Cavorting by the Pool, 1916

lady cavendish / ottoline morrell / cavorting / garsington / 1916
Lady Ottoline Morrell / Lady Cavendish :: Cavorting by the Pool at Garsington, ca. 1916. Gelatin silver print. | src The Met # 283250
Lady Ottoline Violet Anne Cavendish-Bentinck Morrell :: Cavorting by the Pool at Garsington, ca. 1916. Gelatin silver print. | src The Met # 291058

Nude in the Morning Sun, ca. 1920

Heinrich Kühn :: Nude in the Morning Sun, ca. 1920. | originally posted on and censored by tumblr
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Ruth Page by Maurice Seymour

Maurice Seymour studio (1930-1970) ~ Ruth Page with Painted Background, 1920s | src vintageWorks & iphotocentral

Maurice (1900-1993) and Seymour Zeldman (1902-1995), Russian expatriate photographers, formed the “Maurice Seymour” studio in 1929. Inspired by the example of Maurice Goldberg, the foremost photographer of classical dancers and concert musicians of the 1920s and regular contributor to the New York Times, the brothers chose to make a particular forte of ballet dancers. From 1929 to 1950 they plied their trade in a studio at the St. Clair Hotel in Chicago. In 1950 Seymour Zeldman moved to New York City; both men at this juncture legally changed their names to Maurice Seymour.

The New York brother expanded his clientele from dancers and actors to singers, jazz musicians, and burlesque stars in the 1950s. He for a period partnered with James Kriegsmann, successor to Herbert Mitchell, and a practitioner of in situ photography of singers and musicians in their performance venues. The Chicago Maurice Seymour continued specializing in dance and theatrical photography, although he had, for a period of time in the 1930s, a healthy business from radio personalities as well. Both shuttered their studios in the 1970s.

When in Chicago, they collaborated completely when creating images, sharing the posing and developing work. The images tended to be brightly illuminated, posed against neutral featureless backgrounds, and developed on glossy paper. The studio’s skill at retouching was particularly well known. All of the Chicago portraits were taken with a large accordion portrait camera using 8×10 negatives. From 1935 onward, the brothers were the prefered portraitists of the Ballet Russe de Monte Carlo. In 1947 the studio published Seymour on Ballet, a set of photographic studies, with a foreward by Leonid Massine (Chicago: Pelligrini & Cudahy), and in 1952, an expanded portfolio, Ballet Portraits, featuring Margot Fonteyn (Chicago: Pelligrini & Cudahy). / src broadway library

 

Beatrice Baxter by Käsebier

Gertrude Käsebier ~ The sketch (Beatrice Baxter Ruyl), 1902 | src Rijksmuseum
Gertrude Käsebier (1852-1934) ~ The Sketch, 1903. Platinum print. | src The Met

A frequent model for Käsebier and F. Holland Day, Beatrice Baxter Ruyl, who posed here, made illustrations for children’s books and the Boston Herald.

Gertrude Käsebier ~ The Sketch (Beatrice Baxter), 1903. Platinum print
Gertrude Kasebier ~ The Sketch, posed by Beatrice Baxter in Newport, Rhode island, 1902. Glass negative | src Library of Congress
Gertrude Käsebier ~ The Sketch (Beatrice Baxter), 1903. Platinum print. | Collection of George Eastman House

The little butterfly, 1901

Rudolf Eickemeyer Jr. (1862-1932) :: The little butterfly , 1901. [detail] | src Library of Congress
Rudolf Eickemeyer Jr. (1862-1932) :: The little butterfly , 1901. [detail] | src Library of Congress
Rudolf Eickemeyer Jr. (1862-1932) :: The little butterfly [Evelyn Nesbit in Stanford White's Japanese kimono posing sleeping on a polar bear rug at Campbell Art Studio in New York City], 1901. | src Library of Congress
Rudolf Eickemeyer Jr. (1862-1932) :: The little butterfly [Evelyn Nesbit in Stanford White’s Japanese kimono posing sleeping on a polar bear rug at Campbell Art Studio in New York City], 1901. | src Library of Congress

Drops of rain, ca. 1902

Clarence Hudson White :: Drops of rain (dew drops), ca. 1902 | A child holds a glass ball as drops of rain fall on a window in this image which was published in the celebrated photographic magazine Camera Work in 1908.
Clarence Hudson White :: Dew drops | Drops of rain, ca. 1902. Palladium print | A young boy, possibly Maynard Pressley White, looking at a large glass ball, with raindrops on a screen in the background. Published in Camera Work (1908). | src Library of Congress
Clarence Hudson White :: Dew drops | Drops of rain, ca. 1902. Palladium print | A young boy, possibly Maynard Pressley White, looking at a large glass ball, with raindrops on a screen in the background [original scan]. | src Library of Congress

The Kiss (Reynolds Sisters), 1904

Clarence H. White :: The Kiss (the Reynolds Sisters), vintage platinum print, 1904. | src gitterman gallery
Clarence H. White :: The Kiss, Terre Haute, Ind., 1904. Platinum print. (Photograph shows the sisters Jean and Marion Reynolds). | src Library of Congress
Clarence H. White :: The Kiss, Terre Haute, Ind., 1904. Platinum print. (Photograph shows the sisters Jean and Marion Reynolds). [original scan] | src Library of Congress

Blind Man’s Bluff, 1898

Clarence H. White :: Blind Man’s Bluff, 1898. Vintage platinum print. | src gitterman gallery
Clarence H. White :: Blind man’s bluff, Newark, Ohio, 1898. Platinum print. Signed in pencil on mount: Clarence H. White.
Photograph shows a blindfolded woman and another woman playing a game of blind man’s bluff. | src Library of Congress
Clarence H. White :: Blind man’s bluff, Newark, Ohio, 1898. [Original scan]. Signed in pencil on mount: Clarence H. White.
Photograph shows a blindfolded woman and another woman playing a game of blind man’s bluff. | src Library of Congress