Rigmor Rasmussen by Balasz

Atelier Balázs ~ Dancer Rigmor Rasmussen wearing a golden dance costume. Published in ‘Die Dame’ 10/1928 | src getty images

 

 

Shona Dunlop in Cain and Abel

Margaret Michaelis (1902-1985) ~ No title [Shona Dunlop as Cain in ‘Cain and Abel’], Sydney, 1941 | src NGA
Margaret Michaelis (1902-1985) ~ No title [Shona Dunlop as Cain in ‘Cain and Abel’], Sydney, 1941 | src NGA
Margaret Michaelis (1902-1985) ~ No title [Shona Dunlop as Cain in ‘Cain and Abel’], Sydney, 1941 | src NGA
Margaret Michaelis (1902-1985) ~ No title [Shona Dunlop as Cain in ‘Cain and Abel’], Sydney, 1941 | src NGA

Lo Hesse, ca. 1918

Franz Xaver Setzer :: Dancer Lo Hesse, about 1918. (Archiv Setzer-Tschiedel) | src Getty Images
Grainer (München) :: German dancer Lo Hesse | German postcard by Verlag Hans Dursthoff, Berlin, nº 1170. Photo Grainer, Munchen. Collection Didier Hanson | src Flickr

Lo Hesse was active in Munich and Berlin between 1916 and 1920. Her dances relied heavily on extravagantly exotic costumes designed mostly by the German expressionist artist Walter Schnackenberg. | src Flickr

Roshanara · Incense dance · 1913

Bassano Ltd. ~ Roshanara (Olive Craddock) in Incense dance, 1913. Whole-plate glass negative | src NPG
Bassano Ltd. ~ Roshanara (Olive Craddock), 1913. Whole-plate glass negative | src NPG
Bassano Ltd. ~ Roshanara (Olive Craddock) in Incense dance, 1913. Whole-plate glass negative | src NPG

Roshanara occupies a similar position in Britain to that of Ruth St. Denis in the USA, albeit she is far less-widely known. Both aroused an interest in Indian and what was then called oriental dance at a time when there had been little serious study of the art form in Western theatre, although for both theatricality remained more important than authenticity. An important difference from St Denis was that Craddock was born in Calcutta and brought up in India of mixed parentage – an English mother and Anglo-Indian father, of Irish extraction – giving her a serious base rather than fantasy from which to draw her dances. Also, although Roshanara taught, unlike St Denis she never established a formal school to perpetuate her ideas. As Alma Talley wrote in ‘The Story of Roshanara’, The Dance, November 1926, ‘Roshanara has brought to the Western World the spirit of Central India as no one else has ever been able to bring it…India’s dances were a part of her soul. She devoted her life to perfecting them, as an artist in water colors gives years of study to making his art as nearly perfect as perfection is humanly possible’.

Once Craddock had chosen a performing career she adopted the name of a Mughal princess (1617-1671), reputed to have been the first to travel outside her own country. The name means ‘Light-Adorning’. In about 1909 Craddock travelled to Europe with her mother and appears to have worked briefly with Loie Fuller before, in 1911, having studied with Tórtola Valencia, she appeared as the Almah in Kismet at the Garrick Theatre. In 1911 (14, 18, 21, 25m November & 5 December) she appeared five times as Zobeide in Schéhérazade for the Ballets Russes at the Covent Garden, London.

In 1912 Roshanara had a season at the Palace Theatre, London, and in the autumn had a speciality spot on Anna Pavlova’s British regional tour, presenting her Incense, Village and Snake dances. In 1913 Roshanara danced at the Tivoli, London, and in July-August 1914 appeared for two weeks at the London Coliseum. She periodically returned to India to dance. By 1916 she was dancing in the USA where she gave numerous recitals, appeared in productions, danced with Adolph Bolm’s multi-cultural Ballets Intimes and taught. (Bette Davis was for a time one of her pupils). Her life and work are documented in ‘Roshanara “Secrets of Oriental Grace”’, Dance Lovers Magazine, February 1925, pp.35, 36, 66 and substantial obituary articles by Talley: ‘The Story of Roshanara A Short Biography of That Great Englishwoman Who Brought the Art of the Orient to the Eyes of the Western World’, The Dance, November 1926, pp.10-13, 51; and ‘Always a Wanderer, She Brought the Rich Beauty of Oriental Art to Many Lands’, The Dance, December 1926, pp.41, 42, 50. (text : V&A museum)

