Picturing Creativity: Portraits of Artists, 1860-1960
Transcription
Picturing Creativity: Portraits of Artists, 1860-1960
This brochure accompanies an exhibition of the name at the same Bowdoin College Museum of Art from April 3 through May 31, 1998. COVER Gertrude Stanton Kasebier, Portrait of Auguste Rodin His Studio, 1905 (detail) (cat. no. 11) This brochure is published with funding from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation. PHOTOGRAPHS Dennis Griggs, Topsham, Maine DESIGN Michael Mahan Graphics, Bath, Maine EDITOR Susan L. Ransom, Portland, Maine PRINTER J.S. McCarthy Printers, Augusta, Maine Copyright ® 1998 Bowdoin College All Rights Reserved in ACKNOWLEDGMENTS FOREWORD The exhibition Picturing Creativity: Portraits of Artists, 1860-1960 has been organized by Laura Groves, a B. who member of Bowdoin College's Class of 1996, the sixth Andrew W. Mellon Museum of Art. Ms. Groves also wrote the catalogue is Curatorial Intern at the brochure for the exhibition and scheduled an education program of visiting speakers complement the to As Mellon Curatorial Intern, Ms. Groves' chief been responsibility has from many disciplines and suggesting uses which evolves from historian, own Her and collections curator and special interest has ship between the an Groves' own ic and been the and the artist as creator interest gracefully expressive museum's permanent many ways from the Jose in which artists language, she has made in new insight The museum and its Bowdoin celebrated the crein the arts or about the works of staff are art created. most appreciative Andrew W. Mellon foundation, which has cated two three-year grants to the Museum to allo- of Art in support of the curatorial internship program, and has this past September dedicated funds to be matched by Bowdoin College grateful to Laura endow the future We are Groves for her fine work in every demanding aspect of this year, especially for Picturing Creativity: Portraits of Artists, We to of collections use in teaching. 1860-1960. also wish to express thanks to Linda Docherty, who has wholciicartcdly participated in the Mellon program for these six years, and been so joyful Kaliiariiu' Director I. and iu-lpfiii a Watson mentor I '89, Alison to the sub- deeply value 1 thank Dimond, Ferris, Amy Ribas '76, and Victoria K. B. J. Wilson, and former Higgison '78, for their also wish to acknowledge the members of Art in class discussions of several Ransom My appreciation objects, and and for this making my to Michael who has for Ms. Groves. Laura B. W. I Andrew W. Mellon internship, the exhibi- brochure possible. Groves '96 Andrew W. Mellon L. Dennis Griggs '73 for the brochure's design. Finally, express sincere gratitude to the tion, goes to Susan for editing the brochure, to photography of the works from document- these intimately scaled and which they were and brochure. K. Bergeron, V. Scott Edwards Foundation European and American culture that leads the facilitation L. Mahan informal portraits reveal information about viewer-reader to me enrolled in her first-year encouragement and camaraderie. for artist as of themselves. With precise eye and eloquence of the S. this exhibition. relation- late nine- collection, she has whether of colleagues ative personality, and the time Suzanne ments to range of talents. Reviewing photograph- print portraits of artists I Honchell, Patricia Jenks, Mattie Kelley, Liza Nelson, I of Ms. teenth and early twentieth centuries in the ed the when History 342: The Portrait for their insightful com- gifts as address issues of concern arising from her work subject, Docherty introduced of portraiture members of the museum and Department of Art Ms. Groves' involvement in Professor Docherty 's seminar, permits her to express her experience. collection. Associate Professor of Art J. shop manager Chake subject of this exhibition, artist, art permanent the Jennifer Portrait. The protocol and of her knowledge of the works in this exhibition and in staffs: She has worked particularly Docherty as a teaching assistant in Art History 342; The Watson gave gener- her committed support and friendship. closely with Associate Professor of Art History Linda I. J. museum ously of her expertise in nates in this exhibition originality of approach, she has been extraordinarily successful in contacting for art in their courses. number of individuals seminar in 1993; our five-year study together culmi- to facilitate the use of the With recognize a like to experience. Director Katharine ject of Art collections in teaching across the College's curriculum. faculty would History Linda exhibition's focus. Museum I who made my year-long internship at the Bowdoin College Museum of Art a rewarding and enjoyable Curatorial Intern PICTURING CREATIVITY 1860-1960 Portraits of Artists, n the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, the status of individuals engaged in creative professions such as the visual arts, literature, imaginative powers of these al members of society were and music rose The substantially. highly valued in an age of industri- revolution and mass production. Artists recorded through portraiture the veneration of cre- ativity that existed in the public portraits, often made sphere and especially in the small-format sought to capture the aura of the and aesthetic sensibilities, many ways artists on leans sits in to They served The works chosen 1960 represented the creativity for this exhibition show the of their contemporaries, or of his piano. IN