Kiss of Love by Erté (ca 1983)

Erté (Romain De Tirtoff) :: Kiss of Fire, ca. 1983. From Love and Passion Suite. DETAIL
Erté (Romain De Tirtoff) :: Kiss of Fire, ca. 1983. From  Love and Passion Suite.
Erté (Romain De Tirtoff) :: Kiss of Fire, ca. 1983. [Detail]

Erté (Romain De Tirtoff, Russian/French, 1892-1990) color serigraph on paper with silver, gold, and red foil embossing titled “Kiss of Fire” from the artist’s Love and Passion Suite, numbered 61/300, published circa 1983. Depicts a partially nude male and a female couple in profile standing on a gold surface and dressed in red, orange, and purple flowing garments and headdresses reminiscent of flames, their arms resting on each other’s shoulders, against a black background with a black circular pattern embossed above. Numbered in white pencil, lower left below image, signed “Erte” in white pencil, lower right below image. | quoted from Case Fine Arts & Antiques

Erté (Romain De Tirtoff) :: Kiss of Fire, ca. 1983. From  Love and Passion Suite.
Erté (Romain De Tirtoff) :: Kiss of Fire, ca. 1983. From the artist’s Love and Passion Suite.
Erté (Romain De Tirtoff) :: Kiss of Fire, ca. 1983. From  Love and Passion Suite.
Erté (Romain De Tirtoff) :: Kiss of Fire, ca. 1983. From the artist’s Love and Passion Suite. (Close up) | Case Fine Arts & Antiques

Crossed Lines. Matray Ballet

Elli Marcus :: Gekreuzte Linien. Maria Solveg und Keith Lester vom Ernst Matray Ballett. Scherl's Magazin Band 6, Heft 2, Februar 1930
Elli Marcus :: Gekreuzte Linien. Maria Solveg und Keith Lester vom Ernst Matray Ballett. Scherl’s Magazin Band 6, Heft 2, Februar 1930

Rolf Arco · Dance of Suicide

cry, suicide, desperation, dancer, dance, Tanz
Desperate cry. Rolf Areo in the Dance of the Suicide from the ballet "The Five Wishes" by Max Terpis and Rolf Areo. Stage design. Photographer: Elli Marcus.
Published in Scherl's magazine in November 1929
Elli Marcus :: Verzweifelter Aufschrei. Rolf Arco im Tanz des Selbstmörders im Ballett “Die fünf Wünsche” von Max Terpis und Rolf Areo. Bühnenbild. Scherl’s Magazin, B. 5, H.11, November 1929

Desperate cry. Rolf Arco in the Dance of the Suicide from the ballet “The Five Wishes” by Max Terpis and Rolf Arco. Stage design. Photographer: Elli Marcus.

Published in Scherl’s magazine in November 1929

Pavlowa (MPW March 1916)

Pavlowa The Incomparable in "The Dumb Girl of Portici". The Moving Picture World, March 1916 [detail]
Pavlowa The Incomparable in “The Dumb Girl of Portici”. The Moving Picture World, March 1916 [detail]
Pavlowa The Incomparable in "The Dumb Girl of Portici". The Moving Picture World, March 1916
Pavlowa The Incomparable in “The Dumb Girl of Portici”. Published in The Moving Picture World, March 1916

Lucia Joyce in dance pose (1925)

Lucia Joyce in profile as from a Greek vase painting, Paris, circa 1925. From: Carol Loeb Schloss : Lucia Joyce : To Dance in the Wake (2003)
Lucia Joyce in profile as from a Greek vase painting, Paris, circa 1925. From: Carol Loeb Schloss : Lucia Joyce : To Dance in the Wake (2003)

