Jeanne Mandello · Still-lifes

Jeanne Mandello :: Cala (Solarization), Montevideo, 1943 | src Jewish Women’s Archive [JWA]
Jeanne Mandello :: Fotograma (Photogram), Montevideo, 1950 | src Jewish Women’s Archive [JWA]
Jeanne Mandello :: Bodegón (Still-life); solarization. | src Destiny Emigration at Das verborgene Museum

Die Troerinnen · foto Strelow

Liselotte Strelow ~ Ida Ehre als Hekuba in "Die Troerinnen", 1947. LVR-Landesmuseum via Deutsche Fotothek
Label: T Asta B / Ida Ehre als Hekuba in Euripides / Werfels "Troerinnen". Kostüm aus Sackleinen. Kammerspiele, Hamburg / 7407/2a
Liselotte Strelow ~ Ida Ehre als Hekuba in “Die Troerinnen”, 1947. LVR-Landesmuseum via Deutsche Fotothek
Label: T Asta B / Ida Ehre als Hekuba in Euripides / Werfels “Troerinnen”. Kostüm aus Sackleinen. Kammerspiele, Hamburg / 7407/2a
Liselotte Strelow ~ Gisela Mattishent in “Die Troerinnen” als Andromache. Porträt einer Frau in dem Stück “Die Troerinnen” trägt ein Kostüm aus Sackleinen; Strelow Nr. 7407.

Romaine Brooks · Portraits

Beatrice Romaine Goddard (1874-1970), known as Romaine Brooks ~ Au bord de la mer (At the seaside), 1914. Oil on canvas. | Franco-American museum of the Blérancourt castle via wikimedia commons
Beatrice Romaine Goddard (1874-1970), known as Romaine Brooks ~ Au bord de la mer (At the seaside), 1914. Oil on canvas. | Franco-American museum of the Blérancourt castle via wikimedia commons
Beatrice Romaine Goddard (1874-1970), known as Romaine Brooks ~ Au bord de la mer (Autoportrait), 1914. Oil on canvas.
Romaine Brooks ~ Peter (A Young English Girl), 1923-1924, oil on canvas SAAM-1970.70_2

Peter depicts British painter Hannah Gluckstein, heir to a catering empire who adopted the genderless professional name Gluck in the early 1920s. By the time Brooks met her at one of Natalie Barney’s literary salons, Gluckstein had begun using the name Peyter (Peter) Gluck. She unapologetically wore men’s suits and fedoras, clearly asserting the association between androgyny and lesbian identity. Brooks’s carefully nuanced palette and quiet, empty space produced an image of refined and austere modernity. ~ The Art of Romaine Brooks, 2016

Romaine Brooks (1874-1970) ~ Self-Portrait, 1923. Oil on canvas. Smithsonian American Art Museum

With this self-portrait, Brooks envisioned her modernity as an artist and a person. The modulated shades of gray, stylized forms, and psychological gravity exemplify her deep commitment to aesthetic principles. The shaded, direct gaze conveys a commanding and confident presence, an attitude more typically associated with her male counterparts. The riding hat and coat and masculine tailoring recall conventions of aristocratic portraiture while also evoking a chic androgyny associated with the post–World War I “new woman.” Brooks’s fashion choices also enabled upper-class lesbians to identify and acknowledge one another. ~ The Art of Romaine Brooks, 2016

Romaine Brooks ~ Una, Lady Troubridge, 1924, oil on canvas SAAM-1966.49.6_2

Una Troubridge was a British aristocrat, literary translator, and the lover of Radclyffe Hall, author of the 1928 pathbreaking lesbian novel, The Well of Loneliness. Troubridge appears with a sense of formality and importance typical of upper-class portraiture, but with the sitter’s prized dachshunds in place of the traditional hunting dog. Troubridge’s impeccably tailored clothing, cravat, and bobbed hair convey the fashionable and daring androgyny associated with the so-called new woman. Her monocle suggested multiple symbolic associations to contemporary British audiences: it alluded to Troubridge’s upper-class status, her Englishness, her sense of rebellion, and possibly her lesbian identity. ~ The Art of Romaine Brooks, 2016

