Tilla Durieux

Born Ottilie Godeffroy, the daughter of the Austrian chemist Richard Godeffroy (1847–1895), she trained as an actress in Vienna, her native town, and gave her debut at the Moravian Theatre in Olmütz (Olomouc) in 1901/02.

The next season she got an engagement in Breslau (Wrocław). From 1903 she worked with Max Reinhardt at the Deutsches Theater in Berlin and with a group of expressionist artists around Kurt Hiller and Jakob van Hoddis.

In 1911 Durieux entered the stage of the Lessing Theater where, on November 1, 1913, she became the second actress to perform the role Eliza Doolittle in a German language production of George Bernard Shaw’s play Pygmalion, half a year before its English premiere on April 11, 1914. From 1915 she performed at the Royal Schauspielhaus Berlin.[ In 1904, Durieux married the Berlin Secession painter Eugen Spiro, and after their divorce, she remarried in 1910 the successful art dealer and editor Paul Cassirer, who committed suicide in a room next to the court room that pronounced their divorce. Soon after, Durieux married general director Ludwig Katzenellenbogen. In 1927 they were the main financiers of Erwin Piscator’s Neues Schauspielhaus project. Durieux was a public character of 1920s Berlin and associated with numerous celebrities like the famous photographer Frieda Riess.

In 1933, Durieux and her husband left Germany for Switzerland to escape Nazi rule. She continued to perform at the Vienna Theater in der Josefstadt and in Prague.

In 1937 she moved to Zagreb, Croatia (then in the Kingdom of Yugoslavia) where she became a member of the International Red Aid. Durieux unsuccessfully tried to obtain visa for the United States; in 1941 Ludwig Katzenellenbogen was arrested by Gestapo agents in Thessaloniki and deported to Sachsenhausen concentration camp, where he was killed in 1944.

Durieux returned to West Germany in 1952, appearing on stages in Berlin, Hamburg and Münster.

Franz von Stuck (or Mary von Stuck) showing Tilla Durieux in the role of Circe. 1912 The photo served as a model for the painting Tilla Durieux as Circe by Franz von Stuck

Franz von Stuck (or Mary von Stuck) showing Tilla Durieux in the role of Circe. 1912 The photo served as a model for the painting Tilla Durieux as Circe by Franz von Stuck

Tilla Durieux as Circe by Franz von Stuck

Tilla Durieux als Cleopatra im Münchener Künstlertheater von 1913 by Isidore Hirsch München

Portrait of the actress Tilla Durieux by Isidor Hirsch, 1908

Tilla Durieux-as Anna Countess Werdenfels in The Marquis of Keith 192s Picture by arelier Becker & Maaß

Tilla Durieux-as Anna Countess Werdenfels in The Marquis of Keith 192s Picture by arelier Becker & Maaß

Tilla Durieux-as Anna Countess Werdenfels in The Marquis of Keith 192s Picture by arelier Becker & Maaß

Tilla Durieux-as Anna Countess Werdenfels in The Marquis of Keith 1920s Picture by arelier Becker & Maaß

Tilla Durieux-as Anna Countess Werdenfels in The Marquis of Keith 192s Picture by arelier Becker & Maaß

Tilla Durieux-as Anna Countess Werdenfels in The Marquis of Keith 192s Picture by arelier Becker & Maaß

Tilla Durieux-as Potiphar’s wife in the ballet Josefslegende in Berlin 1921 Picture by arelier Becker & Maaß

Tilla Durieux-as Potiphar’s wife in the ballet Josefslegende in Berlin 1921 Picture by arelier Becker & Maaß

Tilla Durieux, German actress. Photography.1914. Photo by Imagno

Tilla Durieux in her home by V.H.Leiser, Berlin, 1910s

Tilla Durieux Photo by Isidor Hirsch, 1910s

Tilla Durieux 1905 Foto Jacob Hilsdorf

Tilla Durieux-1910 Picture by arelier Becker & Maaß

Tilla Durieux-1910 Picture by arelier Becker & Maaß

Tilla Durieux- in ‘Josephs legende’, 1921 Picture by arelier Becker & Maaß

Tilla Durieux as Hebbel, Judith, 1910 postcard, Picture by arelier Becker

Tilla Durieux as Hebbel, Judith, 1910 postcard, Picture by arelier Becker

Tilla Durieux as ‘Delila’ in the play ‘Simson’ by Frank Wedekind, 1914, Picture by Becker & Maaß

Tilla Durieux as ‘Delila’ in the play ‘Simson’ by Frank Wedekind, 1914, Picture by Becker & Maaß

Tilla Durieux William Shakespeare, Sommernachtstraum Tilla Durieux als Oberon- vermutl. 1905 Photo by ullstein bild

Tilla Durieux  in « Grosse Liebe » bt Heinrich Mann photo by  Berker and Maaß,1913

 

Josef Breitenbach (1896 – 1984) Part II

Je vous propose aujourd’hui de poursuivre la découverte de Josef Breitenbach. Cette fois-ci nous laisserons de côté ses influences surréalistes et nous admirons ses fabuleux portraits, et nus et quelques photographies de voyages .

[Je vous suggère de ne pas manquer le premier article qui complète ce dernier, et qui vous permettra d’avoir une vue d’ensemble de l’entendue de son oeuvre ]

En 1932, Breitenbach ouvre son premier studio de photographie. Ses clients étaient des membres éminents de la bohème de Munich, (y compris les acteurs et actrices de la scène dans le théâtre de Munich.)  qui était alors un bastion des défenseurs des libertés et des personnes raffinées. Mais ce  monde a disparu en 1933 avec la prise de pouvoir d’Hitler.Plus que ses racines juives, le passé politique du photographe fait de  lui une cible à persécuter.  En Août 1933, avec son passeport, Breitenbach arrive en France, rejoignant d’autres exilés Allemands qui cherchent refuge à Paris.

La «révolution» surréaliste allait alors devenir dominante dans la scène artistique parisienne. Peu après son arrivée, Breitenbach est entré en contact avec André Breton et son entourage. Préférant conserver son indépendance, il n’a jamais été un membre du groupe surréaliste, mais a participé à des expositions importantes de la photographie surréaliste aux côtés de Man Ray, Jacques-André Boiffard, Brassaï, Eli Lotar, Henri Cartier-Bresson, et Roger Parry.

Breitenbach n’a vécu à Paris  que six ans, jusqu’à ce que la guerre  éclate en 1939, et pourtant, pendant cette période , il a produit certains de ses travaux les plus inventifs.  (Il a adopté plusieurs techniques favorisées par de nouveaux photographes tels que la surimpression, le montage, la solarisation, l’impression en négatif, et le photogramme. Plus important encore, il était l’un des rares artistes des années d’avant-guerre à produire des photographies en couleurs, ce qu’il a fait en utilisant des procédés tels que le blanchiment, la tonification et la pigmentation.)

La guerre interrompit ce deuxième chapitre de la vie du photographe. Interné par les Français comme un étranger suspect, puis rédigé dans un corps civil composé d’étrangers, Breitenbach finalement échappé à la France  de Marseille en 1941 pour New York . Il parvient à retenir l’attention de Walker Evans, qui  publie ses travaux  dans Fortune .

À l’été 1944,  à l’invitation de Josef Albers,  Breitenbach enseigne la photographie au Black Mountain College.  En 1946, il est devenu un citoyen des États-Unis et a rejoint la faculté de la Cooper Union .

For a biography in English go down Article

 

Josef Breitenbach- Night, Paris (Edith Schultze-Westrum)c. 1935, Vintage gelatin silver print collage

Josef Breitenbach- Night, Paris (Edith Schultze-Westrum), 1935, Vintage gelatin silver print collage ©The Josef Breitenbach Trust.

Josef Breitenbach-Edith Schultze-Westrum, 1932, Gelatin silver print© The Josef Breitenbach Trust.

Josef Breitenbach-Edith Schultze-Westrum, 1932, Gelatin silver print© The Josef Breitenbach Trust.


