
Anna Pavlowa (sic), Feb. 1916

images that haunt us


The Rose demonstrates Eva Watson-Schütze’s talent for creating dramatic photographs with pictorial qualities.
Here she posed the young woman against a plain studio backdrop, emphasizing the irregular outline of her dress. Positioned in the center of the composition, the sitter faces the camera directly. Watson-Schütz heightened the feeling of flatness by emphasizing the outline of the model’s body against the background.
Watson-Schütze chose an unusual format for this photograph: a narrow rectangle, which the figure nearly fills. Virtually every element in this composition emphasizes its verticality. For instance, the embroidered panels on the woman’s dress narrow to a point as they descend toward the hem.
The woman holds a fully opened rose, the stem of which is so long it reaches from her throat to her knees. The stem forms a narrow dark line that echoes model’s slender proportions and the center part of her hair. Watson-Schütze placed her monogram in the upper left corner, a device favored by many photographers of the time. [quoted from National Museum of Women in the Arts]












Ron van Dongen :: Rosa “Othello” I, 1997. Sepia toned gelatin silver print.

Michael Cooper :: Painter René Magritte with Rose, Belgium, 1967 / src
kvetchlandia

Eugeni Forcano :: La niña de la rosa, las Ramblas, Barcelona, 1962 | La meva Barcelona | source: bcn.cat/arxiu/virtuals/
more [+] this photographer

Eikoh Hosoe
:: Barakei # 32
(Killed by Roses), a wild yet poetic portrait of Japanese writer Yukio Mishima, 1961 (printed 2006)
/ src: / source: akron art museum
more [+] by this photographer