Grit Hegesa by Atelier Binder

Atelier Binder ~ Grit Hegesa sitting cross-legged with cigarette holder. Die Dame 24/1921 | src getty images
Atelier Binder ~ Grit Hegesa modelling dress with wide sleeves and hat, 1921 | src getty images
Alexander Binder ~ Grit Hegesa. Vintage postcard 452/2 | src alamy
Atelier Binder ~ Portrait of the dancer Grit Hegesa, 1921 | src getty images
Atelier Binder ~ Grit Hegesa Schneidersitz mit Zigarettenspitze. In: Die Dame 24/1921 | src getty images

Morning Notebook · 1939

Manuel Álvarez Bravo (1902 – 2002) ~ Notebook of Tomorrow, 1939. From: Cuaderno de la mañana | src Getty Museum

Alvarez Bravo hired a young female model to pose for him while he was teaching photography at the Academia de San Carlos (Academy of San Carlos) in Mexico City in 1937. Over the course of the next few years he created a series of figure studies that are noteworthy for their simple yet powerful compositions. In this picture Alvarez Bravo positioned the young woman on a fabric covered table against a plain white wall. He achieved a balance between divergent elements–stasis and dynamism, tension and relaxation, and positive and negative space.

Manuel Álvarez Bravo (1902 – 2002) ~ Cuaderno de la mañana (Morning Notebook), 1939 (*) | src Getty Museum

Manuel Alvarez Bravo directed this model to pose with her head dramatically turned upward. The young woman’s unnatural posture encouraged the presumably male viewer to gaze freely at her eroticized form; her averted face denied her the opportunity to return and confirm the gaze. This pose belongs to an academic tradition of representing women as objects of desire.

Alvarez Bravo produced a series of nude photographs depicting this model. He called the series Morning Notebook, suggesting that the female body was a construction that could be documented and then read like words on a page. During this period, many Surrealist artists, whose work influenced Alvarez Bravo, used the female form in much the same way–for clearly visible consumption. (text quoted from Getty Museum)

(*) Secondary inscription on verso: “Cuaderno de la Mañana (Dicha Puerta)” and “# 8”

Mucha model in Bohemian dress

Alphonse Mucha (1860-1939) ~ A model in Mucha’s studio on the Rue du Val-de-Grâce, dressed in a traditional Bohemian folk costume, circa 1900 | src Mucha-Museum Prague
Alphonse Maria Mucha (1860-1939) ~ Model in a long white Bohemian folk robe and a hat with ribbons, Paris, 1899
Alphonse Mucha (1860-1939) ~ Model posing at Mucha’s studio on Rue du Val-de-Grâce, Paris, ca. 1901

Paris chairs in the ice, 1950

«Guido» ~ Chair during ice debacle, Paris, 1950. Vintage silver print | src Senigallia
«Guido» ~ Chaise pendant la débâcle de la glace, Paris, 1950. Tirage argentique d’époque | src Senigallia

We’d like to think it’s a tribute by a mysterious «Guido» to the master Kertész, even if in 1950 his photographs weren’t yet famous… Kertész arrived in Paris in 1925 and photographed the chairs at the Tuileries during his early years as an apprentice. He moved to New York in 1936. | text quoted from auction house Senigallia

Still-life and flower studies ca. 1925

Ervin Kankowszky or Rudolf Balogh (attr. to) ~ Plums in a Plate, Hungary, ca. 1925. Vintage silver print with Kankowszky press agency stamp | src 150cent
Ervin Kankowszky or Rudolf Balogh (attr. to) ~ Three Flowers, Hungary, ca. 1925. Vintage silver print with Kankowszky press agency stamp | src Senigallia
Ervin Kankowszky or Rudolf Balogh (attr. to) ~ Wild Plant Study Hungary, ca. 1925. Vintage silver print with Kankowszky press agency stamp | src Senigallia

Alvarez-Bravo · Luz restirada

Manuel Álvarez-Bravo (1902-2002) ~ Luz restirada (Lengthened Light), 1944 | src Carnegie Museum of Art
Manuel Álvarez-Bravo (1902-2002) ~ Luz restirada (Lengthened Light), 1944 | src AIC (Art Institute Chicago)
Manuel Álvarez-Bravo (1902-2002) ~ Luz restirada / Stretched Light (1944) from Photographs by Manuel Álvarez Bravo (1977) | src Meadows museum Dallas
Manuel Álvarez-Bravo (1902-2002) ~ Luz restirada / Lengthened Light, 1944 | src Madison Museum of Contemporary Art