Josef Breitenbach- Portrait of the  actress Sybille Binder, Munich, Before 1933, Gelatin silver print© The Josef Breitenbach Trust.

Josef Breitenbach- Portrait of the actress Sybille Binder, Munich, Before 1933, Gelatin silver print© The Josef Breitenbach Trust.


Josef Breitenbach- Portrait of the  actress Sybille Binder, Munich, Before 1933, Gelatin silver print© The Josef Breitenbach Trust

Josef Breitenbach- Portrait of the actress Sybille Binder, Munich, Before 1933, Gelatin silver print© The Josef Breitenbach Trust


Josef Breitenbach- Portrait of the  actress Sybille Binder and Paul Robeson, in Othello, Munich,  1932, Gelatin silver print© The Josef Breitenbach Trust

Josef Breitenbach- Portrait of the actress Sybille Binder and Paul Robeson, in Othello, Munich, 1932, Gelatin silver print© The Josef Breitenbach Trust


Josef Breitenbach- Portrait of the  actressSybille Binder  Circa 1932, gelatin silver print, © The Josef Breitenbach Trust.

Josef Breitenbach- Portrait of the actressSybille Binder Circa 1932, gelatin silver print, © The Josef Breitenbach Trust.


Josef Breitenbach – Portrait of the actress Marianne Hoppe, 1933

Josef Breitenbach – Portrait of the actress Marianne Hoppe, 1933 ©The Josef Breitenbach Trust.


Josef Breitenbach-  Sheila ,New York, 1942

Josef Breitenbach- Sheila ,New York, 1942 ©The Josef Breitenbach Trust.


Josef Breitenbach-Aktportrait, Paris, 1933-1939 ©The Josef Breitenbach Trust.

Josef Breitenbach-Aktportrait, Paris, 1933-1939. © The Josef Breitenbach Trust.


Josef Breitenbach-Portrait,  1930s , Gelatin silver print © The Josef Breitenbach Trust.

Josef Breitenbach-Portrait, 1930s , Gelatin silver print © The Josef Breitenbach Trust.


Josef Breitenbach-Portrait,  1930s , Gelatin silver print © The Josef Breitenbach Trust.

Josef Breitenbach-Portrait, 1930s , Gelatin silver print © The Josef Breitenbach Trust.


Josef Breitenbach- Portrait of a lady, Munich, 1932,  Munich,, Gelatin silver print© The Josef Breitenbach Trust.

Josef Breitenbach- Portrait of a lady, Munich, 1932, Munich,, Gelatin silver print© The Josef Breitenbach Trust.


Josef Breitenbach-untitled , Paris 1936

Josef Breitenbach-Untitled , Paris 1936 © The Josef Breitenbach Trust.


Josef Breitenbach-Edith d'Amara, 1932,  Munich,, Gelatin silver print© The Josef Breitenbach Trust.

Josef Breitenbach-Edith d’Amara, 1932, Munich,, Gelatin silver print© The Josef Breitenbach Trust.


Josef Breitenbach- Patricia, New York, 1942, Vintage toned gelatin silver print © The Josef Breitenbach Trust

Josef Breitenbach- Patricia, New York, 1942, Vintage toned gelatin silver print © The Josef Breitenbach Trust


Josef Breitenbach- A Woman and Her Conscience, New York, 1945, Vintage toned gelatin silver print ©The Josef Breitenbach Trust.

Josef Breitenbach- A Woman and Her Conscience, New York, 1945, Vintage toned gelatin silver print ©The Josef Breitenbach Trust.


Josef Breitenbach- Annabella, 1933-39, Vintage gelatin silver print ©The Josef Breitenbach Trust.

Josef Breitenbach- Annabella, 1933-39, Vintage gelatin silver print ©The Josef Breitenbach Trust.


Josef Breitenbach-woman in costume of shiny material with cape and hood, 1930s

Josef Breitenbach- Woman in costume of shiny material with cape and hood, 1930s © The Josef Breitenbach Trust


Josef Breitenbach-Sybille Binder, in fur coat. 1932

Josef Breitenbach-Sybille Binder, 1932 © The Josef Breitenbach Trust


Josef Breitenbach-Portrait ofSchoura Alperin, 1934 Paris, Gelatin silver print © The Josef Breitenbach Trust.

Josef Breitenbach-Portrait ofSchoura Alperin, 1934 Paris, Gelatin silver print © The Josef Breitenbach Trust.


Josef Breitenbach-Portrait,  1935 Paris, Gelatin silver print © The Josef Breitenbach Trust.

Josef Breitenbach-Portrait, 1935 Paris, Gelatin silver print © The Josef Breitenbach Trust.


Josef Breitenbach-Portrait of Ruth Harris 1933-39 Paris, Gelatin silver print © The Josef Breitenbach Trust.

Josef Breitenbach-Portrait of Ruth Harris 1933-39 Paris, Gelatin silver print © The Josef Breitenbach Trust.


Josef Breitenbach-Aristide Maillol, Marly-Le-Roy, 1934  © The Josef Breitenbach Trust

Josef Breitenbach-Aristide Maillol, Marly-Le-Roy, 1934 © The Josef Breitenbach Trust


Josef Breitenbach- Portrait of Man Ray, 1967, Gelatin silver print © The Josef Breitenbach Trust.

Josef Breitenbach- Portrait of Man Ray, 1967, Gelatin silver print © The Josef Breitenbach Trust.


Josef Breitenbach-Portrait of Max Ernst and Marie-Berthe Aurenche, 1936 Paris, Gelatin silver print © The Josef Breitenbach Trust.

Josef Breitenbach-Portrait of Max Ernst and Marie-Berthe Aurenche, 1936 Paris, Gelatin silver print © The Josef Breitenbach Trust.


Josef Breitenbach-Portrait of Max Ernst and Marie-Berthe Aurenche, 1936 Paris, Gelatin silver print © The Josef Breitenbach Trust.

Josef Breitenbach-Portrait of Max Ernst and Marie-Berthe Aurenche, 1936 Paris, Gelatin silver print © The Josef Breitenbach Trust.


Josef Breitenbach-Portrait of Max Ernst , 1938 Paris, Gelatin silver print © The Josef Breitenbach Trust.

Josef Breitenbach-Portrait of Max Ernst , 1938 Paris, Gelatin silver print © The Josef Breitenbach Trust.


Josef Breitenbach- Max Ernst and his wife, Marie-Berthe Aurenche, Paris, 1936, Early gelatin silver print; printed c. 1942-1948 © The Josef Breitenbach Trust

Josef Breitenbach- Max Ernst and his wife, Marie-Berthe Aurenche, Paris, 1936, Early gelatin silver print; printed c. 1942-1948 © The Josef Breitenbach Trust


Josef Breitenbach-James Joyce, Paris , 1937

Josef Breitenbach- James Joyce, Paris, 1937 © The Josef Breitenbach Trust


Josef Breitenbach-Wassily Kandinsky, Neuilly-sur-Seine 1938

Josef Breitenbach-Wassily Kandinsky, Neuilly-sur-Seine 1938 © The Josef Breitenbach Trust

 

Josef Breitenbach- Portrait  of the Actor Sacha Guitry, Paris, 1938, Gelatin silver print © The Josef Breitenbach Trust.

Josef Breitenbach- Portrait of the Actor Sacha Guitry, Paris, 1938, Gelatin silver print © The Josef Breitenbach Trust.


Josef Breitenbach-Japanese female mask, fabric background], ca. 1940s

Josef Breitenbach-Japanese female mask, fabric background], ca. 1940s


Josef Breitenbach-Close-up of woman’s eye, 1940s © The Josef Breitenbach Trust

 

Josef Breitenbach-Sculpture Academy, Paris,  1935, gelatin silver print © The Josef Breitenbach Trust

Josef Breitenbach-Sculpture Academy, Paris, 1935, gelatin silver print © The Josef Breitenbach Trust


Josef Breitenbach-Sculpture Academy, Paris,  1935, gelatin silver print © The Josef Breitenbach Trust

Josef Breitenbach-Sculpture Academy, Paris, 1935, gelatin silver print © The Josef Breitenbach Trust


Josef Breitenbach-Standing Nude (Back), 1930-39, Gelatin silver print© The Josef Breitenbach Trust.

