Adriaan Boer · some portraits

Adriaan Boer (1875–1940) ~ Studio portrait -in profile- of a young woman, seated in a chair, Bloemendaal, 1912-1922 | src Spaarnestad Photo
Adriaan Boer (1875–1940) ~ Portrait of Madeleine Veth sitting on a stool, ca. 1912 | src Spaarnestad Photo
Adriaan Boer (1875–1940) ~ Studio portrait of a girl in a dark suit with a sailor collar, 1897-1912 | src Spaarnestad Photo
Adriaan Boer (1875–1940) ~ Studio portrait of a young woman with long dark hair and a straw hat, 1897-1922
Adriaan Boer (1875–1940) ~ ‘Mevrouw Z.-R.’ portret van een Indische dame, ca. 1910 | src Spaarnestad Photo

Children games by Adriaan Boer

Adriaan Boer (1875–1940) ~ A boy and a girl playing at a table [likely the siblings Hans and Toes Waller], Bloemendaal, ca. 1914
src Spaarnestad Photo
Adriaan Boer (1875–1940) ~ A boy and a girl play at a table [likely Hans Toes and his sister Toes], Bloemendaal, ca. 1914

High (Fun) Fashion Stockings

The latest fashion in England is stockings for women, such as the Scottish Highlanders wear | src Fotocollectie Het Leven
Photo: Five ladies wearing long stockings are watched by a Scotsman in traditional costume as they pass by, 1927
A woman shows stockings (leg) with peacock feathers incorporated. The Roaring Twenties at its best, 1926. (Place and maker unknown) | src Fotocollectie Het Leven (1906-1941)
Stockings with separate toe pieces, 1932 | src Fotocollectie Het Leven (1906-1941)
Images of faces on stockings are the rage of the moment in Paris. A young lady wears the new stockings with an image of herself printed on the satin, Paris, France 1926 | src Fotocollectie Het Leven (1906-1941)
Embroidered stocking with black cat, 1914 | src Fotocollectie Het Leven (1906-1941)
Fur-trimmed garters, United States of America, 1926 | src Fotocollectie Het Leven (1906-1941)

Cilli Wang by Kitty Hoffmann

Kitty Hoffmann (1900–1968) ~ De danseres Cilly Wang. Wenen | The dancer Cilli Wang, Wien, 1932 | src Fotocollectie Het Leven

Cilli Wang (1909-2005) was a Viennese dancer and cabaret artist. She attended dance classes at the Vienna Academy of Music and Performing Arts (Max Reinhardt Seminar) with Gertrud Bodenwieser. In 1928 she gave her first performance by dancing to the recitation of the actor Ernst Ceiss.

In the 1930s she evolved into a transformational artist, appearing on cabaret and small art stages, such as Erika Mann’s “Pfeffermühle” in Zurich, the “Catakombe” in Berlin and, not least, in “Lieben Augustin” and “Simpl” in Vienna.

Her trademark were pantomimic dances and performances with parodic, grotesque and illusionistic elements – which she herself called Verwandeleien / transformations (she also designs her own costumes as well as the puppets and props she used).

For her parodic performances, which were a rarity in her time, she was called the Pavlova of Parody. Initially performing in ensembles, her interest was in the connection between spoken word and movement. She created dance movement numbers to Goethe, Wilhelm Busch and Christian Morgenstern, which she recited herself. She parodied Hitler and made fun of folk dances. Her talent for comic numbers led to comparisons with Charlie Chaplin.

