
Halbakt und Porträt von Schein

images that haunt us




Peter depicts British painter Hannah Gluckstein, heir to a catering empire who adopted the genderless professional name Gluck in the early 1920s. By the time Brooks met her at one of Natalie Barney’s literary salons, Gluckstein had begun using the name Peyter (Peter) Gluck. She unapologetically wore men’s suits and fedoras, clearly asserting the association between androgyny and lesbian identity. Brooks’s carefully nuanced palette and quiet, empty space produced an image of refined and austere modernity. ~ The Art of Romaine Brooks, 2016
Quoted from : Smithsonian American Art Museum (x)












Retrieved from the article:
Der klingende Baum. Eine Berliner Tanzschule. Scherl’s Magazin Band 5, H. 11, November 1929
The Ringing Tree. A Berlin dance school. Scherl’s magazine volume 5, issue 11, November 1929

















All images are by Barbara Ker-Seymer (1905–1993), retrieved from Tate gallery
Sitter: Kyra Nijinsky [ca. 1930]
Some photographs [seven out of a batch of nine] have been marked up with crop lines and areas for retouching.