Josef Breitenbach-Standing Nude (Back), 1930-39, Gelatin silver print© The Josef Breitenbach Trust.


Josef Breitenbach-Dr. Riegler & J. Greno, Munich 1933 © The Josef Breitenbach Trust. from Manifesto By Josef Breitenbach , Ed° Nazraeli Press , 2008

Josef Breitenbach-Dr. Riegler & J. Greno, Munich 1933 © The Josef Breitenbach Trust. from Manifesto By Josef Breitenbach , Ed° Nazraeli Press , 2008


Josef Breitenbach, Dr. Riegler and J. Greno, Munich, 1933

Josef Breitenbach, Dr. Riegler and J. Greno, Munich, 1933  © The Josef Breitenbach Trust


Josef Breitenbach.Dr. Riegler and J. Greno - Munich,1933 Photogravure on wove paper

Josef Breitenbach.Dr. Riegler and J. Greno – Munich,1933 Photogravure on wove paper © The Josef Breitenbach Trust


Josef Breitenbach-Dr. Riegler & J. Greno, Munich 1933 © The Josef Breitenbach Trust. from Manifesto By Josef Breitenbach , Ed° Nazraeli Press , 2008

Josef Breitenbach-Dr. Riegler & J. Greno, Munich 1933 © The Josef Breitenbach Trust. from Manifesto By Josef Breitenbach , Ed° Nazraeli Press , 2008


Josef Breitenbach - Self-Portrait with J. Greno ,1933 © The Josef Breitenbach Trust

Josef Breitenbach – Self-Portrait with J. Greno ,1933 © The Josef Breitenbach Trust


Josef Breitenbach-Female Nude posing, , Nd,, Gelatin silver print© The Josef Breitenbach Trust.

Josef Breitenbach-Female Nude posing, , Nd,, Gelatin silver print© The Josef Breitenbach Trust.


Josef Breitenbach-soft-focus bust of nude woman holding grapes, Paris, . 1933

Josef Breitenbach- Soft-focus bust of nude woman holding grapes, Paris, 1933   © The Josef Breitenbach Trust


Josef Breitenbach-Sonja, Munich, 1930-33, Gelatin silver print© The Josef Breitenbach Trust.

Josef Breitenbach-Sonja, Munich, 1930-33, Gelatin silver print© The Josef Breitenbach Trust.


Josef Breitenbach- Female nude sitting on blanket,  1935, Gelatin silver print © The Josef Breitenbach Trust.

Josef Breitenbach- Female nude sitting on blanket, 1935, Gelatin silver print © The Josef Breitenbach Trust.


Josef Breitenbach-standing female nude - front view, furnishings, 1932

Josef Breitenbach- Standing female nude – front view, furnishings, 1932 © The Josef Breitenbach Trust


Josef Breitenbach-untitled , female nude with dark fur and ornaments, 1940s

Josef Breitenbach- Untitled , female nude with dark fur and ornaments, 1940s © The Josef Breitenbach Trust


Josef Breitenbach-untitled , female nude with dark fur and ornaments, 1940s

Josef Breitenbach- Untitled , female nude with dark fur and ornaments, 1940s  © The Josef Breitenbach Trust


Josef Breitenbach -untitled, 1940s

Josef Breitenbach -Untitled, 1940s © The Josef Breitenbach Trust

 

Josef Breitenbach-We New Yorkers, 1942 © The Josef Breitenbach Trust


Josef Breitenbach- Electric Back, New York, 1949  toned gelatin silver print , montage © The Josef Breitenbach Trust

Josef Breitenbach- Electric Back, New York, 1949 toned gelatin silver print , montage © The Josef Breitenbach Trust


Josef Breitenbach- Medical Illustration, New York, 1949 Aus einer Serie für McCalls Magazine © The Josef Breitenbach Trust

Josef Breitenbach- Medical Illustration, New York, 1949 Aus einer Serie für McCalls Magazine © The Josef Breitenbach Trust


Josef Breitenbach- Emerging Torso, 1942-48, toned gelatin silver print © The Josef Breitenbach Trust

Josef Breitenbach- Emerging Torso, 1942-48, toned gelatin silver print © The Josef Breitenbach Trust


Josef Breitenbach-Adirondacks, , 1948,, Gelatin silver print© The Josef Breitenbach Trust.

Josef Breitenbach-Adirondacks, , 1948,, Gelatin silver print© The Josef Breitenbach Trust.


Josef Breitenbach-  Portraits with Make Up,model Patricia & Josef Breitenbach,  New York, 1945, Vintage gelatin silver print© The Josef Breitenbach Trust

Josef Breitenbach- Portraits with Make Up,model Patricia & Josef Breitenbach, New York, 1945, Vintage gelatin silver print© The Josef Breitenbach Trust


Josef Breitenbach-  Woman Transformed, model Patricia, New York  1942

Josef Breitenbach- Woman Transformed, model Patricia, New York 1942 © The Josef Breitenbach Trust


Josef Breitenbach -Morning, 1950

Josef Breitenbach -Morning, 1950 © The Josef Breitenbach Trust


Josef Breitenbach - Nu, 1950s

Josef Breitenbach – Untitled, 1950s  © The Josef Breitenbach Trust


Josef Breitenbach-Untitled , 1950s

Josef Breitenbach- Untitled ,Nude, 1950s  © The Josef Breitenbach Trust


Josef Breitenbach- Portrait, Paris, 1933-39, Vintage gelatin silver print ©The Josef Breitenbach Trust.

Josef Breitenbach- Portrait, Paris, 1933-39, Vintage gelatin silver print ©The Josef Breitenbach Trust.


Josef Breitenbach- Untitled , 1935  © The Josef Breitenbach Trust


Josef Breitenbach-Untitled , Germany, Munich, 1932

Josef Breitenbach- Untitled , Germany, Munich, 1933  © The Josef Breitenbach Trust


Josef Breitenbach- Akt, München, 1933 © The Josef Breitenbach Trust

Josef Breitenbach- Nu, Germany, Munich, , 1933 © The Josef Breitenbach Trust


Josef Breitenbach-nude girl lying in gras, 1950s

Josef Breitenbach-nude girl lying in gras, 1950s  © The Josef Breitenbach Trust


Josef Breitenbach- Nude woman in the river,New York, 1953, , Gelatin silver print © The Josef Breitenbach Trust.

Josef Breitenbach- Nude woman in the river,New York, 1953, , Gelatin silver print © The Josef Breitenbach Trust.


Josef Breitenbach-female nude with long dark hair lying on side on grass, 1961

Josef Breitenbach-female nude with long dark hair lying on side on grass, USA, 1961  © The Josef Breitenbach Trust


Josef Breitenbach-back view of female nude with long dark hair lying curled on grass, 1961

Josef Breitenbach-back view of female nude with long dark hair lying curled on grass, USA, 1961 © The Josef Breitenbach Trust


Josef Breitenbach-back of female nude with long dark hair, seated outdoors on branching log, Sept. 1961

Josef Breitenbach-back of female nude with long dark hair, seated outdoors on branching log, USA, Sept. 1961 © The Josef Breitenbach Trust


Josef Breitenbach-female nude with long dark hair, lying face-down on grass, full length with feet at left, 1961

Josef Breitenbach-Untitlrd (Female nude with long dark hair, lying face-down on grass, full length with feet at left), USA, 1961  © The Josef Breitenbach Trust


Josef Breitenbach- Untitled ,  (Female nude with long dark hair, lying face-down on grass,) USA , 1961 © The Josef Breitenbach Trust

Josef Breitenbach – Untitled , (Female nude with long dark hair, lying face-down on grass,) USA , 1961 © The Josef Breitenbach Trust


Josef Breitenbach -buttocks and back of female nude with long dark hair, kneeling outdoors, , 1961

Josef Breitenbach -Untitled (Buttocks and back of female nude with long dark hair,kneeling outdoors), USA, 1961. © The Josef Breitenbach Trust


Josef Breitenbach-untitled ,female nude with long dark hair lying face-down on grass , USA  1961

Josef Breitenbach-Untitled (female nude with long dark hair lying face-down on grass) ,USA ,1961.           © The Josef Breitenbach Trust


Josef Breitenbach-untitled ,female nude with long dark hair lying face-down on grass , USA  1961

Josef Breitenbach-Untitled (emale nude with long dark hair lying face-down on grass), USA ,1961.            © The Josef Breitenbach Trust

 

Josef Breitenbach -back of female nude bending over in water, Sept. 1961 © The Josef Breitenbach Trust

Josef Breitenbach -Untitled (Back of female nude bending over in water), USA, Sept 1961. © The Josef Breitenbach Trust

Les années 1950 et 1960 ont été des années d’intense activité pour Breitenbach.  Il a fait reportage photographique en Asie pour les Nations Unies et d’autres entreprises variées, documentant le travail des secours.

