Max Oppenheimer (MOPP) (1885–1954) :: Moderne Galerie Theatiner-Maffeistr. Max Oppenheimer (Exhibition Poster), 1911 MoMA
Oppenheimer, who had begun signing works MOPP by 1911, was initially friendly with both (Oskar) Kokoschka and (Egon) Schiele. But this poster, which he designed for his first Munich exhibition, brought accusations of plagiarism from Kokoschka, who found its subject—a gaunt, naked self-portrait figure bleeding from a chest wound—too close to his own agonized poster of a year earlier (images below). | quoted from MoMA
Julia Margaret Cameron :: Annie Philpot (1857-1936), Freshwater, Isle of Wight, England, January 1864. Albumen silver print.Julia Margaret Cameron (British, born India, 1815 – 1879) :: Annie; January 1864. Albumen silver print.Julia Margaret Cameron :: Annie / “My very first success in Photography January 1864”, January 1864. Albumen silver print. Getty Open Content Program
In December 1863 Julia Margaret Cameron received the gift of a wooden box camera from her only daughter, Julia, and her son-in-law Charles Norman. She was forty-eight years old, a woman whose prodigious energies had been centered on raising her six children. Now, with her daughter married and her husband and three eldest sons away on her family coffee estates in Ceylon, she found herself at a transitional moment in her life. Taking up photography at this time, she began, in her own words “to arrest all beauty that came before me.”
Cameron’s retrospective written account of her career in photography, Annals of My Glass House (penned in 1874 and published posthumously in 1889), stresses the solitary nature of her early experiments: “I began with no knowledge of the art. I did not know where to place my dark box, how to focus my sitter, and my first picture I effaced to my consternation by rubbing my hand over the filmy side of the glass.” Despite this proclamation, Cameron may have already learned the basics of camera operation and chemistry from Oscar Gustave Rejlander, with whom she shared many mutual friends, most importantly Alfred Tennyson, her neighbor on the Isle of Wight. Another likely early tutor was her brother-in-law Lord Somers, an accomplished amateur photographer who made portraits of Cameron’s family circle.
After some three weeks of experimentation in the January cold of her studio at her home in Freshwater, Cameron created this portrait of Annie Philpot (1857-1936), the daughter of a local resident. She later recalled the circumstances surrounding its creation in Annals of My Glass House: “I was in transport of delight. I ran all over the house to search for gifts for the child. I felt as if she entirely had made the picture. I printed, toned, fixed and framed it, and presented it to her father that same day.” Cameron carefully trimmed this particular print for presentation in an album given to Lord Overstone in 1865. It is a picture of great simplicity and grace, conspicuously divided in terms of light and dark. The out-of-focus background and deep shadows around the model’s eyes were acceptable to Cameron, indicating that from the outset her criteria for “success” were notably out of step with convention. She proudly inscribed the picture’s mount “My very first success in photography.”
Sebastiaan Alfonse van Besten :: Modesty, ca. 1912. Autochrome. | src Belgian Autochromists
Alfonse van Besten (1865-1926) was a painter, and took full advantage of the possibilities of the new colour process: the Autochrome. One can see that many of his Autochromes were taken with a “painterly eye” e.g. Musing (Mrs.van Besten) or Symphony in white.
During the first World War (1914-1918) he was a refugee in The Netherlands. Together with his friend A. van Son, another Belgian autochromist and refugee, they gave countless lectures at several Dutch photography societies. They were praised for their excellent Autochrome work, e.g. on the 16th of April 1915 the photographic society “Meer Licht” from Nymegen (NL) paid an homage to Van Besten for his outstanding autochrome plates. See Homage to Van Besten at Nymegen.
He was member of The photographic association IRIS-Antwerp and the Association Belge de Photographie. [quoted from source]
Sebastiaan Alfonse van Besten :: Maiden with butterfly on flower, ca. 1912. Autochrome. | src Belgian AutochromistsSebastiaan Alfonse van Besten :: Young girl amidst marguerites, ca. 1912. Autochrome. | src Belgian AutochromistsSebastiaan Alfonse van Besten :: Purity, 1913. Autochrome. | src Belgian AutochromistsSebastiaan Alfonse van Besten :: Lady with poppies, 1912. Autochrome. | src Belgian AutochromistsSebastiaan Alfonse van Besten :: Study of Mrs. van Besten [Josephine Arnz] as Flemish princess, ca. 1912. Autochrome. | src Belgian Autochromists
Edward Weston :: The Fan – Margrethe Mather; 1914. Platinum or Palladium print. CCP – University of ArizonaEdward H. Weston :: Margrethe Mather – The Fan, ca. 1917. | src kim weston blog
Irma Calson och Jean Börlin i Chopin av Svenska Baletten, foto: okänd. | src Dansmuseet on IGIrma Calson och Jean Börlin i Chopin, Svenska Baletten, foto: Studio V. Henry, Paris, 1920. | src Dansmuseet’s IG
Amelia C. Van Buren :: [Profile portrait of woman draped with a veil]; 1917 (?). Platinum print mounted on black mat. Color film copy transparency of the original. LC-USZC4-9380 | src L. of CongressAmelia C. Van Buren :: [Profile portrait of woman draped with a veil]; 1917 (?). Platinum print on Rembrandt mount. Color film copy slide of the original. LC-USZC4-9108 | src L. of CongressAmelia C. Van Buren :: [Profile portrait of woman draped with a veil]; 1917 (?). Platinum print mounted on black mat. Color film copy slide of the original. LC-USZC2-5993 | src L. of Congress
The Library of Congress owns two impressions of this photograph: 1-a (top and bottom) and 1-b (middle). Forms part of: Artistic photographs collected by Frances Benjamin Johnston in the Frances Benjamin Johnston Collection. Gift of Frances Benjamin Johnston; 1948.
Published in: Ambassadors of progress / edited by Bronwyn A.E. Griffith … France : Musée d’Art Américain Giverny … 2001, p. 177.
Man Ray :: Lizica Codreanu (Codreano) au bal des Beaumont, 1924. | src Centre PompidouMan Ray :: Lizica Codreanu (Codreano) au bal des Beaumont, 1924. | src Centre Pompidou