Atelier d’Ora :: Austrian artist Mileva Roller (Mileva Stojsavljevic), wife of Alfred Roller, ca. 1910. [Mileva Roller, Ehefrau von Alfred Roller, um 1910]. | src Getty Images
Dora Philippine Kallmus :: [Mileva Roller (Frau von Alfred Roller) in einem Reformkleid, Wien, um 1910.] Mileva Roller (Mileva Stojsavljevic) in a Reform dress, Vienna, ca. 1910. | src Getty Images
Laure Albin-Guillot ~ Danseuse acrobatique, 1937. Gelatin silver print. | src Heritage AuctionsLaure Albin Guillot (née Laure Meffredi) ~ Étude de nus, ca. 1935. Tirage argentique d’époque signe au crayon en bas a droite. Indications au crayon pour une reproduction au verso. | src Leclere maison de ventesLaure Albin-Guillot ~ Danseuse acrobatique, 1937. Gelatin silver print. | src Heritage Auctions
Rosalind Maingot (1894-1957) :: «The Silk Scarf» (Nude study), ca. 1933. From: Photograms of the Year 1933, the annual publication of pictorial photography. Plate VI. | src eBay Rosalind Maingot (1894-1957) :: «The Silk Scarf» (Nude study), ca. 1933. Rosalind Maingot [FRPS] came into her photography career after a successful career as an actress. Born in Australia, Maingot studied at the London School of Photography after marrying a surgeon and settling in London. Her work includes figure studies, still lifes and flowers, but throughout her photographs of women, influences from her previous acting career can be seen both in terms of pose and emotion. The Camera Club Archive holds several works by Maingot, including some of her beautiful costume studies. She later became a successful medical photographer, working alongside her husband, and was one of the key people involved in setting up the Royal Photographic Society’s Medical group. She was one of the greatest of contemporary portrait photographers and one of the few women to be made a fellow of the Royal Photographic Society of Great Britain. | quoted from src eBay
Nina Leen :: Dance masks (Margaret Severn’s masks), 1930s (?). Dancer Margaret Severn was most famous for using more than a dozen different W.T. Benda masks in The Greenwich Village Follies of 1921. | src Life magazine hosted by Google