Bassano Ltd. ~ Roshanara (Olive Craddock) in Incense dance, 1913. Whole-plate glass negative | src NPG
Bassano Ltd. ~ Roshanara (Olive Craddock), 1913. Whole-plate glass negative | src NPG

Claire Bauroff, ca. 1925

Trude Fleischmann :: Die Tänzerin | The dancer Claire Bauroff, Vienna, ca. 1925. Vintage silver print. | src liveauctioneers
Trude Fleischmann :: Die Tänzerin | The dancer Claire Bauroff, Vienna, ca. 1925. Vintage silver print. | src liveauctioneers


Tilla Durieux as Circe, ca. 1912

Franz von Stuck :: Study of Tilla Durieux as Circe, ca. 1912. | source adski-kafeteri
Franz or Mary von Stuck ~ Study of Tilla Durieux as Circe, cf. 1912. © Belvedere, Vienna | src Sin and SecessionAlain.R.Truong
sin and secession
Franz or Mary von Stuck :: Study of Tilla Durieux as Circe, cf. 1912. © Belvedere, Vienna | Cropped view as it appears in the painting
Franz or Mary von Stuck ~ Study of Tilla Durieux as Circe, cf. 1912. © Belvedere, Vienna | Cropped view as it appears in the painting
Franz or Mary von Stuck :: Study of Tilla Durieux as Circe, cf. 1912. © Belvedere, Vienna | DETAIL
Franz or Mary von Stuck ~ Study of Tilla Durieux as Circe, cf. 1912. © Belvedere, Vienna | DETAIL (close-up)
Fotografie von Franz oder Mary von Stuck, die Tilla Durieux in der Rolle der Circe zeigt. Das Foto diente als Vorlage für das Gemälde “Tilla Durieux als Circe”, ca. 1912. © Sammlung Museum Villa Stuck via wikimedia

Roshanara by Bassano (1915)

Bassano Ltd. ~ Roshanara (Olive Craddock), 12 July 1915 (bromide print) | src NPG
Bassano Ltd. ~ Roshanara (Olive Craddock), 12 July 1915 (whole-plate glass negative) | src NPG
Bassano Ltd. ~ Roshanara (Olive Craddock), 12 July 1915 (whole-plate glass negative) | src NPG
Bassano Ltd. ~ Roshanara (Olive Craddock), 12 July 1915 (whole-plate glass negative) | src NPG
Bassano Ltd. ~ Roshanara (Olive Craddock), 12 July 1915 (whole-plate glass negative) | src NPG
© National Portrait Gallery, London

Adam et Eve; tableau vivant

Man Ray :: Ciné-Sketch; Adam and Eve (Marcel Duchamp and Bronia Perlmutter), 1924. Gelatin silver print, on carte postale, printed in the 1930s. | src Christie’s & Philadelphia Museum of Art (Philamuseum)

In 1924 Francis Picabia asked Bronia to participate in a production, Ciné Sketch, that he and René Clair were putting on after the Relache ballet on New Year’s Eve. Bronia agreed, and she and Marcel Duchamp appeared nude —Duchamp did have a strategically placed fig leaf— in a living tabloid of Lucas Cranach’s Adam and Eve, which Man Ray photographed.

Ciné Sketch (1924) was a theatrical diversion conceived by Francis Picabia and René Clair, in which Marcel Duchamp and the Jewish-Polish model Bronia Perlmutter mime the figures of Adam and Eve in a tableau vivant of the Temptation after a painting by Cranach. Ciné-Sketch was performed only once, at the conclusion of Relache (by Ballets Suédois) at the Théâtre des Champs-Elysées on New Year’s Eve 1924.