Il exposera ses photographies largement dans les Etats-Unis à partir des années 1940 jusqu’au milieu des années 1960, notamment au Museum of Modern Art et le Metropolitan Museum of Art

Josef Breitenbach-untitled ,woman curled on side in dried grass,  1952 Korea or Japan

Josef Breitenbach-Untitled (woman curled on side in dried grass), Korea or Japan , 1952 © The Josef Breitenbach Trust


Josef Breitenbach- nude woman in black, Tokyo, 1953, Chromogenic print. © The Josef Breitenbach Trust.

Josef Breitenbach- nude woman in black, Tokyo, 1953, Chromogenic print. © The Josef Breitenbach Trust.


Josef Breitenbach-Sleeping Japanese Girl, Japan, 1968.        © The Josef Breitenbach Trust

Josef Breitenbach-Sleeping Japanese Girl, Japan, 1968. © The Josef Breitenbach Trust


Josef Breitenbach- Dancing in the Streets (Bon Odori), Kyoto, 1956

Josef Breitenbach- Dancing in the Streets (Bon Odori), Kyoto, 1956 © The Josef Breitenbach Trust


Josef Breitenbach-Eels and octopus. Pusan, Korea, 1953

Josef Breitenbach-Eels and octopus. Pusan, Korea, 1953 © The Josef Breitenbach Trust


Josef Breitenbach-India, Construction Worker, Bombay, 1960

Josef Breitenbach-India, Construction Worker, Bombay, 1960  © The Josef Breitenbach Trust


Josef Breitenbach-  Woman Transformed, New York  1942

Josef Breitenbach- Woman Transformed, New York 1942  © The Josef Breitenbach Trust

 

Josef Breitenbach-Mother with Sick Child, Patan, Nepal,Nepal, Patan, 1968, Gelatin silver print © The Josef Breitenbach Trust.

You can see more on Gitterman Gallery

Des portraits du photographe par des anonymes ici  sur wordpress sur le blog  A la loupe

  Voir les résultats des actions le concernant sur Mutualart

Conseil de lecture  :

Manifesto By Josef Breitenbach , Ed° Nazraeli Press , 2008

Josef Breitenbach: by Josef Breitenbach Photographs and text (in German) by Josef Breitenbach. Essays (in German) by Peter C. Jones, and Others , Published on the occasion of the 1996-1997 exhibition Josef Breitenbach: Photographien at the Staatliche Galerie Moritzburg Halle and the Fotomuseum im Münchner Stadtmuseum, Ed° Schirmer-Mosel, 1996

Munich, Paris, New York Paperback – 2003 by Josef and Paul Berlanga, Exhibit Catalogue, edition Stephen Daiter Gallery, 2003

Josef Breitenbach » by Larisa Dryansky, Editions de l’Amateur, 2001

Cover of the Book "Josef Breitenbach" by Larisa Dryansky,  Editions de l'Amateur, 2001

Cover of the Book « Josef Breitenbach » by Larisa Dryansky, Editions de l’Amateur, 2001

 English Bio

Josef Breitenbach was born on the 3rd of April 1896. He attended Ludwig-Maximillian University in Munich (philosophy and art history, 1914 to 1917) and became active in the Youth Section and later the Pacifist wing of the Social Democratic Party. In 1918, he took part in the Soviet-inspired Bavarian coup d’état, which was the first spark of the revolutionary fire that swept over Germany in the wake of the armistice. For a few months, Breitenbach also occupied an official position in the new government. Although the revolution was short-lived, the ties he forged with the radical circles of Munich’s intelligentsia later helped him establish his reputation as a photographer.

In 1932, Breitenbach opened his first photographic studio. His clients were prominent members of Munich’s bohemia, including actors and actresses performing in the Munich theater. Munich was a stronghold of libertarians and refined people, whose spirit Breitenbach captured in theatrical portraits of his friend, the journalist Theo Riegler. This world vanished in 1933 with Hitler’s takeover.

More than his Jewish roots, the photographer’s political past made him a target for persecution. In August, 1933, with his passport , Breitenbach made his way to France , joining other German exiles seeking refuge in Paris.

The Surrealist “revolution” had by then become dominant in the Parisian art scene. Soon after his arrival, Breitenbach came into contact with André Breton and his circle. Preferring to retain his independence, he never became a member of the Surrealist group, but did show work in important exhibitions of Surrealist photography alongside Man Ray, Jacques-André Boiffard, Brassaï, Eli Lotar, Henri Cartier-Bresson, et Roger Parry.

Breitenbach only lived in Paris for six years, until the war broke out in 1939. During this period, he produced some of his most inventive work. He adopted several techniques favored by new photographers such as superimpression, montage, solarization, printing in negative, and the photogram. More importantly, he was one of the rare artists of the pre-War years to produce color photographs, which he did by using processes of bleaching, toning and pigmentation. Examples are the images “Montparnasse”, or Forever and Ever.

During his years in Paris, he was also an active member of the German exile community, which alerted the democratic world to the threat of fascism. He participated in the 1938 exhibition by the Union des Artistes Allemandes Libres, “Five Years of Hitler Dictatorship”. A high point for Breitenbach was his collaboration with Bertolt Brecht, summarized by portraits of the playwright. The war interrupted this second chapter of the photographer’s life. Interned by the French as a suspicious alien, then drafted into a civilian corps composed of foreigners, Breitenbach eventually escaped to New York from Marseille in 1941.He came to the attention of Walker Evans, who published his work in Fortune. In the summer of 1944, at the invitation of Josef Albers, Breitenbach taught photography at Black Mountain College. In 1946 he became a United States citizen and joined the faculty at Cooper Union and later The New School. Breitenbach continued to create distinctive and innovative work, including a striking group of camera-less photographs. These works hover in the liminal space between Surrealism and Abstract Expressionism. The 1950s and 1960s were years of intense activity for Breitenbach. He did photographic reportage in Asia for the United Nations and other varied businesses, documenting relief work. He exhibited his photographs extensively in the United States from the 1940s to the mid-1960s, including at the Museum of Modern Art and the Metropolitan Museum of Art.

I proposed today to browse some facets Josef Breitenbach left us behind. This was mainly the result of the encounter with the Surrealists and accompanied throughout his adventure. Through his portraits, montages , collage, photogram , naked, and some memories , moreover

Frieda Gertrude Riess

Riess was born in Czarnikau in the Prussian Province of Posen where her Jewish parents were shopkeepers. At the end of the 1890s, the family moved to Berlin where she first studied sculpture under Hugo Lederer (c. 1907) and later photography at the Berlin « Photographischen Lehranstalt », receiving her diploma in the summer of 1915.