“Most accounts of James Joyce’s family portray Lucia Joyce as the mad daughter of a man of genius, a difficult burden. But in this important new book, Carol Loeb Shloss reveals a different, more dramatic truth: Lucia’s father not only loved her but shared with her a deep creative bond. His daughter, Joyce wrote, had a mind “as clear and as unsparing as the lightning.”” “Born at a pauper’s hospital in Trieste in 1907, educated haphazardly in Italy, Switzerland, and Paris as her penniless father pursued his art, Lucia was determined to strike out on her own. She chose dance as her medium, pursuing her studies in an art form very different from the literary ones celebrated in the Joyce circle and emerging, to Joyce’s amazement, as a harbinger of modern expressive dance in Paris. He described her then as a wild, beautiful, “fantastic being” who spoke to “a curious abbreviated language of her own” that he instinctively understood – for in fact it was his as well. The family’s only reader of Joyce’s work, Lucia was a child of the imaginative realms her father created. Even after emotional turmoil wreaked havoc with her and she was hospitalized in the 1930s, Joyce saw in her a life lived in tandem with his own.” “Though most of the documents about Lucia have been destroyed, Shloss has painstakingly reconstructed the poignant complexities of her life – and with them a vital episode in the early history of psychiatry, for in Joyce’s efforts to help his daughter he sought out Europe’s most advanced doctors, including Jung. Lucia emerges in Shloss’s account as a gifted, if thwarted, artist in her own right, a child who became her father’s tragic muse.”–Jacket, quoted from internet archive

Lucia Joyce in profile as from a Greek vase painting, Paris, circa 1925. From: Carol Loeb Schloss : Lucia Joyce : To Dance in the Wake (2003)
Lucia Joyce, Paris, 1925 Courtesy of the Poetry Collection of the University Libraries, University at Buffalo. One Hundred Years of James Joyce’s Ulysses @ The Morgan Library & Museum

Jenny Hasselqvist in midair

Jenny Hasselqvist, Denmark, May 1919
Jenny Hasselqvist in Charlottenlund, Denmark, photo: unknown, 8 May 1919. | src Dansmuseet on IG
Jenny Hasselqvist in Charlottenlund, Denmark, photo: unknown, 8 May 1919. | src Dansmuseet on IG
Jenny Hasselquist på taket till [Jenny Hasselquist on the roof] Théâtre des Champs-Elysées, 29 oktober 1920, Jenny Hasselquists arkiv. | src Dansmuseet · IG
Jenny Hasselquist på taket till [Jenny Hasselquist on the roof] Théâtre des Champs-Elysées, 29 oktober 1920, Jenny Hasselquists arkiv. | src Dansmuseet · IG

Lucia Joyce in Marche militaire

Bérénice Abbott :: Lucia Joyce dancing to Schubert's "Marche militaire", 1929. | src Raidió Teilifís Éireann, Ireland's National Public Service Media and IA: Lucia Joyce : to dance in the wake by Carol Loeb Schloss
Bérénice Abbott :: Lucia Joyce dancing to Schubert’s “Marche militaire”, 1929 | src Raidió Teilifís Éireann, Ireland’s National Public Service Media
Berenice Abbott :: Portrait of Lucia Joyce, 1926–1927, printed 1982. Gelatin silver print. | src The Clark
Bérénice Abbott :: Lucia Joyce (in the same costume as above, probably dancing to Schubert’s “Marche militaire”), ca. 1927. | src AnOther Mag
Berenice Abbott :: Portrait of Lucia Joyce, 1926–1927, printed 1982. Gelatin silver print. | src The Clark
Berenice Abbott :: Portrait of Lucia Joyce, 1926–1927, printed 1982. Gelatin silver print. | src The Clark
Berenice Abbott :: Portrait of Lucia Joyce, 1926–1927, printed 1982. Gelatin silver print. | src The Clark
Berenice Abbott :: Portrait of Lucia Joyce (in the costume used for dancing to Schubert’s “Marche militaire”), 1926–1927, printed 1982. Gelatin silver print. | src The Clark
Berenice Abbott :: Portrait of Lucia Joyce, 1926–1927, printed 1982. Gelatin silver print. | src The Clark
Berenice Abbott :: Portrait of Lucia Joyce, 1926–1927, printed 1982. Gelatin silver print. | src The Clark
Berenice Abbott :: Lucia Joyce dancing to Schubert's "Marche militaire", 1929. | src Lucia Joyce : to dance in the wake by Carol Loeb Schloss at IA
Berenice Abbott :: Lucia Joyce dancing to Schubert’s “Marche militaire”, 1929. | src Lucia Joyce : to dance in the wake by Carol Loeb Schloss at IA

