Rose Rolanda selfportraits

Rosa Rolanda ~ Autorretrato, 1952, oil on canvas | src MAM · Museo de Arte Moderno de la Ciudad de México
Rosa Rolanda ~ Autorretrato, 1952, oil on canvas (details) | src MAM
Rosa Rolanda ~ Autorretrato, 1945. Gouache sobre papel | Museo Blaisten, Ciudad de México
Rosa Rolanda ~ Autorretrato, 1952, oil on canvas (detail) | src MAM

Sita and Sarita by Cecilia Beaux

Cecilia Beaux (American, 1855 – 1942) ~ Sita and Sarita, ca. 1921. Oil on canvas. | src NGA ~ National Gallery of Art

This portrait by Cecilia Beaux portrays the artist’s cousin, Sarah Allibone Leavitt, dressed in white with her black cat on her shoulder. Beaux was recognized not only for her bold painting technique, but also for her ability to imbue her female subjects with wit and intelligence, rendering them more than just mere objects of beauty. A student in Paris in the late 1880s, the artist was influenced by her firsthand exposure to French impressionism. Her light-filled palette and gestural style invite comparisons with many of her contemporaries, including William Merritt Chase, James McNeill Whistler, John Singer Sargent, and Mary Cassatt.

The sitter’s white dress, for instance, evokes Whistler’s infamous 1862 painting of Joanna Hiffernan, Symphony in White, No. 1: The White Girl (National Gallery of Art, Washington). The formal connection between the two paintings demonstrates Beaux’s knowledge of Whistler’s painting. Additionally, the direct gaze of the black cat perched on Sarah’s shoulder references Edouard Manet’s painting Olympia (1865, Musée d’Orsay, Paris), in which a similarly posed black cat sits at the foot of Olympia’s bed. These connections suggest that Beaux intended to reveal more with this portrait than simply her mastery of painting technique. The enigmatic title of the painting may represent Manet’s influence—Beaux’s use of Spanish diminutives, Sarita for Sarah and Sita, meaning “little one,” for the cat, acknowledges the late 19th-century popularity of Spanish painting, championed by Manet.

The present work is a replica of the original painted in 1893 and displayed in the 1895 Society of American Artists exhibition in New York. Before donating the original to the Musée de Luxembourg in Paris (now in the collection of the Musée d’Orsay, Paris), Beaux recorded that she made a second painting for her “own satisfaction when the original went to France for good.” / quoted from NGA

Cecilia Beaux ~ Sita and Sarita, ca. 1921. Oil on canvas. Corcoran Collection. | Detail

Gluck · Hannah Gluckstein

Howard Coster ~ Gluck [Hannah Gluckstein (1895–1978)], ca. 1932 © Fine Arts Society | src BBC ~ A Queer Eye
Gluck (Hannah Gluckstein) (1895-1978) by unknown. From : Gluck : Art and Identity | src NYT
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

Quoted from : Smithsonian American Art Museum (x)

Photo of Gluck by Howard Coster, 1932. Courtesy of The Fine Art Society | src Gluck: Art and Identity Review

Sabine Hettner by Wols (1933)

Wols (Alfred Otto Wolfgang Schulze; 1913-1951) ~ French modernist painter Sabine Hettner, Paris, 1933 | src Lempertz
Wols (Alfred Otto Wolfgang Schulze; 1913-1951) ~ Sabine Hettner, Paris, no date | src TEA ~ Tenerife espacio de las artes

La creación de las aves, 1957

Remedios Varo ~ La creación de las aves, 1957. Oil on canvas | src MAMM
Remedios Varo ~ Sin título (Bosquejo de la Creación de las aves, 1957) | src MAM ~ Museo de Arte Moderno (Mexico)
Remedios Varo ~ La creación de las aves, 1957. Oil on canvas (DETAIL) | src MAMM

Remedios Varo and the mask

Kati Horna (1912-2000) ~ Remedios Varo with a mask by Leonora Carrington, Mexico, 1957 | src NYBooks
Kati Horna ~ Portrait of Remedios Varo [wearing a mask by Leonora Carrington], 1957 | src Princeton University Art Museum
Kati Horna ~ Remedios Varo y la máscara, 1956. Varo, posing with a mask made by Leonora Carrington | src Morton Subastas
Kati Horna ~ Surreal portrait of Remedios Varo [wearing a mask by Leonora Carrington], 1957 | src Princeton University Art Museum