In 1918, she opened a business on the prestigious Kurfürstendamm; it became one of the most popular studios in the city. Partly as a result of her marriage to the journalist Rudolf Leonhard in the early 1920s, she extended her clientele to celebrities such as playwright Walter Hasenclever, novelist Gerhart Hauptmann and actors and actresses including Tilla Durieux, Asta Nielsen and Emil Jannings. While on a trip to Italy in 1929, she was invited to photograph Benito Mussolini. In addition, she contributed to the journals and magazines of the day including Die Dame, Berliner Illustrierte Zeitung, Der Weltspiegel, Querschnit and Koralle

Her success in Berlin was however short-lived. In 1932, after falling in love with the elderly French ambassador in Berlin, she moved to Paris with him, disappearing from the public eye. Even the date of her death cannot be clearly established and her place of burial remains unknown  (source wilkipedia)

 

Frieda Riess- Toni Freeden – Dancer, Germany  in a dancing pose – 1927 via getty images

Frieda Riess- The dancer Grit Helgesa Portrait in the role of a Harlekin Vintage,1920 via getty images

Frieda Riess- Ellen Petz Dancer, choreographer, Germany with a partner in the Petz Kainer Ballet ‘Scherzo’; costumes designed by Ludwig Kainer – 1920 via getty images

Frieda Riess- Portrait of Margo Lion, Cabaret Artist, Chansonniere, Actress, Germany, Portrait singing the couplet ‘Die Linie der Mode’ in the Wilde Bühne in Berlin 1924 via getty images

Frieda Riess- Hands Beautiful female hands , 1924 via getty images

Frieda Riess- Portrait of The dancer Grit Hegesa,1919 via getty images

Frieda Riess-Mria Schreker, Opera SingerWife of the composer Franz Schreker ,1922 via getty images

Frieda Riess- Lotte Pritzel Costume designer, doll artist,1925 via getty images

Frieda Riess- Lally Horstmann1920 via getty images

Frieda Riess- Lani Mohr-Solf,1931 via getty images

Frieda Riess- Portrait of the actress Leontine Kühnbergy 1925 via getty images

Frieda Riess- Dare Vare The daughter of the Italian Ambassador in China, wearing a white dress in the summer,1933 via getty images

Frieda Riess-Trude  Hesterberg – Actress, SingerPortrait in the cabaret Wilde Bühne, dressed in a long dress Vintage,1922 via getty images

Frieda Gertrud Riess The Sculptor Renée Sintenis (Die Bildhauerin Renée Sintenis) Gelatin silver print, 1925-35 Via moma

Frieda Gertrud Riess – Woman’s handS, 1924 via

 

Frieda Ries- Renee Sintenis, sculptor, Germany 1925 via

Frieda Riess-Baroness Nadine Uexküll dressed as Nefertiti,1928

Atelier Riess (Frieda Gertrud). Bara – Die Tänzerin Charlotte Bara. Ca. 1926-28.

Frieda Gertrud Riess Nude Model ,photogravure, 1925 via ebay

Frieda Gertrud Riess Nude Model ,photogravure, 1925 via ebay

Frieda Gertrud Riess Nude Model ,photogravure, 1920 via ebay

Frieda Gertrud Riess Nude Model ,photogravure 1920 via ebay

The actress Elsie Fergusonas as Lizzie Parsons, in “Footlights”. Directed by John S. Robertson 1921 Promotional picture by Paramount Pictures (see the dress here)

The actress Elsie Fergusonas  as Lizzie Parsons, in  “Footlights”. Directed by  John S. Robertson 1921 Promotional picture by  Paramount Pictures (see the dress here)

Trude Fleischmann

Trude  Fleischmann - Austrian stage and film actress Helene Ottilie Thimig  , Vienna c. 1930 Vintage silver print, postcard

Trude Fleischmann – Austrian stage and film actress Helene Ottilie Thimig , Vienna c. 1930 Vintage silver print, postcard

Trude  Fleischmann – Austrian stage and film actress Helene Ottilie Thimig

, Vienna c. 1930 Vintage silver print, postcard

Charles J Cook

 

Charles J. Cook- Nude, 1910

Charles J. Cook- Nude, 1910

Charles J. Cook- Nude, 1910

charles-j-cook-nude-c-1910

charles-j-cook-untitled-nude-c-1910

Charles J. Cook- Nude, 1910

Charles J. Cook- Nude, 1910

 

Charles J. Cook- Nude, 1927

Charles J. Cook- Nude, 1927

 

Charles J. Cook- Nude, 1920

Charles J. Cook- Nude, 1920

Charles J. Cook- Nude, 1910

Charles J. Cook- Nude, 1910

 

 

Charles J. Cook- Nude, 1928

Charles J. Cook- Nude, 1928

 

Charles J. Cook- Nude, 1910

Charles J. Cook- Nude, 1910

Charles J. Cook- Nude, 1927

Charles J. Cook- Nude, 1927

 

Charles J. Cook- Nude, 1930

Charles J. Cook- Nude, 1930

E.O. Hoppé- Anna May Wong’s hands , 1925-26

E.O. Hoppé- Anna May Wong, 1926 © E.O. Hoppé Corbis

E.O. Hoppé- Anna May Wong, 1926 © E.O. Hoppé Corbis

E.O. Hoppé- Anna May Wong, 1925-26 © E.O. Hoppé Corbis

E.O. Hoppé- Anna May Wong, 1925-26 © E.O. Hoppé Corbis

E.O. Hoppé- Anna May Wong, 1925 © E.O. Hoppé Corbis

E.O. Hoppé- Anna May Wong, 1925 © E.O. Hoppé Corbis

E.O. Hoppé- Anna May Wong, 1925 © E.O. Hoppé Corbis

je l’ai ai achetées donc je les marque puisque personne n’est capable , sauf les bons !!! de citer ses sources; je découvre des sites comme je ne le citerai pas, ( pas de pub pour lui) où mon blog en entier y est!!! Des magazines comme juxtapoz sinon, et ne parlons de the redlist là c’est le bouquet !!!!!

Cela en est assez des personnes qui se servent, qui ne se demandent pas si l’on paie pour avoir ces photos, si on achète des livres, si on redimensionne les photographies, si on les nettoie.

Le self service gratuit. Je dis Non.

Lyda Borelli

Lyda Borelli (1884 – 1959) fut une actrice au théâtre et au cinéma et une diva du cinéma muet italien.

Portrait of Lyda Borelli,  1920 Italian postcard by A.G.F.

Portrait of Lyda Borelli, 1920s  Italian postcard by A.G.F.

Italian actress Lyda Borelli,  1920s.

Lyda Borelli, 1915- 1920.( non creditée)

Lyda Borelli as Salomé ( Oscar Wilde), 1915-20 by Mario Nunes Vais

Lyda Borelli as Salomé ( Oscar Wilde), 1915-20 by Mario Nunes Vais

Lyda Borelli by Emilio Sommarive, 1911

Lyda Borelli as Salomé ( oscar Wilde) by Emilio Sommarive, 1911

Lyda Borelli by Emilio Sommarive, 1911

Lyda Borelli by Emilio Sommarive, 1911

Lyda Borelli by Badidi fotographia , 1910-15s

Lyda Borelli by Badidi fotographia , 1910-15s

Lyda Borelli by Badidi fotographia , 1910-15s

Lyda Borelli by Badidi fotographia , 1910-15s

Sa Biograghie ici sa filmographie complète sur IMDB

Elio Luxardo (1908-1969)

Elio Luxardo- Nudo, c. 1937

 