Romaine Brooks ~ La France Croisée, 1914, oil on canvas SAAM-1970.69_2

In La France Croisée, Brooks voiced her opposition to World War I and raised money for the Red Cross and French relief organizations. Ida Rubinstein was the model for this heroic figure posed in a nurse’s uniform, with cross emblazoned against her dark cloak, against a windswept landscape outside the burning city of Ypres. This symbolic portrait of a valiant France was exhibited in 1915 at the Bernheim Gallery in Paris, along with four accompanying sonnets written by Gabriele D’Annunzio. The gallery offered reproductions for sale as a benefit to the Red Cross. For her contributions to the war effort, the French government awarded Brooks the Cross of the Legion of Honor in 1920. This award is visible as the bright red spot on Brooks’s lapel in her 1923 Self-Portrait. ~ The Art of Romaine Brooks, 2016

Romaine Brooks ~ Ida Rubinstein, 1917, oil on canvas, Smithsonian American Art Museum

Brooks met Russian dancer and arts patron Ida Rubinstein in Paris after Rubinstein’s first performance as the title character in Gabriele D’Annunzio’s play The Martyrdom of St. Sebastian. Rubinstein was already well known for her refined beauty and expressive gestures; she secured her reputation as a daring performer by starring as the male saint in this boundary-pushing show that combined religious history, androgyny, and erotic narrative. Brooks found her ideal — and her artistic inspiration — in the tall, lithe, sensuous Rubinstein, who modeled for many sketches, paintings, and photographs Brooks produced during their relationship, from 1911 to 1914. In her autobiographical manuscript, “No Pleasant Memories,” Brooks said the inspiration for this portrait came as the two women walked through the Bois de Boulogne on a cold winter morning. ~ The Art of Romaine Brooks, 2016

All quotations and images (except n. 1 & 2) are from the Smithsonian American Art Museum (x)

Johansson by Fleischmann

Trude Fleischmann (1895–1990) ~ Die Tänzerin Ronny Johansson, Wien, 1924. Vintage silver print on semi-matte paper.
src Ostlicht Foto Auktion Spring 2023

Photographer’s stamp with address at “Wien I. Ebendorferstraße 3”, her copyright stamp and her re-order stamp with handwritten negative no. “281” in ink, and handwritten title in pencil on the reverse [‘Die Tänzerin Ronny Johansson’]. Ronny Irene Johansson was born 1891 in Latvia, to Swedish and Scottish parents. Her father, a businessman in the shipping industry, sent Ronny to Russian and Swedish boarding schools. It was in Sweden that she established a professional dancing career, debuting in Weisbaden in 1916. After touring and performing throughout Europe, she moved to the USA in 1925 to pursue Modern dance. [quoted from source]

Trude Fleischmann (1895–1990) ~ The dancer Ronny Johansson, Vienna, 1924. Vintage silver print on semi-matte paper.
src Ostlicht Photo Auction Spring 2023

Frau von Heute · Fleischmann

Trude Fleischmann (1895–1990) ~ Marianne Rosenberg, Vienna, 1931 | Ostlicht Spring 2023 Photo Auction
Trude Fleischmann (1895–1990) ~ Marianne Rosenberg, Vienna, 1931 | Detail

Photographer’s stamp with address at “Wien I. Ebendorferstraße 3”, her copyright stamp and her re-order stamp with handwritten negative no. “1039/a” in ink, “Wiener Foto-Kurier” agency stamp, several numbers and handwritten annotated “Frl. Marianne Rosenberg” in pencil on the reverse. LITERATURE “Die junge Frau von Heute”, in: Die Bühne, no. 299, March 1931, Vienna, p. 5 (titled “Fräulein Maria Rosenberg”); Frauke Kreutler, Anton Holzer (eds.), Trude Fleischmann. Der selbstbewusste Blick, cat. Wien Museum, Vienna 2013, p. 127 (ill. from “Die Bühne”).