Lolly Spender · nudes · 1937-38

Humphrey Spender ~ Elisabeth Margaret ‘Lolly’ Spender’s chest, 1937-38. John Banting collection | src Tate gallery
Humphrey Spender ~ Elisabeth Margaret ‘Lolly’ Spender’s chest, 1937-38. John Banting collection | src Tate gallery
Humphrey Spender ~ Elisabeth Margaret ‘Lolly’ Spender, 1937-1938. John Banting collection | src Tate gallery
Humphrey Spender ~ Elisabeth Margaret ‘Lolly’ Spender’s chest, 1937-38. John Banting collection | src Tate gallery

Frauenporträt von Antios

Anton Josef Trčka (1893-1940) ~ Frauenporträt. Portrait of a woman in profile, ca. 1925; palladium print | src Galerie Kicken

ANTIOS – this clearly legible and decorative signet is as much an effective design element of these famous portraits as EGON SCHIELE’s signature. For a long time, it seemed no one was interested in the fact that this legendary Viennese painter and self-portraitist could not have produced such accomplished photographs without the cooperation of a partner who was a master of photographic technique. The way expressive movement blends with the demands of ”classic” portraiture, or the way graphic outline contrasts with the two-dimensional rendering of figures and garments – this cannot have been the work of an amateur.
An amateur he certainly was not, this Anton Josef Trčka, who contracted his own name to form the artistic trademark ANT(on) IOS(ef) during his third year of studies at the “Graphischen Lehr- und Versuchsanstalt” (Institute of Graphic Instruction and Experimentation) in Vienna. This specialized learning institute for photography and reproduction technology, the first of its kind worldwide, was founded in 1888 in the tradition of the commercial arts schools, and combined the demand for technical perfection with solid instruction of an artistic nature. The young Trčka found in Karel Novak (later the co-founder of a similar school in Prague that produced the likes of Sudek or Rössler) a teacher, who not only taught his students how to turn the idea of Pictorialism into professional practice, but also conveyed an understanding of classical portraiture and a love of contemporary painting. The level of Novak’s influence can be seen in the way artists such as Rudolf Koppitz or Trude Fleischmann, along with ANTIOS, remained true their life long to decorative design devices particular to their teacher.
Well before his Schiele and Klimt portraits, ANTIOS had experimented with compositions that were indebted to Jugendstil. The dynamic contours of his figures appear to be inspired by the work of those young dancers who, in the first decades of the 20th century, consciously distanced themselves from classical ballet. By 1924, Trčka had developed close friendships with several dancers, including Hilde Holger and Gertrud Bodenwieser, and these found expression in photographic dance studies, nudes and portraits, and even drawings and poems. During this period, he developed a portrait style that clearly sets him apart from what is generally considered to be the international avant-garde of the 1920’s, yet at the same time is far removed from the great amateur art photographers at the turn of the century. ANTIOS’s imagery – with its wonderfully circular compositions, the painterly reworking by the artist himself, and the integration of the image title and his signature – radiates a deeper melancholy stemming from a determination for perfection that stands diametrically opposed to the photographic goals of the ”Neues Sehen” movement.
As early as his student years, the young Trčka considered himself not only a photographer but also – or mainly! –a painter and poet. And he put these inclinations to use in the service of his intense interest in religion, theosophy and anthroposophy. His admiration for Rudolf Steiner was second only to his admiration for Otokar Brezina, a Czech Poet who at the turn of the last century, created a language based on religion and nature that turned against traditional poetry as well as the hated Austrian domination. Due to this conflict between his Czech roots and the Austrian identity forced (due to economic reasons) on him, and driven with missionary zeal for Anthroposophy, Anton Josef Trcka would be damned to a lifelong existence on the margins. He saw his photographs and paintings exhibited only once in his lifetime, his poetry was made public only through private readings. However, his few friends and admirers, such as Hilde Holger, found in his work something extraordinary that accompanied them in times of escape or emigration. (Text by Monika Faber) ~ quoted from Galerie Kicken Berlin

Fifi in the woods by Jacob Olie

Jacob Olie jr. ~ Fifi in een bos | Fifi in the Woods (possibly Oud-Amelisweerd estate); ca. 1910 – 1914. Autochrome | src Rijksmuseum
Jacob Olie jr. ~ Fifi in een bos | Fifi in the Woods; ca. 1910 – 1914. Autochrome | src Rijksmuseum
Detail from: Fifi in the Woods (possibly Oud-Amelisweerd estate); 1910 – 1914. Autochrome by Jacob Olie jr.

Girl identifying flowers

Meisje dat bloemblaadjes determineert | Girl identifying petals; 1907-1930. [Anonymous] Autochrome | src Rijksmuseum
Detail from: Meisje dat bloemblaadjes determineert | Girl identifying petals; 1907-1930. [Anonymous] Autochrome