Irina Khrabroff by Sipprell

Clara E. Sipprell (1885-1975) :: Irena [Irina] Khrabroff Sewing, 1920. Gelatin silver print. | src Amon Carter Museum of American Art
Clara Sipprell (1885-1975) :: [Irina Khrabroff], ca. 1925 – 1933. Gelatin silver print on tissue. | src Amon Carter Museum of American Art
Clara Sipprell (1885-1975) :: Irena [Irina] Khrabroff in Russian Costume, 1925. Gelatin silver print. | src Amon Carter Museum of American Art
Clara E. Sipprell (1885-1975) :: Irina Khrabroff, ca. 1930s. Gelatin silver print. | src Amon Carter Museum of American Art

Sipprell was born on Halloween, 1885, in Tillsonburg, Ontario, Canada. In 1895 (after her father’s death), she and her mother moved from Canada to Buffalo. In the early 1900s, Buffalo was a center of the pictorialism. Sipprell became one of the foremost practitioners of pictorial photography in the United States. She produced autochromes and platinum, bromoil, gum, and carbon prints; won awards in exhibitions; and had her work published in magazines in the United States and Europe.

As a portrait photographer, Sipprell sought to convey a sense of the whole person and what made each unique. […] In 1915, Sipprell, then thirty, moved to New York City with Jessica E. Beers, with whom she lived until 1923. She opened a photographic studio in Greenwich Village and eventually became a contract photographer for the Ethical Culture School, where Beers was a principal.

A Russian immigrant, Irina Khrabroff, was first her student and later her traveling companion, close friend, and business manager. As a student, Khrabroff spent her winters living with Sipprell and Beers in New York City. In 1923, when Khrabroff married, Beers moved out of the apartment, but Sipprell continued living there with Khrabroff and her husband until 1933.

[…] It is not clear whether or not Sipprell’s relationships were sexual or even romantic, yet their length and stability, and the evidence of the memorial marker, indicate an extraordinary level of commitment. [Quoted from lgbtq encyclopedia: Sipprell, Clara Estelle (1885-1975) by Tee A. Corinne]

Hagemeyer by Hagemeyer

Johan Hagemeyer (1884-1962) :: [Johan Hagemeyer] [glass negative, retouched] undated but the item belongs to Early Works folder (circa 1908-1915). | src OAC · Calisphere
Johan Hagemeyer (1884-1962) :: [Johan Hagemeyer] [negative] selfportrait [reading] | src OAC · Calisphere
Johan Hagemeyer (1884-1962) :: [Johan Hagemeyer reading in forest.] [negative] selfportrait | src OAC
Johan Hagemeyer (1884-1962) :: [Johan Hagemeyer reading] [negative] selfportrait | src OAC
Johan Hagemeyer (1884-1962) :: [Johan Hagemeyer reading in chair.] [negative] Selfportrait | src OAC
Johan Hagemeyer (1884-1962) :: Johan Hagemeyer. Nitrate negative. Selfportrait. | src OAC · Calisphere

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 für Humor und Kunst. Meggendorfer-Blätter nº 1230, 23 Juli 1914. [Illegible photographer’s name on lower right] | src Universitätsbibliothek Heidelberg
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 Alps hotel or why Miss Schneider and Mr. Müller returned from their glacier tour so late.

«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 für Humor und Kunst. Meggendorfer-Blätter nº 1230, 23 juli 1914. [Illegible photographer’s name on lower right] | src Universitätsbibliothek Heidelberg
Meggendorfer-Blätter. Zeitschrift für Humor und Kunst; nº 1230, 23 Juli 1914.
[Illegible photographer’s name on lower right] | src Universitätsbibliothek Heidelberg

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

Dalí reading his biography, 1959

Salvador Dalí reading his biography, 6 May, 1959. A photograph of the Spanish artist taken by Terry Fincher for the Daily Herald newspaper. Dalí is reading Fleur Cowles’ book ‘The Case of Salvador Dalí’ (1959), whilst on a train from Folkestone. With a studied expression of shock on his face, Dali enjoys the photo opportunity. | src Daily Herald Archive via Getty Images