Women eating watermelon

Erwin E. Smith (1886–1947) ~ [Women eating watermelon], ca. 1907. Nitrate negative | src Amon Carter Museum P1986.41.343
Erwin Evans Smith (1886–1947) ~ [Women eating watermelon], ca. 1907. Nitrate negative
Amon Carter Museum of American Art (P1986.41.344)
Erwin Evans Smith (1886–1947) ~ [Two women eating watermelon], ca. 1907. Nitrate negative
Amon Carter Museum of American Art (P1986.41.342)

Fabienne Lloyd by van Vechten

Carl van Vechten ~ Jemima Fabienne Cravan Lloyd (m. Benedict), December 19, 1937 | src Beinecke Library [DETAIL]
Carl van Vechten ~ Jemima Fabienne Cravan Lloyd (m. Benedict), December 19, 1937 | src Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library ~ Yale University
Carl van Vechten ~ Jemima Fabienne Cravan Lloyd (m. Benedict), December 19, 1937
Carl van Vechten ~ Jemima Fabienne Cravan Lloyd (m. Benedict), December 19, 1937 | src Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library ~ Yale University
Carl van Vechten ~ Jemima Fabienne Cravan Lloyd (m. Benedict), December 19, 1937
Carl van Vechten ~ Jemima Fabienne Cravan Lloyd (m. Benedict), December 19, 1937
Carl van Vechten ~ Jemima Fabienne Cravan Lloyd (m. Benedict), December 19, 1937
Carl van Vechten ~ Jemima Fabienne Cravan Lloyd (m. Benedict), December 19, 1937
Carl van Vechten ~ Jemima Fabienne Cravan Lloyd (m. Benedict), December 19, 1937
Carl van Vechten ~ Jemima Fabienne Cravan Lloyd (m. Benedict), December 19, 1937
Carl van Vechten ~ Jemima Fabienne Cravan Lloyd (m. Benedict), December 19, 1937
Carl van Vechten ~ Jemima Fabienne Cravan Lloyd (m. Benedict), December 19, 1937
Carl van Vechten ~ Jemima Fabienne Cravan Lloyd (married, Benedict), December 19, 1937
Carl van Vechten ~ Jemima Fabienne Cravan Lloyd (m. Benedict), December 19, 1937 | src Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library ~ Yale University

Fabienne (Fabi) Cravan Lloyd

Berenice Abbott (1898–1991) ~ Fabienne Lloyd [Jemima Fabienne Cravan Lloyd], 1928. | src The Philadelphia Museum of Art

Fabienne Cravan Lloyd (Fabi) was the daughter of the Swiss writer, poet and boxer Arthur Cravan (born Fabian Avenarius Lloyd; 1887 – disappeared 1918) and the British-born artist (painter, writer and lamp designer) Mina Loy (born Mina Gertrude Löwy; 1882–1966).

After the disappearance of Arthur Cravan, Loy travelled back to England (from Buenos Aires), where she gave birth to her daughter, Fabienne, named after her father, on 5 April 1919.

Fabi (Fabienne), having inherited her parents’ artistic talent, but perhaps less of their volatility and wanderlust, worked as a designer, married twice, and had four children. As a seventy-eight-year-old widow, unwell and nearly blind, she committed suicide in 1997. Immortality, of a sort, had been secured more than half a century earlier, thanks to the cameras of her mother’s famous friends Man Ray and Carl Van Vechten. Their photographs of a young Fabi reveal a watchful, dark-haired girl with a perfect profile, an air of steely calm, and an eerie resemblance to the father she never met. (text adapted from Lapham’s Quarterly: The Vanishing Pugilist and the Poet. The marriage of twentieth-century avant-gardists Arthur Cravan and Mina Loy was blissfully happy—until his mysterious disappearance.)

Man Ray (Emmanuel Radnitzky) ~ Jemima Fabienne Cravan Lloyd, vers 1925 | src Centre Pompidou
Berenice Abbott (1898–1991) ~ Fabienne Lloyd [Jemima Fabienne Cravan Lloyd], 1928. | src Lapham’s Quarterly

Bone and Passion Flower, 1957

Ruth Bernhard (1905–2006) ~ Bone and Passion Flower, 1957. Toned gelatin silver print. | src Princeton University Art Museum
Ruth Bernhard (1905–2006) ~ Bone and Passion Flower, 1957. Gelatin silver print. | src Princeton University Art Museum

Emma Gramatica by Nunes Vais

Mario Nunes Vais ~ Rittrato della attrice Emma Gramatica, 1900-1915. Gelatina ai sali d’argento, vetro | src ICCD
Mario Nunes Vais ~ Rittrato della attrice Emma Gramatica, 1900-1915. Gelatina ai sali d’argento, vetro | src ICCD
Mario Nunes Vais ~ Rittrato della attrice Emma Gramatica, 1900-1915. Gelatina ai sali d’argento, vetro | src ICCD