(self) portrait by André Steiner

André Steiner :: Contre-plongée, Roscoff, 1933
tirage argentique
André Steiner :: Contre-plongée, Roscoff, 1933; tirage argentique. | Ce qu’on n’a pas fini d’aimer @ Musée Nicéphore Niépce
André Steiner [Andor Steiner] :: Sans titre, Roscoff, 1933. Tirage argentique.
André Steiner [Andor Steiner] :: Sans titre, Roscoff, 1933. Tirage argentique. | src Binoche et Giquello

Lily, seen by André Steiner

André Steiner (Andor Steiner) :: La pente [The Slope], Lily, Roscoff, 1933. | L'amour et la photographie · Musée Nicéphore Niépce
André Steiner (Andor Steiner) :: La pente [The Slope], Lily, Roscoff, 1933. | L’amour et la photographie · Musée Nicéphore Niépce
André Steiner (Andor Steiner) :: Lily, Hongrie, 1934. | L'amour et la photographie · Musée Nicéphore Niépce
André Steiner (Andor Steiner) :: L’Ivresse du Mouvement, Hongrie, 1934. | L’amour et la photographie · Musée Nicéphore Niépce
Andor Steiner, L'Ivresse du Mouvement, Lac Balaton, Hongrie, 1935 + Sans titre, Lac Balaton, Hongrie, 1935
André Steiner :: L’Ivresse du Mouvement & Sans titre, Lac Balaton, Hongrie, 1935. | src Binoche et Giquello
André Steiner (Andor Steiner) :: Lily, 1936. | L'amour et la photographie · Musée Nicéphore Niépce
André Steiner (Andor Steiner) :: Lily, 1936 (aka Composition). | L’amour et la photographie · Musée Nicéphore Niépce
André Steiner :: Composition, Hongrie, 1935; tirage argentique. | src Binoche et Giquello
André Steiner (Andor Steiner) :: Lily, 1935. | L'amour et la photographie · Musée Nicéphore Niépce
André Steiner (Andor Steiner) :: Lily, 1935. © Nicole Steiner-Bajolet | L’amour et la photographie · Musée Nicéphore Niépce
André Steiner (Andor Steiner) :: Lily, 1936. | L'amour et la photographie · Musée Nicéphore Niépce
André Steiner (Andor Steiner) :: Lily, 1936. © Nicole Steiner-Bajolet | L’amour et la photographie · Musée Nicéphore Niépce

Maud Cronhielm (in 1920s)

Maria Sundström :: Maud Cronhielm fotograferad inför kostymbal i Karlskrona (Porträtt), 1920s. | src Sörmlands museums samlingar
Maria Sundström :: Maud Cronhielm fotograferad inför kostymbal i Karlskrona (Porträtt), 1920s. | src Sörmlands museums samlingar
Maria Sundström :: Maud Cronhielm fotograferad inför kostymbal i Karlskrona (Porträtt), 1920s. | src Sörmlands museums samlingar
Hugo Fredrik Cederin :: Maud Cronhielm (Porträtt), 1920s. | src Sörmlands museums samlingar
Hugo Fredrik Cederin :: Maud Cronhielm (Porträtt), 1920s. | src Sörmlands museums samlingar
Hugo Fredrik Cederin :: Maud Cronhielm (Porträtt), 1920s. Visitkort. | src Sörmlands museums samlingar
Hugo Fredrik Cederin :: Maud Cronhielm (Porträtt), 1920s. Visitkort. | src Sörmlands museums samlingar

Rokoko by Ferdinand Flodin

Ferdinand Flodin (1863-1935) :: Titel saknas, u.å. | Untitled, nd | src Moderna Museet
Ferdinand Flodin (1863-1935) :: Titel saknas, u.å. | Untitled, nd | src Moderna Museet ~ Helmer Bäckströms fotografisamling
Ferdinand Flodin (1863-1935) :: Titel saknas, u.å. | Untitled, nd | src Moderna Museet ~ Helmer Bäckströms fotografisamling
Ferdinand Flodin (1863-1935) :: Rokoko, 1922. Pigment print mounted on board. | src Moderna Museet ~ Helmer Bäckströms fotografisamling
Ferdinand Flodin (1863-1935) :: Rokoko, 1922. Pigment print mounted on board. | src Moderna Museet ~ Helmer Bäckströms fotografisamling
Ferdinand Flodin (1863-1935) :: Titel saknas, u.å. | Untitled, nd | src Moderna Museet ~ Helmer Bäckströms fotografisamling
Ferdinand Flodin (1863-1935) :: Titel saknas, u.å. | Untitled, nd | src Moderna Museet ~ Helmer Bäckströms fotografisamling

Estella Reed by Paul Citroen

Paul Citroen :: Portret van danseres Estella Reed, 1931 © Paul Citroen / Nederlands Fotomuseum Rotterdam | From Gallery of Honour of Dutch Photography
Paul Citroen :: Portret van danseres Estella Reed, 1931 © Paul Citroen / Nederlands Fotomuseum Rotterdam | From Gallery of Honour of Dutch Photography

The Devil, self-portrait, 1929

autoportrait, selfportrait, role portrait, 1920s
Claude Cahun :: Self-portrait (The Devil), 1929 [ in Le Mystère d’Adam] | src Hauser & Wirth via ocula
Claude Cahun :: Self-portrait (The Devil), 1929 [in The Mystery of Adam]. | src Hauser & Wirth via ocula

Claude Cahun was a French photographer and writer known for her surrealist self-portraits. Her performative photographic practice explores themes of identity, gender nonconformity, and self-image. Cahun’s art prefigured the radical feminist photography of artists such as Cindy Sherman, Nan Goldin, and Yasumasa Morimura.