text adapted from Theatermuseum Wien & German wikipedia entry

Flower photograms by Nell Dorr

Nell Dorr (1893-1988) ~ [Wildflowers view two], ca. 1940-1954. Photogram | src Amon Carter Museum
Nell Dorr (1893-1988) ~ [Wildflowers], ca. 1940-1954. Photogram. [Mother and Child 7] | src Amon Carter Museum
Nell Dorr (1893-1988) ~ [Wildflowers view five], ca. 1940-1954. Photogram. [Mother and Child 66] | src Amon Carter Museum
Nell Dorr (1893-1988) ~ [Wildflowers view seven], ca. 1940-1954. Photogram. [Mother and Child 83] | src Amon Carter Museum
Nell Dorr (1893-1988) ~ [Wildflowers view four], ca. 1940-1954 [Mother and Child 41] | src Amon Carter Museum
Nell Dorr (1893-1988) ~ [Wildflowers view four], ca. 1940-1954 [Mother and Child 41] | src Amon Carter Museum P1990.45.66
Nell Dorr (1893-1988) ~ [Wildflowers view three], ca. 1940-1954. Photogram. [Mother and Child 35] | src Amon Carter Museum
Nell Dorr (1893-1988) ~ [Wildflowers], ca. 1940-1954. Photogram | src Amon Carter Museum P1990.45.215
Nell Dorr (1893-1988) ~ [Wildflowers view nine], ca. 1940-1954. Photogram | src Amon Carter Museum
Nell Dorr (1893-1988) ~ [Wildflowers view eight], ca. 1940-1954. Photogram. [Mother and Child 84] | src Amon Carter Museum
Nell Dorr (1893-1988) ~ [Wildflowers view twenty-one], ca. 1940-1954. Photogram. Endpaper; right hand page
Nell Dorr (1893-1988) ~ [Wildflowers view fifteen], ca. 1940-1954. Photogram | src Amon Carter Museum
Nell Dorr (1893-1988) ~ [Wildflowers view six], ca. 1940-1954. Photogram. [Mother and Child 48-82] | src Amon Carter Museum

He Brings Me Roses

Barbara Crane (1928-2019) ~ He Brings Me Roses: Bouquet #3 view #1, 2011. Photogram | src Amon Carter Museum
Barbara Crane (1928-2019) ~ He Brings Me Roses: Bouquet #4 view #1, 2011. Photogram | src Amon Carter Museum

Vivian Maier · on cats

Vivian Maier (1926-2009) ~ Cats in Window, ca. 1955. Gelatin silver print | src “Vivian Maier: A Singular Vision”
Vivian Maier (1926-2009) ~ Animal Encounters, circa 1950s | src Heritage auctions: “Vivian Maier: A Singular Vision”
Vivian Maier (1926-2009) ~ Shop Cat, 1950s | src Heritage auctions: “Vivian Maier: A Singular Vision”
Detail from Cats in Window (circa 1955) by Vivian Maier | src Heritage auctions: “Vivian Maier: A Singular Vision”

A Duncan dancer by Genthe

Arnold Genthe (1869-1942) ~ Isadora Duncan dancer, nude (with veil), between 1915 and 1923 | src alamy
Arnold Genthe (1869-1942) ~ Isadora Duncan dancer, nude, between 1915 and 1923 | src alamy
Arnold Genthe (1869-1942) ~ Portraits of a Isadora Duncan (1877-1927) dancer; between 1915-1923 | src alamy

What fools these mortals be

Tyree Studio ~ Meredith College students in costume all posing with props while sitting inside trunks, ca 1916. Glass negative
Senseless Souls: What fools these mortals be! (detail from glass plate negative) The J.C. Knowles photograph collection

The photograph is titled “Senseless Souls: What fools these mortals be!” and it appears in the 1916 ‘Oak Leaves’ Meredith College yearbook. A poem accompanied the photo in the yearbook in which each stanza refers to the women pictured from left to right. | src State Archives of North Carolina on flickr

Tyree Studio (1905-1911) ~ Meredith College students in costume all posing with props while sitting inside trunks, ca 1916. Glass negative

The J. C. Knowles Photograph Collection consists in a collection of glass plate negatives dating from ca. 1900 through the late 1910s, attributed to Wharton & Tyree Studio and Tyree Studio of Raleigh, NC. Based on the age of the negatives, where they were found initially, and a notation on one of the plates, it is likely they were all created by Wharton’s Gallery, 1886-1905, Wharton & Tyree Studio, 1905-1912, and Tyree Studio, 1912-1916 of Raleigh, North Carolina.

Cyrus P. Wharton (1852-1929) operated one of the best-equipped and largest photography studios in North Carolina beginning with Wharton’s Gallery on Fayetteville Street in downtown Raleigh in 1886. In 1905 he partnered with Manly W. Tyree (1877-1916) and operated as the Wharton & Tyree Studio. Wharton appears to have retired in 1911, and Tyree continued on alone as the Tyree Studio until his death.

Negatives from J. C. Knowles collection attribution is as listed below:

1- Wharton’s gallery (1886- 1905)

2- Wharton & Tyree Studio (1905-1911)

3- Tyree Studio (1912-1916)