Johan Hagemeyer :: Magnolia Blossom, 1925. «This rare image of a magnolia flower, a sublime and thoughtful botanical close-up that reflects Hagemeyer’s early horticutural training». | src Bonhams
Johan Hagemeyer :: Rose. Pasadena, 1929. Gelatin silver print. | src OACJohan Hagemeyer :: [Rose. Pasadena.] [negative], 1929. | src OACJohan Hagemeyer :: Calla Lily, negative 1925; print 1926. Collotype. From: Pictorial Photography in America. Vol. 4 | src The J. Paul Getty MuseumJohan Hagemeyer :: Yellow Tulip, 1920s-1940s. Gelatin silver print. | src The Metropolitan Museum of ArtJohan Hagemeyer :: [Flower]. Gelatin silver print. | src OACJohan Hagemeyer :: [Flower]. Gelatin silver print. | src OAC
Arnold Genthe :: Modern Torso, ca. 1918. Gelatin silver print. | src The J. Paul Getty Museum > permalinkModern Torso (1918) by Arnold Genthe. Published in Vogue magazine (1938) | src BnF · Gallica
Ferdinand Flodin :: Titel saknas, 1930. Pigment print mounted on board. | src Moderna MuseetFerdinand Flodin :: Pierrette, 1932. Glamourous study titled “Pierrette”. It is a high quality halftone print from The Amateur Photographer, November 9th, 1932. | src eBayFerdinand Flodin :: Titel saknas, 1930. Pigment print mounted on board. | src Moderna Museet
Baron Adolf de Meyer ::Water Lilies, ca. 1906. Platinum print, printed 1912. «The critic Charles H. Caffin described this photograph by de Meyer as “a veritable dream of loveliness.” It is one of several floral still lifes de Meyer made in London around 1906–9, when he was in close contact with Alvin Langdon Coburn, a fellow photographer and member of the Linked Ring. Both men were inspired by the Belgian writer Maurice Maeterlinck’s 1906 book The Intelligence of Flowers, a mystical musing on the vitality of plant life. De Meyer exhibited several of his flower studies, including this platinum print, at Stieglitz’s influential Photo-Secession galleries in New York in 1909. The image also appeared as a photogravure in an issue of Stieglitz’s art and photography journal Camera Work.» [Camera Work, issue nº 24, 1908] src The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Alfred Stieglitz Collection
Adolf de Meyer :: The Shadows on the Wall (Chrysanthemums), 1906. Platinum print. Focusing his camera not on a still life per se, but on its evanescent trace, de Meyer creates a composition that approaches abstraction. (…) Here, the shadow of a vase of flowers cast onto the wall has the effect of a Japanese lacquered screen. | src Alfred Stieglitz Collection, MetMuseum