Lucia Joyce portraits

Lucia Joyce, Ostend, 1924. Courtesy of the Poetry Collection of the University Libraries, University at Buffalo. The Morgan Library & Museum
Lucia Joyce, Ostend, 1924. Courtesy of the Poetry Collection of the University Libraries, University at Buffalo. The Morgan Library & Museum
Lucia Joyce, Zurich, ca. 1917. From: Carol Loeb Schloss : Lucia Joyce : To Dance in the Wake (2003)
Lucia Joyce, Zurich, ca. 1917. From: Carol Loeb Schloss : Lucia Joyce : To Dance in the Wake (2003)

“Most accounts of James Joyce’s family portray Lucia Joyce as the mad daughter of a man of genius, a difficult burden. But in this important new book, Carol Loeb Shloss reveals a different, more dramatic truth: Lucia’s father not only loved her but shared with her a deep creative bond. His daughter, Joyce wrote, had a mind “as clear and as unsparing as the lightning.”” “Born at a pauper’s hospital in Trieste in 1907, educated haphazardly in Italy, Switzerland, and Paris as her penniless father pursued his art, Lucia was determined to strike out on her own. She chose dance as her medium, pursuing her studies in an art form very different from the literary ones celebrated in the Joyce circle and emerging, to Joyce’s amazement, as a harbinger of modern expressive dance in Paris. He described her then as a wild, beautiful, “fantastic being” who spoke to “a curious abbreviated language of her own” that he instinctively understood – for in fact it was his as well. The family’s only reader of Joyce’s work, Lucia was a child of the imaginative realms her father created. Even after emotional turmoil wreaked havoc with her and she was hospitalized in the 1930s, Joyce saw in her a life lived in tandem with his own.” “Though most of the documents about Lucia have been destroyed, Shloss has painstakingly reconstructed the poignant complexities of her life – and with them a vital episode in the early history of psychiatry, for in Joyce’s efforts to help his daughter he sought out Europe’s most advanced doctors, including Jung. Lucia emerges in Shloss’s account as a gifted, if thwarted, artist in her own right, a child who became her father’s tragic muse.”–Jacket, quoted from internet archive

Bérénice Abbott :: Lucia Joyce, Paris, 1926. From: Carol Loeb Schloss : Lucia Joyce : To Dance in the Wake (2003)
Bérénice Abbott :: Lucia Joyce, Paris, 1926. From: Carol Loeb Schloss : Lucia Joyce : To Dance in the Wake (2003)

Cabaret artist Marion Forde, 1925

Marion Forde, from the Forde sisters, Cabaret artist from the USA, posing half naked for Reville fashion house. Photographer: Reville. Published in ‘Querschnitt’ 9/1925. | src Getty Images

Sonnenplätzchen, ca. 1930

R. Wichtl :: Sonnenplätzchen, Austria, ca. 1930. | src anamorfose
R. Wichtl :: Sonnenplätzchen, Austria, ca. 1930. Beside R. Wichtl was an Austrian Post-Pictorialist there is no other information available. | src anamorfose

Between the baths, Aug. 1908

Lady Ottoline Morrell (‘Between the baths’), possibly by Philip Edward Morrell, vintage snapshot print, August 1908. | src NPG

Skandalaffäre im Alpenhotel

«Die neueste Skandalaffäre im Alpenhotel oder weshalb Frl. Schneider und Herr Müller so spät von der Gletschertour heimkehrten.» | The latest scandalous affair in the Alpenhotel or why Miss Schneider and Mr Müller returned home from their glacier tour so late. Zeitschrift sür Humor und Kunst. Meggendorfer-Blätter nº 1230, 23 juli 1914. [Illegible photographer’s name on lower right] | src Universitätsbibliothek Heidelberg
«Die neueste Skandalaffäre im Alpenhotel oder weshalb Frl. Schneider und Herr Müller so spät von der Gletschertour heimkehrten.»
Phot. W. Nehrkorn. (sic) | src Heidelberg University Digital Library
Published in Jugend Magazin: Münchner illustrierte Wochenschrift für Kunst und Leben, 1914. Heft 22, Seite 691.
«Die neueste Skandalaffäre im Alpenhotel oder weshalb Frl. Schneider und Herr Müller so spät von der Gletschertour heimkehrten.» | The latest scandalous affair in the Alpenhotel or why Miss Schneider and Mr Müller returned home from their glacier tour so late. Zeitschrift sür Humor und Kunst. Meggendorfer-Blätter nº 1230, 23 juli 1914. [Illegible photographer’s name on lower right] | src Universitätsbibliothek Heidelberg
«Die neueste Skandalaffäre im Alpenhotel oder weshalb Frl. Schneider und Herr Müller so spät von der Gletschertour heimkehrten.» | The latest scandalous affair in the Alpenhotel or why Miss Schneider and Mr Müller returned home from their glacier tour so late. Zeitschrift sür Humor und Kunst. Meggendorfer-Blätter nº 1230, 23 juli 1914. [Illegible photographer’s name on lower right] | src Universitätsbibliothek Heidelberg

Scribner’s Magazine, 1897

Maxfield Parrish :: Scribner's, August 1897 (Poster, chromolithograph) | src MFA Boston
Maxfield Parrish :: Scribner’s Magazine (Poster), August, 1897. From: Posters; a critical study of the development of poster design in continental Europe, England and America by Charles Matlack Price (1913) New York: G.W. Bricka. | src Smithsonian Libraries @ internet archive
Maxfield Parrish :: Scribner's, August 1897 (Poster, chromolithograph) | src MFA Boston
Maxfield Parrish :: Scribner’s, August 1897 (Poster, chromolithograph) | src MFA Boston

The Book of Bookplates, 1900

J. W. Simpson :: The Book of Bookplates (1900). From: Posters; a critical study of the development of poster design in continental Europe, England and America by Charles Matlack Price (1913) New York: G.W. Bricka. | src Smithsonian Libraries @ internet archive