PORTRAITURE portraiture dramatically in the mid-nineteenth cen- tury. Before the advent of the camera, only the wealthy could afford to trait, a process that could require multiple sittings photography became commercial a viable much reduced art in sit and sometimes months for a painted porto complete. Not only was photography quick and inexpensive, customers price. could never produce. At first, When 1855, the bourgeoisie posed for a few minutes obtained objective likenesses, exact traces of their physical being the subjective human eye professional studios emulated painted portraiture by surrounding props such as columns, cur- their sitters with tains, The contemplative thought, an actress assumes a character, a composer The new medium of photography changed at a artistic circles. as souvenirs of valued relationships, shared THE USE OF PHOTOGRAPHY AND PRINTMAKING and of mediums of printmaking, photography, and drawing, stylistic influences. from 1860 themselves: a writer sitter. among members and contrived landscape backgrounds. But innovative photographers such as Nadar (Gaspard-Felix Tournachon, 1820-1910) soon realized the medium's inherently expressive capabilities and expressions, let their sitters' and body language poses, facial reveal personality. A revival of the popularity of etching, first in 1850s and 1860s and Europe in the United States, paralleled the later in the development of photography. The etching technique, seen as a logical extension of drawing rather than engrav- moved ing, because the stylus soft ground rather than cutting into plate, easily through a a metal encouraged experimentation. In contrast to reproductive engraving, which relied on meticulous craftsmen to copy larger works made by others, etching called for imagination 5 Edgar Degas, Edouard Manet (bust-length), 1864-1865 and aesthetic sensibility. A new the painter-etchers, exploited the artists, expressive power of the graphic create original landscapes, and scenes, As line to urban portraits. artists asserted work that their photography and etching could be rather than reproductive, in fine, these art, mediums soon became popular traits of class for por- of their colleagues. Because of their often close relationships, either through friendship or a professional affinity of tastes and values, artists felt comfortable interpreting their identities or collaborating sitters' with their subjects to capture a sense of personality. The small formats of photographs and prints, as well as the shortened time commitment for their completion, added to the intimacy of the encounter. Working with and acquain- friends tances sympathetic to their endeavors, artists could move past more traditional modes of portraiture. They posed portrayed sitters casually, them and even borrowed the tions, 3 Nadar, George Sand, ca. 1864 their working environments, used unconventional composi- in their artistic styles of their subjects to draw attention to those sitters' creative contributions to society. ARTISTS AS ADMIRED INDIVIDUALS Visual artists respected not only other visual musicians, and stage performers with their personal whom artists, but also the authors, poets, philosophers, they worked and socialized. As a testament to and professional admiration, they portrayed these individuals, sometimes con- temporaries and sometimes a generation older, as icons of their age. Many considered Edouard Manet (1832-1883) Influenced early in his career by the Spanish everyday critics life in Paris and its and the public with art (cat. no. 5) the founder of modern art. of Velasquez and Goya, he painted scenes of suburbs using broad, flat patches of contrasting color. He shocked his transformation of traditional subject matter, such as the female nude, into blunt commentaries on the modern world. Artists often portrayed Manet in group portraits at the center of the avant garde. Edgar Degas, of Manet as an state in his series artist.' of portraits of Manet from 1864 to 1865, showed his admiration Edouard Manet (bust-length), an impression of the fourth and canceled of one of the plates, could have been prompted by Felix Bracquemond's etchings after Nadar's photographs of Parisian literati from this period. Probably of greater influence, however, was Goya's 1799 self-portrait for the frontispiece of the Caprichos, a series of aquatints reissued in 1855. ' Degas, aware of Manet's respect for Goya, conflates the Parisian with the Spanish ute. He emulates artist in a gesture of trib- Goya's composition by portraying Manet in a left, nearly profile view. Manet's jacket, with a striking white triangular collar, mirrors Goya's gray coat and Degas employs aquatint, Goya's scarf. famed medium, to darken the and coat more than etched background lines could do alone. Unlike Goya's sagging chin and drooping eyes, however, Manet's prominent jaw brow (aided by his beard) and sculpted give him a noble appearance. Degas's pro- nouncement of these characteristics may have been influenced by the nineteenthcentury science of phrenology, which set forth that the shape of the brain, as known through bumps, could be cranial used to evaluate mental capacity and character. 6 Broad foreheads displays here) (like the meant an and imagination, since one Manet excess of intellect practitioners of phrenology claimed that these qualities 7 Auguste Rodin, Victor Hugo, Three-Quarter View, 1885 were found near the crown.' Rodin also emphasized the believed center of creativity Victor Hugo (1802-1885), author Rodin probably etched tural portraits of the author. On in various degrees of finish. From deeply marks delineate the cranium. Rodin mally for his portrait, then, with my head filled Pan, Hercules and Jupiter skin."