Baker by Hoyningen-Huene

George Hoyningen-Huene ~ Josephine Baker for Vogue Studio, 10 November 1927 | src Yale university library
George Hoyningen-Huene ~ Josephine Baker [in a wig by Antoine de Paris] for Vogue Studio, 10th November 1927 [detail]
George Hoyningen-Huene ~ Josephine Baker for Vogue Studio, November 1927 (full size) | src Yale university library
George Hoyningen-Huene ~ Josephine Baker for Vogue Studio, November 1927 | src Yale university library

Scenen magazine covers 1928

Scenen Nr. 7, 1928 : Elly Holmberg, foto: Jan de Meyere (1927) | src Projekt Runeberg
Scenen Nr. 19, 1928 : Jenny Hasselquist (foto: Ekstrand) | src Projekt Runeberg
Scenen Nr. 13-14, 1928 : Josephine Baker | src Projekt Runeberg
Scenen Nr. 22, 1928 : Tora Teje (foto: Jaeger) | src Projekt Runeberg
Scenen Nr. 23-24, 1928. Julen 1928. Foto: Jaeger | src Projekt Runeberg
Detail of cover from : Scenen Nr. 13-14, 1928 : Josephine Baker

Baker in color by Lipnitzki 1926

Boris Lipnitzki ~ Josephine Baker (1906-1975), May 1926. Colourized photo. Detail | src getty images
Boris Lipnitzki ~ Josephine Baker. From a sitting in the studio of Paul Colin. Paris, May 1926. Colorized photo | src getty images

Jeanne Mammen (1890–1976) II

Jeanne Mammen :: Kabarett-Mädchen | Chorus girls – Revuegirls, 1928-29. Oil on cardboard. | src Berlinische Galerie

In the pleasure-hungry Berlin of the 1920s, theatres vied for attention with spectacular variety shows. Chorus girls in scanty costumes provided an erotic touch. As links in the chain of swinging legs, they were usually depicted as a type, not as individuals. But the two women in “Chorus Girls” by Jeanne Mammen (1890–1976) could hardly be more different. The artist centres on their weary faces, sallow skin and garish lipstick. The real attraction – the dancers’ long-limbed bodies – are only visible down to the breast. They pause for breath, no trace of glamour here.

Mammen, a free-lance artist and a prototype of the emancipated “New Woman”, often highlighted female clichés of the day. The chorus girl in front has the facial features of the artist. The figure behind resembles her sister Mimi. [quoted from Berlinische Galerie]

Jeanne Mammen :: Josephine Baker, ca. 1926. [Revue Neger]. Barbican Centre | src Flickr

Weimar Clubs and cabarets – German cities, 1920s

After the collapse of its Empire and the defeat of the First World War, Germany became a democracy, the Weimar republic. In the early 1920s, people yearned for excitement, there was a sense of liberation and the economy started to recover. Night clubs appeared which fused cabaret, literature, art, music, theatre and satire in multi-sensory experiences. American jazz and dance crazes including the foxtrot, tango, one-step and Charleston became popular and exotic dances by Anita Berber, Valeska Gert and famously Josephine Baker were performed.

Fantasy spaces were created such as the dance-casino called Scala where the ceiling was sculpted into jagged structures that hung down like crystalline stalactites. The pulsating energy of such clubs and bars was captured by artists including Otto Dix, Jeanne Mammen and Elfriede Lohse-Wächtler.

[Barbican Centre] From Into the Night: Cabarets & Clubs in Modern Art (October 2019 to January 2020)

Jeanne Mammen :: Langweilige Puppen | Boring Dolls, 1929. Watercolour and pencil on slightly nacreous wove paper, mounted on cardboard by the artist. | src Die George Economou Kollektion
Jeanne Mammen :: Langweilige Puppen | Boring Dolls, 1929. Watercolour and pencil on slightly nacreous wove paper, mounted on cardboard by the artist. | src Die George Economou Kollektion
Jeanne Mammen :: Brüderstrasse [Freies Zimmer | Free Room], 1930. The George Economou Collection © DACS, 2018. | src Apollo magazine

Visions of a dark world in the art of Weimar Germany [Apollo magazine]

Review on the exhibition Magic Realism: Art in Weimar Germany 1919-33 (Tate Modern, 2018-19)

[…] towards the end of the exhibition, a small cluster of drawings introduces the work of Jeanne Mammen. Mammen’s drawings – gauzy depictions of women in watercolour, pen and ink – illustrated fashion magazines and poetry publications throughout the 1920s, until the Nazis shut down the journals she worked for and she went into inner exile, refusing to show her work. Here, they fill an important gap in describing women’s experiences of city life. Mammen observed women on the streets of Berlin and in nightclubs, and often depicted them in conversation, smoking, or playing cards. In Brüderstrasse (Free Room) (1930), the women are intimate and aloof; in Boring Dolls (1929), they’re defiant, out for their own pleasure.

[…] The exhibition doesn’t quite tease out the paradoxes between trauma and humour, leaving both to loiter in the murkiness of Dix’s circus tent. What we’re given is a vision of a world that hinges on reality yet twists from view. It’s a distortion of the truth, full of landscapes littered with war debris and nightclub corners filled with smoke. It’s the same world, but darker than before.

quoted from the review by Harriet Backer for Apollo magazine

Josephine Baker and dancer at the Folies Bergères, 1927

American – French artist Josephine Baker at the ‘Folies Bergères’, performing, Paris, 1927. | src Spaarnestad Photo ~ Het Geheugen

Josephine Baker by d’Ora 1927

Josephine Baker, Folies Bergere, ca. 1926. Non attributed photographer on source. (detail) | src getty images
Atelier d’Ora ~ Tänzerin und Sängerin Josephine Baker in einem roten Tüllkleid des französischen Modeschöpfers Jean Patou. Die Dame 14/1927. Aufnahme: Madame d’Ora (Dora Kallmus) | Josephine Baker in a red tulle dress by Jean Patou. | src getty images
Josephine Baker, Folies Bergere, ca. 1926. Non attributed photographer on source. Probably from this photoshoot with Kallmus. | src getty images

‘La Baker’ in Voilà, 1933

Teddy Piaz ~ Josephine Baker and her pet cheetah, Chiquita. Cover of the former French weekly magazine Voila, nº 137, Nov. 4th, 1933. | src Flickr
Teddy Piaz (Studio Piaz) ~ Josephine Baker and her pet cheetah, Chiquita. Voila, nº 137, Nov. 4th, 1933. | src Flickr

Josephine Baker, 1931

George Hoyningen-Huene :: American singer-dancer Josephine Baker wearing a costume with a large feather boa/fan for her Casino de Paris performance. Published in Vanity Fair 1931. | src and hi-res Getty Images

Josephine Baker portrait

Harcourt Studio, Paris :: African American dancer and singer Josephine Baker, a head and shoulders pose, wearing an attractive costume. Signed in bold dark ink ‘Josephine Baker’. Undated. | src Drouot