Sleeping lady in costume

Jules Gervais-Courtellemont :: Slapende vrouw in Orientaalse kleding [Sleeping woman in oriental costume], ca. 1910-ca. 1940. Autochrome. | src Rijksmuseum
Jules Gervais-Courtellemont :: Slapende vrouw in Orientaalse kleding, ca. 1910 - ca. 1940. Autochrome. | src Rijksmuseum  [DETAIL]
Jules Gervais-Courtellemont :: Slapende vrouw in Orientaalse kleding, ca. 1910 – ca. 1940. Autochrome. | DETAIL
Jules Gervais-Courtellemont :: Slapende vrouw in Orientaalse kleding, ca. 1910 - ca. 1940. Autochrome. | src Rijksmuseum
Jules Gervais-Courtellemont :: Slapende vrouw in Orientaalse kleding [Sleeping woman in oriental costume], ca. 1910-ca. 1940. Autochrome. | src Rijksmuseum

Jules Gervais-Courtellemont (1863 – 1931)

Photographer and editor, friend of Pierre Loti, by Auguste Rodin, d’Albert Kahn. He devoted most of his life to traveling the world, and more especially the Orient. From his many trips, he gathered a large collection of photographs, mostly autochromes. It’s in the years 1880s, in Algeria, that he acquired the practice of photography, seeing in the medium the most suitable tool to “faithfully reproduce the splendours of the past and the picturesque of the present”. Thereby, he will also launch into the publication of a journal from 1889, “Artistic and picturesque Algeria”. The first discovery of the Orient for Jules Gervais-Courtellemont took place a few years later, in 1893. From Paris to Jerusalem via Constantinople, he crossed the countries with the sole regret that he could only bring back black and white photos. So, from the demonstration of the autochrome process by the Lumière brothers in 1907, he immediately undertook the same journey with his wife, this time bringing back the first colored “Visions d’Orient”. Faced with the success of his photographic testimonials in color, he and his wife set out to travel the world, in order to build a large collection of autochromes. Algeria (1911, 1912), Tunisia (1911), Morocco (1921), Spain (1911, 1914), Italy, India (1913), Japan, Tibet. Convert to Islam, Jules Gervais-Courtellemont brought back unpublished photographs of Mecca in 1896, published in L’Illustration in 1897. Jules Gervais-Courtellemont also photographed the First World War with reconstructed scenes in the post-war trenches, as well as pictures of colonial troops. Most of Jules Gervais-Courtellemont’s photographic work is kept at the Robert-Lynen Cinémathèque in the city of Paris.
Orient Visions : upon his return to France, following his second trip to the Orient in 1907, Jules-Gervais -Courtellemont wanted to transmit to the public his first autochrome images. Under the title of “Visions d’Orient”, he organized his first color “projection-conference” at the Hôtel de l’Université des Annales in 1908. Of 1908 at 1909, his Visions d’Orient were screened every evening, Charras room in Paris. The advertising brochure for this event reflects the public’s enthusiasm for this photographer and his first color images.

quoted from House of Photography of Marrakesh

Jules Gervais-Courtellemont :: Slapende vrouw in Orientaalse kleding [Sleeping woman in oriental costume], ca. 1910-ca. 1940. Autochrome. Edited image to enhance color. | src Rijksmuseu
Jules Gervais-Courtellemont :: Slapende vrouw in Orientaalse kleding [Sleeping woman in oriental costume], ca. 1910-ca. 1940. Autochrome. Edited image to enhance color. | src Rijksmuseum

Our note: as a very similar Autochrome as the one we publish here is titled: “Tunisienne au bonnet pointu” (resolution is very poor, the lady photographed is the same, also the costume and headgear), we adventure the date of this one maybe around 1911, when JGC traveled to Tunisia.

Movie actress by Nappelbaum

Moisei Solomonovich Nappelbaum (1869-1958) :: Movie actress, 1940s. Gelatin silver print. Inscribed on the reverse. А stamp of the Directorates of international photo exhibitions on the reverse. Borodulin Coll. | src Hermitage Fine Art
Moisei Solomonovich Nappelbaum (1869-1958) :: Movie actress, 1940s. Gelatin silver print. Inscribed on the reverse. А stamp of the Directorates of international photo exhibitions on the reverse. Borodulin Coll. | src Hermitage Fine Art

Dancer in oriental costume

Andrée Hachette :: [Danseuse, costumée à l’orientale avec drapés et bijoux], 1907-1945. Plaque de verre Autochrome. | src SFP and SFP
Charles Adrien :: [Étude de costume en studio], 1907-1930. Plaque de verre Autochrome. | src SFP

Ida Rubinstein in Shéhérazade

Eugène Druet (1867-1916) :: Ida Rubinstein da ns Shéhérazade, France, 1910. Tirage au gélatino-bromure d’argent. | src Lumière des roses – 16e Livraison

Nyota Inyoka in dance costume

Cambodian dancer Nyota Inyoka (1896-1971) in stage costume, ca. 1915. (Photo by Photo12/Universal Images Group) | src Getty Images
Cambodian dancer Nyota Inyoka (1896-1971) in stage costume, ca. 1915. (Photo by Photo12/Universal Images Group) | src Getty Images
Cambodian dancer Nyota Inyoka (1896-1971) in stage costume, ca. 1915. (Photo by Photo12/Universal Images Group) | src Getty Images

Stacia Napierkowska, 1910s

French actress, dancer, and silent film star Stacia Napierkowska, [between ca. 1910 and ca. 1915]. Bain News Service (publisher). Glass negative. [cropped]
French actress, dancer, and silent film star Stacia Napierkowska, [between ca. 1910 and ca. 1915]. Bain News Service (publisher). Glass negative. | src George Grantham Bain Collection (Library of Congress)
French actress, dancer, and silent film star Stacia Napierkowska lying on bed with pet dog and holding a Comœdia Illustré issue on right hand, [between ca. 1910 and ca. 1915]. Bain News Service (publisher). [cropped]
French actress, dancer, and silent film star Stacia Napierkowska, [between ca. 1910 and ca. 1915]. Bain News Service (publisher). Glass negative. | src George Grantham Bain Collection (Library of Congress)

Hedy Pfundmayr in Shéhérazade

Franz Xaver Setzer :: Dancer Hedy Pfundmayr in Schéhérazade by Maurice Ravel, 1923. (Photo by Archiv Setzer-Tschiedel) | src Getty Images