^ View (cat. no. 7) from this plate at least four different angles Hugo allowed house and to observe him his of the French novelist of Notre-Dame de Paris (1831) and Les Miserables (1862). Victor Hugo, Three-Quarter writer's in his portrait one of his 1883 of Hugo's head are seen incised drypoint lines to tentative stippling, the knew this forehead intimately. Refusing to the sculptor to set in the interior. Rodin up a recalled, sit for- modeling stand on the veranda of "I would go and look at him, and with the expression of an image which combined the properties of I would go back again Most of the sketches Rodin made to memorize a feature, a wrinkle or a fold of in preparation for the sculptural portrait feature Hugo's skull from different points of view, as Rodin watched him reading, thinking, and ing. Rodin repeats his inquiry of Hugo's cranium and over again The etching, empathy in made in 1885, the year of for the novelist, Guernsey here, etching from eat- a finished sculpture over an attempt to capture the physical sign of Hugo's genius. who Hugo's death, commemorates Rodin's esteem and lived in exile from 1853 to 1870 autocracy of Louis-Napoleon. Rodin shared with to sculp- in 1891 to experience first-hand Hugo after speaking out against the a sense of alienation and even traveled Hugo's place of exile.' Later photographs of the artist show Rodin in front of his 1886-1890 sculpture Hugo and Victor the Muses, highlighting his fek affinity with the great author. Like Rodin, the writer, caricaturist, and photographer Nadar portrayed Sand (Amadine Aurore Lucie Dupin, Baroness Dudevant, 1804-1876), individual trousers, (cat. no no. 3). With smoked cigars, reference to her independent youth, in and had haisons with Frederic Chopin, the sixty-year-old cloak. The portrait is his favorite authors a novelist throughout France. Ten years two hundred and Hugo sits in his who earlier, in as a stable as their marshal. They which she wore pyramid within the folds of her striped Nadar made towards Sand, one of writers. The Pantheon Nadar. In the a tortuous parade from lop first Nadar dedicated collection of stories, print, bottom with Victor to halt at the lower left before a radiant bust of representations of other romantic forebears. In 1856 Was as a strong, influential 1854, he featured her as one of the founders of the make enthusiasm and profound respect," his George helped spread the notion of universal democracy group portrait of French fifty literary figures sitter, famous men including the composer the pinnacle of a series of gestures and Romantic movement Sand several his George Sand and to Sand, with "fervent Quand j'etais etudiant (When I a Student).'' Here Nadar depicts Sand as a mountain, majestic and insurmountable in her brilliance. In the photograph, possibly the product of one of the sessions in the 1860s undertaken to replace a less flattering portrait then circulating,^ Sand's distant gaze visually portrays her contempla- free-thinking mind. tive, Sand reveals a quiet confidence, perhaps from the recent success of the adaptation of her novel Villemer at the Odeon, a Parisian theater,^ or possibly as a reflection of Nadar's reverence for her. Later, he selected this image for his Galerie Contemporaine (1876-1885), a group of photographs of important nineteenth-century French individuals. ARTISTS AS CELEBRITIES During this period, a "cult tured celebrities. ing Many of personality" developed in Europe as popular weekly journals fea- artists responded to increased interest in their lives and acting out public personas. The masses condoned celebrities as independent intellectuals free from by consciously eccentric behavior, viewing their traditional mores and conventional As the public demanded more and more information about their biographies and artists began to appear bigger than The obsessive fies this life and interest in the life life talents, and work of James McNeill Whistler (1834-1903) exempli- Caught up by the public persona he personal attributes (the white lock of his figure his delicate style criticism.' in their portraits. celebration of individualism. Four hundred portraits were after his death.'" creat- hair, made of Whistler during his created, artists often featured his pointed mustache, and monocle) and imitated in and elongation of form. An 1897 oil painting by Italian expatriate Giovanni Boldini (copied here in a posthumous etching by lames Reich nently displays these characteristics. Whistler's fingers, spread like a fan |cat. on no. 14|) promi- his forehead, con- spicuously point to his white lock and monocle, while his mustache curls to mirror the shape of his eyebrows. Boldini used a high vantage point characteristic of Japanese painting to allude to Whistler's stylistic interests and surrounded him with a dark background to evoke Whistler's fondness for the abstract. In the reproductive etching of 1916, Reich included in the lower right Whistler's mother, a portion of one of Whistler's best known margin the head of paintings from the time of its acquisition by the French most government and successfully advanced his career and abstraction, a monochromatic Whistler's death in through his 1 in palette. artistic necessary to refer to the felt it had values of simplicity, Even thirteen years and more importantly portraits, Arrangement these. 