The Mask (Josephine Schwarz)

Jane Reece :: Josephine Schwarz, The Maskmaker (aka The Mask), 1924-1929 (signed and dated on bottom right). Courtesy of Special Collections & Archives, Wright State University via Ohio Virtual Dance Collection / Exhibits (2018)

Sent M’Ahesa, 1928

Franz Löwy (Vienna) :: Dancer Sent M’Ahesa (Elsa von Carlberg). From Der Kunstlerische Tanz Unserer Zeit [The Artistic Dance of Our Time], p. 11. Published in 1928. | src Marcus Bunyan
Hanns Holdt :: Sent M’ahesa (Elsa von Carlberg). From Der Kunstlerische Tanz Unserer Zeit [The Artistic Dance of Our Time] by Hermann Aubel and Marianne Aubel. Leipzig, 1928. p. 10. | originally posted on tumblr | src Crossett Library

Dancing with Helen Moller, 1918

“Unfolding, as though giving or about to receive — an idea of petals opening to exchange the flower’s perfume for the warmth of the sun’s rays.” From ‘Dancing with Helen Moller’, 1918. Page 26. University of California Libraries. | src internet archive
“A gentle and pleasantly expectant expression of aspiration — the lines of the entire body, arms, neck and head, having an upward tendency.” From ‘Dancing with Helen Moller’, 1918. Page 94. University of California Libraries. | src internet archive
“An expression of pleasurable relaxation pervading the entire body— a complete reaction to influences that are pervasive in their sweetness and charm.” From ‘Dancing with Helen Moller’, 1918. Page 94. University of California Libraries. | src internet archive
“The graceful management of draperies is an important requisite in Greek dancing. When the robe is voluminous, as in this instance, its manipulation demands considerable skill.” From ‘Dancing with Helen Moller’, 1918. Page 44. University of California Libraries. | src internet archive
“Classic perfection of repose, with one limb bearing the body’s weight while the other, with the knee flexed, preserves balance, is one of the Greek dancer’s earliest achievements.” From ‘Dancing with Helen Moller’, 1918. Page 44. University of California Libraries. | src internet archive
“Different individual reactions to the same sense of calamity -one erect as though petrified, the other crushed by despair; neither imitative, but each creative.”
Helen Moller and Curtis Dunham :: From ‘Dancing with Helen Moller; her own statement of her philosophy and practice and teaching formed upon the classic Greek model, and adapted to meet the aesthetic and hygienic needs of to-day’, 1918. Page 40. University of California Libraries. | src internet archive

ACKNOWLEDGMENT: Many of the photographs reproduced in this book were taken by the author herself. For the privilege of reproducing other fine examples of the photographer’s art, she desires to express her grateful acknowledgments to Moody, to Maurice Goldberg, to Charles Albin and to Underwood and Underwood; also to Arnold Genthe for the plate on Page 36; and to Jeremiah Crowley for his admirable arrangement of the entire series of illustrative art plates. [quoted from source]

Lubovska, NY Tribune, 1918

Lubovska**, international première danseuse, formerly with the Daghilieff (sic) Ballet. | src NY Tribune, 09/15/1918 page 8
Everything
At the Hippodrome
** Lubowska or Lubovska or Désirée Lubovska, aka Mme Lubowska was the stage name of American dancer Winniefred Foote.

Le P’tit Parigot, 1926

Lizica Codreanu, wearing a Pierrot-Éclair costume designed by Sonia Delaunay, on the set of René Le Somptier’s film Le P’tit Parigot, 1926; unknown photographer. © Bibliothèque nationale de France. | src Tate Modern: The EY Exhibition: Sonia Delaunay
Lizica Codreanu, wearing a Pierrot-Éclair costume designed by Sonia Delaunay, on the set of René Le Somptier’s film Le P’tit Parigot, 1926; unknown photographer. © Bibliothèque nationale de France. | src Tate Modern: The EY Exhibition: Sonia Delaunay
till photo from the film "Le P’tit Parigot," written by Paul Cartoux and directed by René Le Somptier, France, 1926. Collection of Antoine Blanchette. © L & M SERVICES B.V. The Hague 20100623. | src dwell
Still photo from the film “Le P’tit Parigot,” written by Paul Cartoux and directed by René Le Somptier, France, 1926. Collection of Antoine Blanchette. © L & M SERVICES B.V. The Hague 20100623. | src dwell
Still from Le P’tit Parigot directed by René Le Somptier. Costumes by Sonia Delaunay, 1926. | src life.ro
Still from Le P’tit Parigot directed by René Le Somptier. Costumes by Sonia Delaunay, 1926.