Elio Luxardo- Sinuose armonie (Sinuous harmonies) , 1936

« The history of the Luxardos began in the first years of the 20th century when the young photographer Aldo Luxardo decided to leave Pise (Pisa) and set his lens on far objects: America. Alfredo, with his wife Margherita, stopped at S. Paul in Brazil – country that will mark the destiny of the whole Luxardo family. His subject changed, from the American myth to the Amazonian tribes: group photos and portraits developed and printed in absolute empirical ways. In Brazil his three children were born: Elio, Elda and Aldo. In 1928 Alfredo Luxardo returned in Italy where he took over the photo studio Sam Bosch (Photographer of the Royal House) in via XX Settembre. Here began the history of the liaison Rome-Luxardo.The three children, Elio, who previusly joined the Experimental Center of Cinematography, Aldo and Elda worked in their father’s studio. It was the thirties and the famous studio in via del Tritone fixed some features that developped a following and signed a epoch. Diffuse lights, combined with reflexes, dark settings and light cuttings that carved faces and designed bodies. In few words the Myth of Beauty was born, the cult of the body. The studio was populated of divas and sports champions, intellectuals and artists, from Pirandello to Marinetti, from Assia Noris to Isa Miranda, from Valentina Cortese to Alida Valli, to the world champion Primo Carnera. In the postwar period there was a cooperation with the « Folie de Broadway » and than the beginning of the contest Miss Italia from which came celebrities like Loren and Lollobrigida. The Dolce Vita – the intense friendship with Federico Fellini – movies like « Poveri ma Belli » (« Poor but Beautiful »), actors like Mastrianni and Gassmann. These were the images of the sixties. The last dream of Elio Luxardo has been Sperlonga, where he retired to live. On the Mediterranean coast, the photographer looked for the lights and colors of the native country, but in vain. He died in 1969 at the age of 59. His brother Aldo continued to work alone in the family studio – that his sister Elda left marrying the producer Argento, father of the director, Dario. But the recall of the land of origin became stronger and stronger and, at the end, Aldo decided to go back to Brazil. » Luxario gallery

Elio Luxardo -Nudo femminile , 1932

Elio Luxardo -Nudo femminile , 1932

Elio Luxardo -Nudo femminile , 1932

Elio Luxardo -Nudo femminile , 1932

Elio Luxardo -Nudo femminile , 1932

Elio Luxardo -Nudo femminile , 1932

Elio Luxardo - Nudo femminile, 1940s

Elio Luxardo – Nudo femminile, 1940s

Elio Luxardo- Nudo, 1935

Elio Luxardo- Nudo, 1935

Elio Luxardo – Nudo femminile N.2 – 1935

 

Elio Luxardo-Nudo femminile N. 3 - 1935

Elio Luxardo-Nudo femminile N. 3 – 1935

Elio Luxardo-Nudo femminile N. 4 – 1935

Elio Luxardo - Nudo di donna, ca. 1930, Galleria Luxardo, Roma

Elio Luxardo – Nudo di donna, ca. 1930, Galleria Luxardo, Roma

Elio Luxardo- Nudo femminile, Roma, 1940

Elio Luxardo- Nudo femminile, Roma, 1940

Elio Luxardo- Nudo con drappo, 1937

Elio Luxardo- Sin titulo, c.1930~1950

Elio Luxardo- Sguardo in fiore, (Look in bloom) 1939

Elio Luxardo- Ritratto,c.1930~1950

Elio Luxardo- Ritratto, c.1930~1950

Elio Luxardo- Confessione nd

Elio Luxardo- Aria, 1941

Elio Luxardo- Silhouette, 1939-40

Elio Luxardo- Nudo femminile , 1940

Elio Luxardo- Nudo femminile , 1940

Elio Luxardo - nudo 1940s

Elio Luxardo – nudo 1940s

Elio Luxardo – Girandole di fuoco, (Laura Nucci), 1939

Elio Luxardo – Girandole di fuoco, (Laura Nucci), 1939

Elio Luxardo - Marisa Maresca, 1955

Elio Luxardo – Marisa Maresca, 1955

Elio Luxardo – Marina Maresca, 1955

Elio Luxardo - Portrait of the photographer Ghitta Carell, 1955

Elio Luxardo – Portrait of the photographer Ghitta Carell, 1955

Elio Luxardo Doris Duranti Luxardo Mazzota fotografia L’italica Bellezza Turroni (Giuseppe), 1960 Gabriele Mazzotta editore

Elio Luxardo Doris Duranti Luxardo Mazzota fotografia L’italica Bellezza Turroni (Giuseppe), 1960 Gabriele Mazzotta editore

Elio Luxardo- Isa Barzizza,from Luxardo Mazzota fotografia L’italica Bellezza Turroni (Giuseppe), 1960 Gabriele Mazzotta editore

Elio Luxardo- Isa Barzizza,from Luxardo Mazzota fotografia L’italica Bellezza Turroni (Giuseppe), 1960 Gabriele Mazzotta editore

Elio Luxardo Ritratto femminile 1950′s

Elio Luxardo Ritratto femminile 1950′s

Elio Luxardo- Doris Duranti,1940

Elio Luxardo- Doris Duranti,1940

Elio Luxardo- L'attrice Marisa Maresca,1955

Elio Luxardo- L’attrice Marisa Maresca,1955

Elio Luxardo - Isa Pola “La signora dell’Oves

Elio Luxardo – Isa Pola “La signora dell’Oves

Elio Luxardo -Germana Paolieri, 1937

Elio Luxardo -Germana Paolieri, 1937

Elio Luxardo- ritrato per conecorso, 1941

Elio Luxardo- ritrato per conecorso, 1941

Elio Luxardo- Giungla Luxardo Mazzota fotografia L’italica Bellezza Turroni (Giuseppe), 1960 Gabriele Mazzotta editore

Elio Luxardo- Giungla Luxardo Mazzota fotografia L’italica Bellezza Turroni (Giuseppe), 1960 Gabriele Mazzotta editore

Elio Luxardo - Pamela Palma' 1940

Elio Luxardo – Pamela Palma’ 1940

Elio Luxardo, Modella indossa un abito nero con paillettes fuma, Italia, 1948

Elio Luxardo, Modella indossa un abito nero con paillettes fuma, Italia, 1948

Elio Luxardo- L'Italia Bellezza, 1950

Elio Luxardo- L’Italia Bellezza, 1950

Elio Luxardo- Valentina Cortese, 1950

Elio Luxardo- Valentina Cortese, 1950

Elio Luxardo- Valentina Cortese, 1950

Elio Luxardo- Valentina Cortese, 1950

Elio Luxardo -Portrait of a lady, ca. 1940

Elio Luxardo -Portrait of a lady, ca. 1940

Elio Luxardo - Una soubrette , 1945

Elio Luxardo – Una soubrette , 1945

Elio Luxardo-Leda Gloria, 1940

Elio Luxardo-Leda Gloria, 1940

 

Elio Luxardo - Bellezza Italica, ca. 1930 Vintage gelatin silver print Galleria Luxardo, Roma

Elio Luxardo – Bellezza Italica, ca. 1930 Vintage gelatin silver print Galleria Luxardo, Roma

Elio Luxardo - Bellezza Italica, ca. 1930 Vintage gelatin silver print Galleria Luxardo, Roma

Elio Luxardo – Bellezza Italica, ca. 1930 Vintage gelatin silver print Galleria Luxardo, Roma

Elio Luxardo biographie

More gallery

 

 

Theda Bara as Vampire , 1915 -[in a publicity shot for the film “A Fool There Was »directed by Frank Powell]

Theda Bara, as the vampire ,  1915 -[in a publicity shot for the film A Fool There Wasdirected by Frank Powell]

Theda Bara, as the vampire , 1915 -[in a publicity shot for the film « A Fool There Was »directed by Frank Powell]

©-Theda Bara- 1915 -[in a publicity shot for the f

Theda Bara, as the vampire ,  1915 -[in a publicity shot for the film “A Fool There Was »directed by Frank Powell]

Theda Bara, as the vampire , 1915 -[in a publicity shot for the film A Fool There Wasdirected by Frank Powell]

Theda Bara, as the vampire , 1915 -[in a publicity shot for the film A Fool There Wasdirected by Frank Powell]

Theda Bara, as the vampire , 1915 -[in a publicity shot for the film A Fool There Wasdirected by Frank Powell]

Theda Bara, as the vampire , 1915 -[in a publicity shot for the film A Fool There Wasdirected by Frank Powell]

Theda Bara, as the vampire ,  1915 -[in a publicity shot for the film A Fool There Wasdirected by Frank Powell].

Theda Bara, as the vampire , 1915 -[in a publicity shot for the film A Fool There Wasdirected by Frank Powell].

