A Woman’s Lips, ca. 1929

Martin Munkácsi :: A Woman's Lips, ca. 1929. Gelatin silver print. | src The Metropolitan Museum of Art
Martin Munkácsi :: A Woman’s Lips, ca. 1929. Gelatin silver print. | src The Metropolitan Museum of Art

When Martin Munkacsi arrived in Berlin in 1927, he found a metropolis bursting with artistic innovation. Photography was particularly fertile ground for the principles of Surrealism, the New Vision, and the New Objectivity, all of which had captured the imaginations of many avant-garde photographers. Munkacsi was introduced to these ideas through his employer Kurt Safranski, the managing editor of the Ullstein publications, and began to conduct his own experiments in the late 1920s. This image was likely one such enterprise; it features the close-up view favored by avant-garde photographers, and the unusual cropping is characteristic of Surrealism, in which disembodied lips regularly materialized as erotic symbols. [quoted from The Met]

Barbara La Marr, 1923

Hoover Art Co. :: Barbara La Marr, 1923. Published in Photoplay Magazine, May 1923. Caption reads: “Once again we present the orchidiarious Barbara La Marr, highly promising femminine possibility for screen stardom. Barbara has been dazzling filmdom since she played Milady in Douglas Fairbank’s ‘The Three Musketeers’.” | src  The Museum of Modern Art Library at Internet Archives