum print. | src Library of Congress
Clarence Hudson White :: The Readers (Letitia Felix and Ada Follett), Newark, Ohio, 1897. Platinum print. | src Library of Congress

C.H. White portraits (1900s)

Clarence Hudson White :: Mrs. Fox (Kate Parsenau), New York, 1910. Platinum print. | src Library of Congress
better resolution: image below
Clarence H. White :: Kate (Parsenau) Fox, head-and-shoulders portrait, facing left, 1910. Platinum print. | src: Library of Congress
Clarence H. White :: Girl with Bowl, 1907. Platinum print. | src Princeton University Art museum
Clarence H. White :: Girl with Bowl, 1907. Platinum print. | src Princeton University Art museum

In his first years as a photographer, White concentrated on genre subjects like this one, often using young women as his models. Throughout his career, he continued to photograph women, from his mother and members of his wife’s family to well-known actresses of the day, such as Maude Adams. White attempted to imbue women with notions of truth and beauty, a view not uncommon among the photographers known as Pictorialists, who considered the female subject to be the most artistic and spiritual choice in the history of art. Photographs like this one allowed White to experiment with dramatic lighting while simultaneously relating photography to a long tradition of painting, through his use of a female model. [source of text]

Clarence H. White :: Woman on rocks, Caritas Islands, Connecticut, 1909. Platinum print. | src Princeton Univ. Art museum
Clarence H. White :: Woman on rocks, Caritas Islands, Connecticut, 1909. Platinum print. | src Princeton Univ. Art museum

Dancer Sahary Djèli, 1920

Clarence Hudson White :: Hungarian performer and belly dancer Sahary Djèli, 1920 | src Zvab
more [+] by this photographer | more [+] Sahary Djèli posts

The Ring Toss, 1899

Clarence Hudson White :: The Ring Toss, Newark, Ohio, 1899. Photograph shows three little girls playing ring toss game. [digital file from color film copy transparency] | src Library of Congress
Clarence Hudson White :: The Ring Toss, Newark, Ohio, 1899. Photograph shows three girls playing ring toss game. [digital file from original photograph] | src Library of Congress
Clarence Hudson White :: The Ring Toss, Newark, Ohio, 1899. Photograph shows three girls playing ring toss game. [digital file from original photograph – full size original scan] | src Library of Congress

Morning, ca. 1905

Clarence Hudson White :: Morning, ca. 1905. Photogravure. | src NGA
Clarence Hudson White :: Morning, ca. 1905. Photogravure. | src National Gallery of Art

Inscription on verso, by unknown hand in graphite: Woman with Chrystal Globe (Study of Mrs. White) about 1905.

Clarence Hudson White :: Morning, 1905. Gum bichromate print. | src Princeton University Art Museum
Clarence Hudson White :: Morning, 1905. Gum bichromate print. | src Princeton University Art Museum