 Underwood & Underwood - Portrait of Theda Bara in A Fool There Was directed by frank Powell, 1915

Underwood & Underwood – Portrait of Theda Bara in A Fool There Was directed by frank Powell, 1915

 Underwood & Underwood - Theda Bara, as the vampire , in A Fool There Was directed by Frank Powell, 1915

Underwood & Underwood – Theda Bara, as the vampire , in A Fool There Was directed by Frank Powell, 1915 Here

 More works Underwood & Underwood

Constance Collier as Cleopatra

Unknown photographer- Constance Collier as Cleopatra,in, Antony and Cleopatra ,1906

 

Constance Collier as Cleopatra in Antony and Cleopatra , 1906

Constance Collier as Cleopatra in  Antony and Cleopatra , 1906

 

George Maillard Kesslere (1894-1979)

 

George Maillard Kesslere- Maria Gambarelli et sa troupe, 1925

George Maillard Kesslere était un photographe et peintre américain. Diplômé de l’Université de Syracuse, Kesslere était l’un des derniers élèves du peintre impressionniste américain, William Merritt Chase. Après l’optention de son diplome, il a créé un studio ( surtout de portrait) à Syracuse,Etat de New York, où il a pratiqué la photographie et la peinture. Il a également collaboré à plusieurs projets muraux.

Bien que son travail de photographe ait gagné une reconnaissance immédiate pour son talent artistique, Kesslere ne put jamais gagner sa vie à ses debuts,car le prix des photogravure étant trop élevées. Donc, en 1921, The Debutante (La débutante), un périodique de New York peu cher, le convie à devenir éditeur d’art, Kesslere saute sur l’occasion, le déplacement à New York en Août 1921. Pour une brève période, il a maintenu les deux lieux de travail, mais son succès en tant que photographe à New York fit obturateur studio Syracuse en 1922.

La Débutante disparue, Il plublie un ensemble de portraits de Dorothy Dickson dans Vanity Fair qui cimente sa reputation comme un artiste photographe talentueux , ce qui lui a valu une clientèle de ville.Esthète, snob, bisexuels libertin, et le parti-donateur, il est devenu une figure importante dans la consolidation des liens culturels entre la communauté des arts et de la haute société homosexuels dans la période entre les deux guerres.

George Maillard Kesslere-Dorothy Dickson , November 1920

Remarquant la vogue dans les magazines culturels pour les photos floues de danseuses nues, Kesslere en 1923 a commencé à développer une série de peintures et pastels de filles nues drapées diaphonously fonctionnant à l’air libre. Ce genre arty de la peinture de pin-up a attiré l’attention de Broadway chair marchand, Earl Carroll qui a installé Kesslere comme son photographe officiel après la mort de John De Mirjian (voir article sur Lui ICI) en 1928. Les programmes pour « Vanités » série Carroll sélectionnée peintures et photos par Kesslere, et une appréciation effusive de son art par certains luminaire culturelle de la journée.

George Maillard Kesslere- Two nude with aveil in the wind,photo-painting 1924-25

George Maillard Kessler- Untitled, 1930 credited by in the date by 1000 nude, ed Taschen, 2005, but it seems to be from the same serie of the wind in 1924

George Maillard Kesslere-Early Morning 1924-30s

Dans le monde de la photographie théâtrale, la renommée de Kesslere reposait sur des représentations du corps, autant que ses traitements évocateurs et expérimentaux de la tête. Il était l’un des plus beaux des photographes de format de buste de la fin des années 1920 et 1930. Il excellait dans le traitement pictural de buste.Pour ses portraits, il a reçu la reconnaissance de l’Académie royale britannique de la photographie

Le 26 Mars 1935, Kesslere expose 500 de ses photographies, peintures, dessins, gravures et dans le salon de Ziegfeld Theater Patricia Loew. Le 1er Juillet 1947, une exposition itinérante du travail de Kesslere, «Stars d’hier et d’aujourd’hui, »fait le tour des Etats-Unis .

En 1952, Kesslere fait don de 6000 photographies et 500 tableaux à la Collection Théâtre de la New York Public Library. Malheureusement, l’atelier de Kesslere, a pris feu peu de temps avant le transfert des images, et la plupart des articles qui ont été enregistrés et transférés à la collecte NYPL souffrent de dégâts d’eau et une manipulation brutale. Texte de David S. Shields traduit par mes soins.

George Maillard. Kesslere- The Graces, posed by The Muller Dancers,pubished in Theatre Magazine, september 1923

George Maillard Kesslere Norma Talmadge ,1920-1925

George Maillard Kesslere-Norma Talmadge, 1924-27

George Maillard Kesslere Nude, Womanhood, 1925

George Maillard Kesslere Sultry Shirley 1922-25

George Maillard Kessler- Sultry Shirley in parshall (Série Earl Carrols Vanities), {Crop} 1931[source ebay]

Kesslere consacré son art photographique du portrait de théâtre et de la mode. Peintre de formation, il a poursuivi une carrière parallèle comme un bel artiste, excellant dans des tons pastels. De la première, il illustré l’approche-Hollywood lutte contre picturale, des photographes de Kansas City et les racloirs de New York négatifs. Il a rénové et modernisé le style de la photographie vignette fin du 19ème siècle . Le succès de ces portraits de médias mixtes conduit d’autres, comme Hal Phyfe , John De Mirjian , et même Irving Chidnoff , a expérimenter avec le style, conduisant à un moment en 1926-27 quand un style distinct de New York de l’art du portrait a prévalu. Même dans les années 1930 plus tard, quand un style rectiligne de représentation est devenu la norme, les images de Kesslere ont été si lourdement retouchées qu’ils semblaient graphique plutôt que photographique.

George Maillard Kesslere – Maria Gambarelli ( greatest dancer of the Metropolitan Opera ballet school, 1920s

George Maillard Kesslere- Portrait of Maria Gambarelli ( greatest dancer of the Metropolitan Opera ballet school, 1920s

George Maillard Kesslere- Jacqueline Logan

George Maillard Kesslere-Betty Blythe 1924

G MAILLIARD KESSLERE VIVIAN KEEFER SEMI NUDE 1920’S

George Maillard Kesslere – Maria Gambarelli ( greatest dancer of the Metropolitan Opera ballet school, 1922

George Maillard Kesslere – Maria Gambarelli ( greatest dancer of the Metropolitan Opera ballet school, 1922 ( ebay)

George Maillard Kesslere – Maria Gambarelli ( greatest dancer of the Metropolitan Opera ballet school, 1922

George Maillard Kesslere – Maria Gambarelli ( greatest dancer of the Metropolitan Opera ballet school, 1922

George Maillard Kesslere – Maria Gambarelli ( greatest dancer of the Metropolitan Opera ballet school, 1922

George Maillard Kesslere – Maria Gambarelli ( greatest dancer of the Metropolitan Opera ballet school, 1922

George Maillard Kesslere -Annette Margules, 1924

George Maillard Kesslere- Alice Burragen 1922-24

George Maillard Kesslere- Belle Bennett ( actress), 1920s

George Maillard Kesslere -Ethelind Terry, 1920s

George Maillard Kesslere-Betty Blythe 1924

George Maillard Kesslere- unknown model, 1924

George Maillard Kesslere-Dorothy Dickson , November 1920

George Maillard Kesslere -Marion Benda, 1920s

George Maillard Kesslere- Evangeline Raleigh ( miss Brodway, Sunny days), 1928

George Maillard Kesslere -Gloria Swanson, 1927

George Maillard Kesslere- silent Western star and speakeasy ownerunknown model, 1924, 1924-26

George Maillard Kesslere- unknown model, 1924

George Maillard Kesslere -The showgirl, dancer and actress Lota Cheek, 1924

George Maillard Kesslere -the showgirl dancer and actress Lota Cheek, 1924 police gazette COVER_

George Maillard Kessler- Womanhood, 1925

George Maillard Kesslere – The south wind, 1924

George Maillard Kesslere -Peggy Cornell, 1928

George Maillard Kesslere -Fowler and Tamara Dancers – Pierrot 1925 Magazine

George Maillard Kesslere -Gloria Swanson, For the magazine the Tatler 1927

George Maillard Kesslere -Gloria Swanson, 1927

George Maillard Kesslere -Gloria Swanson, 1927

George Maillard Kessler- Tallulah Bankhead, 1935

George Maillard Kesslere- Earl Carroll Vanities, 1921

George Maillard Kesslere- Earl Carroll Vanities, 1922

George Maillard Kesslere- Earl Carroll Vanities,

George Maillard Kesslere -Ruth Page and Adolph Bolm in Visions Fugitives, c1922_e

