Ludmiła Bojarska 1926-1927

Ludmiła Bojarska, tancerka. Fotografia sytuacyjna wykonana w atelier, 1926
Lyudmila Bojarska, dancer. Role portrait taken in an atelier, 1926
Ludmiła Bojarska, tancerka. Fotografia sytuacyjna wykonana w atelier (w tańcu ‘Kwiat’), 1927
Lyudmila Bojarska, dancer. Role portrait taken in an atelier (in the ‘Flower’ dance), 1927

All images above this line are, according to source, in Public domain: Narodowe Archiwum Cyfrowe

LUDMIŁA BOJARSKA Tancerka. Warszawa, 1926. pocztówka | postcard

Loda Halama in dance costume

Dorys (Warszawa) :: Loda Halama, aktorka-tancerka w stroju scenicznym – fotografia sytuacyjna wykonana w atelier, 1918-1933
Dorys (Warsaw) :: Loda Halama, actress-dancer in stage costume – situational photograph taken in the atelier, 1918-1933
Bil M. – Loda Halama, actress-dancer performing a dance – Role portrait photography taken in the atelier, 1918-1935
Bil M. – Loda Halama, aktorka-tancerka podczas wykonywania tańca – fotografia sytuacyjna wykonana w atelier, 1918-1935
Dorys (Warsaw) :: Loda Halama, actress-dancer in stage costume – situational photograph taken in the atelier, 1918-1933 (DETAIL)
Artystka Loda Halama w jednej ze scen przedstawienia “Tańcu z kulą”, 1938. Brak danych. “As” nr 27, 03.07.1938
The artist Loda Halama in one of the scenes of the performance “Dancing with a Ball”, 1938. Unknown ph. “Ace” No. 27, July 3rd, 1938

source of all images: Narodowe Archiwum Cyfrowe (Domena publiczna) (Polish National Digital Archive)

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

Markova as Giselle ca. 1948

Baron (Sterling Henry Nahum) :: Dame Alicia Markova, professional name of Lilian Alicia Marks, English ballerina, 1949. She joined Diaghilev's Ballets Russes in 1924. | src Getty Images
Baron (Sterling Henry Nahum) :: Dame Alicia Markova, professional name of Lilian Alicia Marks, English ballerina, 1947-1948. She joined Diaghilev’s Ballets Russes in 1924. | src Getty Images
Baron (Sterling Henry Nahum) :: Dame Alicia Markova, professional name of Lilian Alicia Marks, English ballerina, 1949. She joined Diaghilev's Ballets Russes in 1924. | src Getty Images
Baron (Sterling Henry Nahum) :: Dame Alicia Markova, professional name of Lilian Alicia Marks, English ballerina, 1949. She joined Diaghilev’s Ballets Russes in 1924. | src Getty Images
Ballet dancer Alicia Markova performs as Giselle in the ballet of the same name. (Photo by © Hulton-Deutsch Collection/CORBIS/Corbis via Getty Images)
Ballet dancer Alicia Markova performs as Giselle in the ballet of the same name, 1948-1949. Uncredited photographer on source. Most probably photographed by Baron. | src Getty Images

Maria Ley by Dora Kallmus

Madame d'Ora :: Maria Ley-Piscator, 1926. Photographer: Atelier d'Ora - Dora Kallmus. | src Getty Images
Madame d’Ora :: Maria Ley-Piscator, 1926. Photographer: Atelier d’Ora – Dora Kallmus. | src Getty Images
Atelier d’Ora :: Tänzerin Maria Ley-Piscator mit ihrem Partner Roberts, , 1925. Foto: Madame d’Ora (Dora Kallmus). | Getty Images

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

Karsavina dans Le dieu bleu

Le Dieu bleu : [Tamara Karsavina dans le rôle de la jeune fille], 1912. [Photographe présumé : Waléry] | src Gallica ~ BnF
Le Dieu bleu : Légende hindoue en 1 acte / chorégraphie de Michel Fokine. - Paris : Théâtre du Châtelet, 13-05-1912
Le Dieu bleu : [Tamara Karsavina dans le rôle de la jeune fille], 1912. [Photographe présumé : Waléry] | src Gallica ~ BnF
Le Dieu bleu : Légende hindoue en 1 acte / chorégraphie de Michel Fokine. – Paris : Théâtre du Châtelet, 13-05-1912
Title :  Le Dieu bleu : [photographie] : [Tamara Karsavina dans le rôle de la jeune fille] : [photographie de Waléry, Paris ?]
Author :  Waléry (1866-1935 ; photographe). Photographe présumé
Publication date :  1912
Relation :  Le Dieu bleu : Légende hindoue en 1 acte / chorégraphie de Michel Fokine. - Paris : Théâtre du Châtelet, 13-05-1912
Le Dieu bleu : [Tamara Karsavina dans le rôle de la jeune fille], 1912. [Photographe présumé : Waléry] | src Gallica ~ BnF
Le Dieu bleu : Légende hindoue en 1 acte / chorégraphie de Michel Fokine. – Paris : Théâtre du Châtelet, 13-05-1912 (detail)