Ghost Rock · Laura Gilpin · 1919

Laura Gilpin (1891-1979) ~ The Ghost Rock, 1919. Platinum print. | src Amon Carter Museum of American Art
Laura Gilpin (1891-1979) ~ The Ghost Rock. Garden of the Gods; Apr. 1919. Gelatin silver print. | src Amon Carter Museum of Art
Laura Gilpin ~ The Ghost Rock; Garden of the Gods; April 1919. Gelatin silver print, slightly toned. | src Amon Carter Museum

Sisters G, Das Magazin, 1932

Melbourne Spurr :: Hungarian twins, Eleanor and Karla Gutöhrlein, known as Sisters G wearing matching oriental gowns. Das Magazin; Band 8, Heft 89, Januar 1932
Melbourne Spurr :: Hungarian twins, Eleanor and Karla Gutöhrlein, known as Sisters G wearing matching oriental gowns. Das Magazin; Band 8, Heft 89, Januar 1932
Melbourne Spurr :: Hungarian twins, Eleanor and Karla Gutöhrlein, known as Sisters G wearing matching oriental gowns. Das Magazin; Band 8, Heft 89, Januar 1932
Melbourne Spurr :: Sisters G…, die Stars der diesjährigen Ziegfeld-Revue. Das Magazin; Band 8, Heft 89, Januar 1932
Melbourne Spurr :: Sisters G…, die Stars der diesjährigen Ziegfeld-Revue. Das Magazin; Band 8, Heft 89, Januar 1932

Cahun’s selfportrait in mirror

autoportrait, selfportrait, lucy schwob
Claude Cahun :: Self-portrait [reflected image in mirror with chequered jacket], 1927-1928-1929.
Claude Cahun :: « Autoportrait » (1929) | src RMN ~ Grand Palais
Claude Cahun :: Self-portrait [reflected image in mirror with chequered jacket], ca. 1927 | src Christie’s

The androgynous poet Claude Cahun, who was linked to the Surrealist movement, made this self-portrait with her face against a mirror to suggest the duality of her nature. She cropped the picture tighter for the enlargement she made for use in a window display (see figs.) to promote her 1930 book, Aveux non avenus.

Claude Cahun & Marcel Moore :: Untitled, 1928. | src SF~MoMA
Claude Cahun & Marcel Moore :: Untitled, 1928. | src SF~MoMA
Claude Cahun :: “Self-Portrait” (ca. 1927), in which the artist is doubled by a mirror, is among Claude Cahun’s riveting photographs of herself. (Wilson Centre for Photography) | The New Woman behind the Camera

“Under this mask, another mask. I will never be finished removing all these faces.” That’s what Claude Cahun wrote in Disavowals, her autobiography. The groundbreaking French artist, writer and photographer, renowned for her exploration of gender, used the lens and her body as weapons in portraying her ideas about gender – rejecting existing narratives and conventions. This all sounds pretty fantastic now – 61 years after her death – but being an androgynous artist in the early 20th century wasn’t easy. Challenging notions of beauty and gender came hand-in-hand with the title of criminality, not the creator of radical art that acted as a looking glass into what gender and its exploration means today.

In many ways the Surrealist (though she never became a fully fledged member, due to the movement’s ‘boys’ club’ nature) shaved-head artist cherry picked her identity, along with her several pseudonyms, to coincide with the self-portraits she produced with her mirror. The tool was utilised to depict the persona she’d chose to explore that day. Where the majority of Surrealist artist positioned women as sexual objects, Cahun ventured the visual possibilities of genders and how they are portrayed on the human body.

Alongside her ‘questionable’ artworks, Cahun also tread on the wrong side of the law with her writing. Her and partner Suzanne Malherbe were both investigated for their protest poems that undermined the German authority controlling the Isle of Jersey at the time, where they both lived, and ultimately led to them facing the death sentence – something they were relieved from when the island was liberated in 1945. Cahun would pass away 11 years later, but her influence has carried on to inspire the iconic works of strong female artists in their own rights, such as Cindy Sherman and Nan Goldin. Now, almost six decades after Cahun’s death, publishers Laurence King have teamed up with Mary Warner Marien to celebrate Cahun’s gender ambiguous creations in their latest book, Photography Visionaries. [quoted from Dazed Digital]

Claude Cahun :: “Self-Portrait” (ca. 1928)
Claude Cahun :: “Self-Portrait” (ca. 1928). Courtesy of Photography Visionaries. | src Dazed Digital
Claude Cahun :: Woman at Mirror [Marcel Moore], ca. 1928; courtesy of Photography Visionaires

Annemarie Heinrich · Nude XIX

Annemarie Heinrich ~ Desnudo / Nude XIX, 1948. Vintage gelatin silver print. | src Nailya Alexander gallery
Annemarie Heinrich ~ Desnudo / Nude XIX, 1948. Vintage gelatin silver print. | src Nailya Alexander gallery

Johnston as New Woman · 1896

Frances Benjamin Johnston ~ Self-portrait in the studio as a New Woman, 1896 (detail)

In this self-portrait the photographer Frances Benjamin Johnston poses as an independent ‘new woman.’ On the mantelpiece are six portraits she took of men (from left to right): poet Bliss Carman; A. N. Brown, likely the librarian at the U.S. Naval Academy; Henry Guston Rogers, likely the inventor and playwright Henry Gustave Rogers; architect James Rush Marshall; Smithsonian librarian Frank Phister; and L. M. McCormick, a photographer and member of the Capital Camera Club. [quoted from Library of Congress] permalink

[Frances Benjamin Johnston, full-length portrait, seated in front of fireplace, facing left, holding cigarette in one hand and a beer stein in the other, in her Washington DC studio], 1896

Johnston crossdressing ca. 1890

[Frances Benjamin Johnston, full-length self-portrait dressed as a man with false moustache, posed with bicycle, facing left]; 1890-1900
src Library of Congress
[Frances Benjamin Johnston (right), full-length self-portrait dressed as a man with false moustache, posed with two unidentified women, one of whom is also dressed as a man]; 1880-1900 | src Library of Congress

According to Shorpy ─in this website the photograph is titled “Reverso”─ Frances Benjamin Johnston is posing here with two similarly cross-dressing friends. The “lady” is a gent identified in a few other FBJ photos as the illustrator Mills Thompson.

A. Heinrich · Nude XXXIII

Annemarie Heinrich :: Desnudo XXXIII – Nude 33, 1938 | src Galeria Vasari
Annemarie Heinrich :: Desnudo XXXIII – Nude 33, 1938 | src Nailya Alexander gallery