A Cameron card and the original

"Summer Days" (1866) by Julia Margaret Cameron. Postcard
Marni Sandweiss (Amon Carter Museum) postcard sent to Carlotta Corpron. January 28, 1981. From Carlotta Corpron Papers
The photograph is a reproduction of “Summer Days” (c. 1866) by Julia Margaret Cameron printed by George Eastman House.
Back of the postcard is viewable here as a pdf file
Julia Margaret Cameron :: 'Summer Days', ca. 1866. Albumen print from wet collodion glass negative. A photograph of two young women (May Prinsep and Mary Ryan) wearing straw hats, two young children (Freddy Gould and Elizabeth Keown) are seated in front. | V&A
Julia Margaret Cameron :: ‘Summer Days’, ca. 1866. Albumen print from wet collodion glass negative. A photograph of two young women (May Prinsep and Mary Ryan) wearing straw hats, two young children (Freddy Gould and Elizabeth Keown) are seated in front. | V&A Museum

In late 1865, Julia Margaret Cameron began using a larger camera. It held a 15 x 12 inch glass negative, rather than the 12 x 10 inch negative of her first camera. Early the next year she wrote to Henry Cole with great enthusiasm – but little modesty – about the new turn she had taken in her work.

Cameron initiated a series of large-scale, closeup heads that fulfilled her photographic vision. She saw them as a rejection of ‘mere conventional topographic photography – map-making and skeleton rendering of feature and form’ in favour of a less precise but more emotionally penetrating form of portraiture. Cameron also continued to make narrative and allegorical tableaux, which were larger and bolder than her previous efforts.

Cameron’s ability to capture large groups improved with experience as well as with the use of her new, larger lens. Her friend and photographic advisor, the scientist Sir John Herschel, wrote that this picture was ‘very beautiful, and the grouping perfect.’ quoted from V&A

Grethe Ruzt-Nissen (ca. 1922)

Waldemar Eide :: Postkort med motiv av Grethe Ruzt-Nissen (ca. 1922). Eneret Mittet & Co. (nº 12) | src Oslo Museum

Kind mit Nimbus auf einer Blumenwiese, um 1909

Egon Schiele :: Kind mit Nimbus auf einer Blumenwiese, um 1909. Bleistift, Tusche laviert, auf Zeichenpapier. | Child with a nimbus on a flower meadow, around 1909. Pencil, washed ink, on drawing paper. | src Albertina Museum Online Collection
1909 entwirft Egon Schiele für die Wiener Werkstätte einige Postkarten, die allerdings nie gedruckt wurden. Stilistisch sind diese Postkartenentwürfe eng miteinander verwandt. Ihr radikaler Flächenstil macht sie trotz ihres kleinen Formats zu Hauptwerken Schieles aus seiner Jugendstilphase. (In 1909 Egon Schiele designed some postcards for the Wiener Werkstätte, which were never printed. Stylistically, these postcard designs are closely related to one another. Despite their small format, their radical surface style makes them one of Schiele’s main works from his Art Nouveau phase.) quoted from Albertina Collection Online

Dorrit Weixler postcard

AK 77/3. Dorrit Weixler, nach einem photogr. Bildnis von Karl Schenker Berlin, ungelaufen
Verlag: Film-Sterne. | Postcard 77/3. Dorrit Weixler, based on a photographic portrait by Karl Schenker Berlin, postally unused. Publisher: Film-Sterne. | src Abebooks and Zvab

Karl Andreyevich Fischer**

:: Russian stage actress Maria Germanova as The Witch, in Konstantin Stanislavski’s production

of Maurice Maeterlinck’s play ‘The Blue Bird’, at the Moscow Arts Theatre, 1908. / source: cerca de la cerca and The New York Public Library

related posts, here

** Photographer’s name on verso of the postcard: “К. Фишер Mockba”