Persistently aiming to undermine authority and actively disavow social and cultural norms, Cahun was highly politicised, both in her art and her everyday life and was active as a resistance worker and propagandist during World War II.

Despite not receiving recognition during her lifetime, Cahun’s artwork has been exhibited widely at major galleries around the world including The Museum of Modern Art and The Metropolitan Museum of Modern Art in New York.

Early Years

Cahun was born in Nantes, France in 1894 to a prominent Jewish family. As a teenager, Cahun experimented with photography and recorded her first self-portrait in 1912. After moving to Paris to study at the Sorbonne University, Cahun immersed herself in the surrealist art scene. She began working alongside artists and intellectuals like Man Ray, André Breton, and Georges Bataille.

In the early 1920s, Cahun—born Lucy Renée Mathilde Schwob—decided to change her name to Claude Cahun. Traditionally in France, the adopted name ‘Claude’ can refer to either a woman or a man, making it gender-neutral.

Although never identifying as openly gay, Cahun’s forward thinking approach to gender-fluidity shaped her artistic practice and has established her as an important figure among artists and members of the LGBTQ community. As she wrote in her surrealist memoir Disavowals in 1930, ‘Masculine? Feminine? It depends on the situation. Neuter is the only gender that always suits me.’

Cahun often collaborated with fellow artist and lifelong romantic partner Suzanne Malherbe, who adopted the pseudonym Marcel Moore. The two artists worked together to create multidisciplinary art including collages and sculptures. Cahun and Moore also published various written works including articles and novels.

Self-Portraits (1925-1930)

Claude Cahun is best known for her portraits capturing the self in a plethora of shifting personalities. Cahun used her photos as a device to present her own image and the overworked characteristics of feminine and masculine identity.

Her self-portraits capture posed performances where Cahun would dress as a man or woman under various guises. She fashioned her hair short, long, or completely shaved, and wore playful makeup that disguised her as anything from dandy to doll, body-builder to vampire.

Her performative portraits feature various surrealist aesthetics. From her expressions and poses, to her backgrounds and use of specific props, Cahun encapsulates the vibrancy of surrealism during its height in the 1920s. Her photographs were strikingly different to her male contemporaries because they focused on self-image as the subject and object of the work.

quoted from Ocula Limited

Claude Cahun - Marcel Moore :: Untitled [Claude Cahun in Le Mystère d'Adam (The Mystery of Adam)], 1929. Detail. | src SF·MoMA
Claude Cahun – Marcel Moore :: Untitled [Claude Cahun in Le Mystère d’Adam (The Mystery of Adam)], 1929. | src SF·MoMA

Eyes of Youth by Rosalind Maingot

Rosalind Maingot (née Rosalind Beddome, 1894-1957) :: Eyes of Youth, ca. 1945. Halftone print. From: Photograms of the Year 1945. | src eBay
Rosalind Maingot :: Eyes of Youth, ca. 1945. Halftone print. | src eBay
Rosalind Beddome was born 1894 in Brisbane, Australia.  After a successful career as an actress she studied at the London School of Photography and married surgeon Rodney Maingot. The influences of her previous career can be seen in her theatrically posed, expressive photographs of portraits, figure studies and flowers. In 1932 she was made a fellow of the Royal Photographic Society and in 1933 had a one woman show at the Camera Club. Her work was published in the Sketch between 1933 and 1946. Later she worked alongside her husband as a medical photographer and helped set up the Royal Photographic Society’s Medical group. In 1947 she went on a lecture tour in America where she socialized with American photographers including Mildred Hatry her account of which was published in the RPS Journal Feb. 1948 “A woman photographer visits America”. She died in 1957 in London. quoted from source

Bebe Daniels in Affairs of Anatol

1920s
Karl Struss (1886-1981) :: Bebe Daniels in elaborate robe, 1921 [production still from “Affairs of Anatol”], 1921. | src Amon Carter Museum
Karl Struss :: [Bebe Daniels sitting on floor by telephone, "Affairs of Anatol"], 1921. Gelatin silver print. | src Amon Carter Museum
Karl Struss :: [Bebe Daniels sitting on floor by telephone in “Affairs of Anatol”], 1921. Gelatin silver print. | src Amon Carter Museum
Karl Struss :: Bebe Daniels [production stills from the movie “Affairs of Anatol”], 1921. Gelatin silver print. | src Amon Carter Museum