Dancer Áine Stapleton talks about her film Horrible Creature, a ‘creative investigation’ of the life of Lucia Joyce
I’ve been creatively investigating the biography of Lucia Joyce (daughter of the writer James Joyce) since 2014, through both choreography and film.
Lucia once commented to a family friend in Paris that she wanted to ‘do something’. She wanted to make a difference and to creatively have an impact on the world around her. Dancing was her way of having an impact. She trained hard for many years and worked with various avant-garde teachers including Raymond Duncan. She created her own costumes, choreographed for opera, entered high profile dance competitions in Paris, and even started her own dance physical training business after apprenticing with modern dance pioneer Margaret Morris.
Until this time she had lived almost entirely under the control of her family, and had to share a bedroom with her parents well into her teens. I imagine that dancing must have been a revolutionary feeling for her, and would have offered her an opportunity to process her chaotic and sometimes toxic upbringing. It was during these dancing years that she was finally allowed to spend some time away from her family, but this freedom did not last long. Her father’s artistic needs and his sexist disregard for her career choice interrupted her training at a vital stage. She was forced to stop dancing, and the circumstances surrounding this time remain unclear. I do not believe that she herself made the decision to quit dancing. Lucia was incarcerated by her brother in 1934, and then remained in asylums for 47 years. She died in 1982 and is buried in Northampton England, close to her last psychiatric hospital.
I’ve read Lucia’s writings repeatedly over the last four years, and my opinion of her hasn’t changed. She was a kind, funny, intelligent, creative and loving person. After her father James’ death in 1941, she had one visit from her brother and no contact from her mother, yet she only writes good things about her family. She was consistently thankful to those people who made contact with her during her many years stuck in psychiatric care. She appreciated small offerings from friends, such as an additional few pounds to buy cigarettes, a radio to keep her company, a new pair of shoes or a winter coat, all of which seemed to offer her some comfort in her later years.
I have no interest in romanticising Lucia’s relationship with her father. I also don’t believe that she was schizophrenic. I think that whatever mental strain Lucia experienced was brought on by those closest to her. Her supposed fits of rage or out of the ordinary behaviour only brought to light her suffering. We know that many women have been mistreated and silenced throughout history. Why do we still play along with a romanticised version of abuse? And why is James and Lucia’s relationship, or ‘erotic bond’ as Samuel Beckett described it, regarded as an almost tragic love story?
Horrible Creature (2020) examines Lucia’s story in her own words, and also focuses on the environment which shaped her during this time. The work attempts to tap into that invisible energy that can provide each of us with a real sense of aliveness and connectedness to the world around us, even in moments of great suffering.
Quoted from Raidió Teilifís Éireann, Ireland’s National Public Service Media

Abeceda by Karel Teige (1926)

A page for Abeceda [The Alphabet], 1926
Poetry by Vitezslav Nezval (Czech, 1900–1958)
Design, typography, and photomontage by Karel Teige (Czech, 1900–1951)
Choreography by Milča Mayerová (Czech, 1901–1977)
src Listování. Moderní knižní kultura ze sbírek Muzea umění Olomouc | Západočeská galerie v Plzni
O page for Abeceda [The Alphabet], 1926

« In Nezval’s Abeceda, a cycle of rhymes based on the shapes of letters, I tried to create a ‹ typofoto › of a purely abstract and poetic nature, setting into graphic poetry what Nezval set into verbal poetry in his verse, both being poems evoking the magic signs of the alphabet. » –Karel Teige, quoted from Abeceda – Index Grafik

H page for Abeceda [The Alphabet], 1926

In 1926 the Czech dancer Milca Mayerová choreographed the alphabet as a photo-ballet. Each move in the dance is made to the visual counterpoint of Karel Teige’s typographic music. Teige was a constructivist and a surrealist, a poet, collagist, photographer, typographer and architectural theorist, and his 1926 photomontage designs for the alphabet are a uniquely elegant and witty invention, and one of the enduring masterpieces of Czech modernism. –Quoted from The Guardian

Nude dancer at Herion school

Paul Jsenfels :: Dancer, Stuttgart Dance School. [Ida Herion dance school]. Photoengraving; printed 1927. | src liveauctioneers
Paul Jsenfels :: Dancer, Stuttgart Dance School. [Ida Herion dance school]. Photoengraving; printed 1927. | src liveauctioneers
Paul Jsenfels :: Dancer, Stuttgart Dance School. [Ida Herion dance school]. Photoengraving; printed 1927. | src liveauctioneers