George Maillard Kesslère -Ruth Page in the Music Box Revue, 1922 and 1924 npgl

George Maillard Kesslère -Ruth Page in the Music Box Revue, 1922 and 1924 npgl

George Maillard Kesslère -Ruth Page in the Music Box Revue, 1922 and 1924

Dorothy Wilding ( 1893-1976)

Dorothy Wilding(ou plutôt était) la plus célèbre photographe  de Grande-Bretagne. En fait, elle a été la première femme à recevoir un mandat royal pour être le photographe officiel de la Reine Roi lors de leur couronnement, et une de ses photographies de la reine actuelle (connu sous le nom   «Portrait Wilding») a été utilisé pour une série de timbres en Grande-Bretagne, utilisé entre 1953 et 1967. Elle a travaillé principalement dans le Studio sur Bond Street ( d’abord chez celui  Marian Neilson ,où elle a débuté en tant qu’ apprentie, puis dans son propre studio) , et en 1937 en a ouvert un autre à New York. Elle est surtout connue pour ses compositions linéaires lumineuses photographiées sur un fond blanc. Son autobiographie en quête de perfection a été publié en 1958

Ce n’est pas du tout les portrait des têtes couronnés que je vous présente aujourd’hui, mais des portraits de célébrités ( danseuses actrices..)  de l’époque ainsi que des nus comme d’habitude,  r2alisés entre 1920 et 1930.

 

Dorothy Wilding- The Silver Turban.1928 © William Hustler and Georgina Hustler

Dorothy Wilding- The Silver Turban.  serie  » hidden face » #1, 1928 © William Hustler and Georgina Hustler

Dorothy Wilding- Hidden face , 1928  © William Hustler and Georgina Hustlerd Georgina Hustler

Dorothy Wilding-  The Silver Turbanserie  » hidden face » #4 , 1928 © William Hustler and Georgina Hustlerd Georgina Hustler

 

Dorothy Wilding -nude study, 1920 © William Hustler and Georgina Hustler

Dorothy Wilding -The Silver Turban , nude study, serie  » hidden face » # 3 ,1928 © William Hustler and Georgina Hustler

Dorothy Wilding – portrait of Rhoda Beasley, 1932

Dorothy Wilding – Nude study,  portrait of Rhoda Beasley, 1932

 

Dorothy Wilding - Nude study with veil, 1930 © William Hustler and Georgina Hustler

Dorothy Wilding – Nude study with veil, 1930 © William Hustler and Georgina Hustler

 

Dorothy Wilding -The Bat, 1927 [chlorobromide print] © William Hustler and Georgina Hustler

Dorothy Wilding -The Bat, 1927 [chlorobromide print] © William Hustler and Georgina Hustler

Dorothy Wilding - Le Matin (Unidentified woman) 1920 © William Hustler and Georgina Hustler

Dorothy Wilding – Le Matin (Unidentified woman) 1920 © William Hustler and Georgina Hustler

Dorothy Wilding - "Le Papillon "(Unidentified woman) 1920 © William Hustler and Georgina Hustler

Dorothy Wilding – « Le Papillon « (Unidentified woman) 1920 © William Hustler and Georgina Hustler

Dorothy Wilding - Ingenue, 1920. © William Hustler and Georgina Hustler

Dorothy Wilding – Ingenue, 1930. © William Hustler and Georgina Hustler

Dorothy Wilding-   'Perles', 1930s  © William Hustler and Georgina Hustler

Dorothy Wilding- ‘Perles’, 1930s © William Hustler and Georgina Hustler

Dorothy Wilding - 'Le Matin ' (Unidentified woman) 1920 © William Hustler and Georgina Hustler

Dorothy Wilding – ‘Le Matin ‘ (Unidentified woman) 1920 © William Hustler and Georgina Hustler

Dorothy Wilding - Le reveil , 1920 © William Hustler and Georgina Hustler

Dorothy Wilding – Le reveil , 1920 © William Hustler and Georgina Hustler

 

Dorothy Wilding - Anna May Wong ,1938 . Theater Portrait was taken during her successful run in the Broadway production of On the Spot. She would later star in the film version entitled Dangerous to Know ,1938 ©

Dorothy Wilding – Anna May Wong ,1938 . Theater Portrait was taken during her successful run in the Broadway production of On the Spot. She would later star in the film version entitled Dangerous to Know ,1938 ©William Hustler and Georgina Hustler

Dorothy Wilding - Anna May Wong, chlorobromide print on card mount, 1929 © William Hustler and Georgina Hustler

Dorothy Wilding – Anna May Wong, chlorobromide print on card mount, 1929 © William Hustler and Georgina Hustler

Dorothy Wilding-  Iris , Lady Cameron, 1935 © William Hustler and Georgina Hustler

Dorothy Wilding- Iris , Lady Cameron, 1935 © William Hustler and Georgina Hustler

Dorothy Wilding-  Iris , Lady Cameron, 1935 © William Hustler and Georgina Hustler

Dorothy Wilding- Iris , Lady Cameron, 1935 © William Hustler and Georgina Hustler

 

Dorothy Wilding  The Pianist Harriet Cohen, 1920 © William Hustler and Georgina Hustler

Dorothy Wilding The Pianist Harriet Cohen, 1920 © William Hustler and Georgina Hustler

Dorothy Wilding  The Pianist Harriet Cohen, 1920 © William Hustler and Georgina Hustler

Dorothy Wilding The Pianist Harriet Cohen, 1920 © William Hustler and Georgina Hustler

Dorothy Wilding - Isabel Jeans, 1920 © William Hustler and Georgina Hustler

Dorothy Wilding – Isabel Jeans, 1920 © William Hustler and Georgina Hustler

Dorothy Wilding -Maharaj Kumari Sudharani Devi of Burdwan, 1927 © William Hustler and Georgina Hustler

Dorothy Wilding -Maharaj Kumari Sudharani Devi of Burdwan, 1927 © William Hustler and Georgina Hustler

Dorothy Wilding - Portrait of Diana Wynyard, 1937 © William Hustler and Georgina Hustler

Dorothy Wilding – Portrait of Diana Wynyard, 1937 © William Hustler and Georgina Hustler

 

Dorothy Wilding - Dorothy Dickson, 1937 © William Hustler and Georgina Hustler

Dorothy Wilding – Dorothy Dickson, 1937 © William Hustler and Georgina Hustler

Dorothy Wilding - Dorothy Dickson, nd © William Hustler and Georgina Hustler

Dorothy Wilding – Dorothy Dickson, nd © William Hustler and Georgina Hustler

 

Dorothy Wilding - Tallulah Bankhead,  1934  © William Hustler and Georgina Hustler

Dorothy Wilding – Tallulah Bankhead, 1934 © William Hustler and Georgina Hustler

Dorothy Wilding - Jacques Cartier,chlorobromide print on tissue and card mount, 1932 © William Hustler and Georgina Hustler

Dorothy Wilding – Jacques Cartier,chlorobromide print on tissue and card mount, 1932 © William Hustler and Georgina Hustler

Dorothy Wilding- Self portrait, 1920s© William Hustler and Georgina Hustler

Dorothy Wilding- Self portrait, 1920s© William Hustler and Georgina Hustler

Dorothy Wilding- Self portrait, 1920s© William Hustler and Georgina Hustler

Dorothy Wilding- Self portrait, 1920s© William Hustler and Georgina Hustler

Dorothy Wilding- The studio of Dorothy Wilding 1920s © William Hustler and Georgina Hustlerd Georgina Hustler

Dorothy Wilding- The studio of Dorothy Wilding 1920s © William Hustler and Georgina Hustlerd Georgina Hustler