«Die junge Frau von Heute». Fräulein Maria Rosenberg. Die Bühne, no. 299, March 1931, p. 5
«Die junge Frau von Heute» Die Bühne, no. 299, March 1931, p. 6
«Die junge Frau von Heute» Die Bühne, no. 299, March 1931, p. 7
Elisabeth Martin, die Gattin des Direktors der Berliner Volksbühne Karl Heinz Martin. Die Bühne, 299, März 1931
Hanne Wassermann, die bekannte Wiener Gymnastiklehrerin. Die Bühne, 299, März 1931

Northern noir · Kourtney Roy

Kourtney Roy :: Northern noir, 2015 | src Kourtney Roy
Kourtney Roy :: Northern noir, 2015 | src Kourtney Roy
Kourtney Roy :: Northern noir, 2015 | src Kourtney Roy

Northern noir

The world has a secret potential to transform itself at any moment into a film set.

Northern Noir was photographed during the summer and winter of 2015 in Northern Ontario and British Columbia, Canada. My intent was to create a series of film stills taken from an unknown and fictional film, more precisely, a crime film. I wanted to photograph the non-events that encircle the places where transgressive acts may have taken place. The banality of the scenes photographed both hides and yet hints at the presence of shady and malevolent happenings. These fragments capture unintentional and marginal details. Their mundane and anecdotal qualities are fetishized and magnified, adding a sense of dread to the otherwise indifferent and un-extraordinary decors. The series was realised over several road trips through the wilderness and towns of my youth. The facet of memory, my memory, real or imagined, links itself to the screen memories of the film still. The road is not only a physical space but also a space of the imagination, a state of mind where the past and present convene. These stills of a nameless film intertwine with the aura of a specific place and time, melding the impervious with the personal.

quoted from artist’s website

Kourtney Roy :: Northern noir, 2015 | src Kourtney Roy
Kourtney Roy :: Northern noir, 2015 | src Kourtney Roy

Roy has produced several series which all share the artist’s bold and cinematic aesthetic. Staged in laundrettes, motels, supermarkets and various other banal locations Roy creates hyper-realistic images that resemble film stills. Throughout her work Roy plays with ideas of the bizarre and the uncanny, whether it be a lone female figure walking along a deserted road in a vast landscape or a woman photographed through the wing mirror of a car, Roy’s photographs are permeated with an unsettling air. In her work Roy creates familiar still images of stereotyped heroines, using herself as the model Roy invents numerous characters for herself. This is a crucial element to her work, Roy has stated “It’s usually the male gaze, and the woman is the object to be looked at. So the idea was becoming the person who objectifies, but also objectifying myself. I just thought it was interesting to play the dual role.” quoted from Huxleyparlour Gallery

Kourtney Roy’s work is bound up in an ambiguous and cinematic image-making that borders the real and the fantastic. Her approach to photography provokes contemplation and reconfiguration of common place subjects via playful revelation of the bizarre and the uncanny. She is fascinated with exploring the boundaries of liminal spaces; whether spatial, temporal or psychological. By using herself as the principal subject in her work, the artist creates a compelling, intimate universe inhabited by a multitude of diverse characters that explore these enigmatic themes. (quoted from Kourtney Roy)

Anna Riwkin selfportraits 1928

Anna Riwkin [självporträtt], 1928. Gelatinsilverfotografi. | src Moderna Museet
Anna Riwkin [självporträtt], 1928. Gelatinsilverfotografi. | src Moderna Museet
Anna Riwkin [self-portrait], 1928. Gelatin silver print. | src Moderna Museet
Anna Riwkin · Självporträtt, 1928 Moderna Museet
Anna Riwkin :: Självporträtt, 1928 Moderna Museet F1999018151

Barton by Barton, circa 1905

Emma Barton / Mrs G.A. Barton (née Rayson) ~ Ave Maria, ca. 1905. Photogravure. Photographische Mitteilungen 1905 | src Photoseed
Emma Barton (née Rayson) ~ Dorothy Barton, undated. Private collection of Lesley & Cheryl Bousfield. Courtesy Luminous-lint : LL/28323 
Emma Barton / Mrs G.A. Barton (née Rayson) ~ (untitled on source). Photographische Mitteilungen 1905 | src The Art of Photogravure
Emma Barton / Mrs G.A. Barton (née Rayson) ~ The Song of Ages. Photograms of the year 1904. | internet archive