

images that haunt us



Baron Adolph de Meyer :: Still Life. Published in Camera Work, Nº 24, 1908. / src Toledo Museum of Art via NY Times blog
more [+] by this photographer



In his first years as a photographer, White concentrated on genre subjects like this one, often using young women as his models. Throughout his career, he continued to photograph women, from his mother and members of his wife’s family to well-known actresses of the day, such as Maude Adams. White attempted to imbue women with notions of truth and beauty, a view not uncommon among the photographers known as Pictorialists, who considered the female subject to be the most artistic and spiritual choice in the history of art. Photographs like this one allowed White to experiment with dramatic lighting while simultaneously relating photography to a long tradition of painting, through his use of a female model. [source of text]


Hisaji Hara :: A study of the still lifes 3 (Grapes), 2011 / src: theRedList

J. Willett
:: Florence French, 1922. Published in the magazine Shadowland (Sept. 1922 issue) / source: Film Maker Magazine
The caption reads: ‘This charming interpretative dancer is returning to the stage, after an absence of several years, in a new musical show called “Oh, What’s the Use”.’

Qeta Gvinepadze :: Untitled, unknown date

Ruth Bernhard (1905-2006) :: Embryo, 1934 (printed 1955-1960). Reproduced with permission of the Ruth Bernhard Archive, Princeton University Art Museum.
/ source: Lensculture

Baron Adolph de Meyer :: The Cup, from Camera Work 40. A photogravure on Japanese tissue, 1912.
more [+] by this photographer

William M. Vander Weyde :: Woman Bowling, 1900’s