903, Reich in 1891. Whistler's portraits to the after man most famous of Grey and Black: Portrait of the Painter's Mother. Sarah Bernhardt (1844-1923), the world-renowned French stage 'Ay*' actress, spread her fame performing for the camera in such roles as Sardon's Theodora, Racine's Phedre, and Shakespeare's Hamlet. In the 1860s, before she became known, Felix Nadar had taken a series of portraits of her, unadorned and draped in cloth with shoulders bare. In the when 1890s, tograph (cat. either Nadar himself or no. 6), Bernhardt cious personality his son, Paul (but had transformed and eagerness more probably the son), took this pho- herself into an eccentric celebrity with a viva- to give herself to a role. Bernhardt cleverly masked herself in this portrait as Pierrot, the sensitive clown from Theodore de character, 1887 comedy Le Banville's Baiser. She evolves into the zanni, a traditional comic through costume and pose: Bernhardt's bulky jacket hides her thin figure, the black skull cap and white hat cover her hair, and her face distorts her beautiful visage felt makeup with thick, pointed eyebrows and a painted-on The pucker. identity of Sarah Bernhardt, the glamorous stage personality, cannot be separated from choly fool who melan- Pierrot, the sags his shoulders in despair. Whereas Bernhardt used her whole body through her costume and pose promote her Rodin in on the Gertrude Kasebier, celebrity, platinum print in her His Studio to Portrait of Auguste (cat. great sculptor's no. 11), focused head and hand. Clothed in a white smock, the bulky torso of Rodin (1840-1917) melds with the plaster cast of The Gates of Hell behind him, making his head, the center of creative inspiration, and his hand, the tool necessary to vision, the figure. communicate most well-defined his parts of his Rodin looks down upon and touches his sculpture of Baron Paul d'Estournelles de Constant, as the if his were mind and hand of God capable of giving life to the work. 6 Atelier Nadar, Sarah Bernhardt in Le Baiser, 1890s In 1905, in his when Meudon most famous him Kasebier photographed Rodin was the world's studio, living artist. The Thinker, The Kiss, and Monument to known Balzac were well throughout Europe and the United whole pavilion at the had been reserved 1900 A States. Paris Exposition for his sculpture. The author George Bernard Shaw, conflating the respect people once for the sculptor with his girth, felt remarked, "No photograph yet taken has touched [Rodin]. He .. man you the biggest by is a million chalks ever saw."" Kasebier's prox- imity to her subject and sensitive use of light monumentality of successfully capture the Rodin's figure and the aura surrounding his head and hand, making one of the this great portraits of the sculptor. THE STYLE OF THE SITTER Portraying a sitter who is an own unique characteristics of that sitter's style U Auguste Rodin in His Studio, 1905 century to create a distinctive who broke with convention small corner of the photograph, but his The instrument can be seen he composes a symbolizes his virtuosity whole. Newman artistic score, in of the twentieth (cat. no. 18), occupies a presence pervades the work. The composer's open lid of which dominates the picture as Stravinsky's equivalent in this context: and in its it is the tool he resemblance to a quarter note (albeit reversed) combining on paper disparate musical elements into The rectangular fields it a cohesive of the background and the triangular shapes from the negative space between the piano to the twenty-five year neoclassical period Stravinsky his portrait. Several photo- translates into visual language Stravinsky's musical style in the minimalistic setting of the portrait. resulting arts. in the first half Newman by Arnold joins almost seamlessly with the piano, the fingers as powerful way to convey his body of work. Igor Stravinsky (1882-1971), portrayed here plane. artistic graphic portraits featured in this exhibition recreate the style of individuals body a subtle, yet or her contribution to the Certrude Stanton Kasebier, Portrait of is by using the artist During this lid and had its just support refer by visual means completed when time Stravinsky's scores were characterized by clarity, Newman simplicity took and symmetry,'^ qualities reproduced in the carefully planned geometry of the setting. George Daniell also focused on a portrait photograph of Georgia O'Keeffe poraneous phers distinctive period in his sitter's artistic series made (cat. He took this no. 22, p. 15) in 1955 to allude to her contem- of abstract paintings featuring the door in her patio wall. her their subject, including Todd life. Webb and While others pictured her with her paintings or in her Many photogra- O'Keeffe's husband, Alfred Stieglitz. New Mexico surroundings, Daniell implies O'Keeffe's increasingly abstract style by placing her against geometric shadows that fall 18 Arnold Newman, 1946 Igor Stravinsky, (printed ca. Arnold 1984) Newman on the adobe wall of her home. Daniell posed O'KeefFe led her to it buy the abandoned house was something I had to have. It Abiquiu at took me in a doorway, in 1945. it . . and simplified work, these paintings use door opening, ground, and from sky, to different perspectives.'^ a finite The shadows work of oil on canvas. At the center stands O'Keeffe, the feathery, others sharply defined, that in with a of over twenty patio paintings, and 1960. Some of her most number of elements, such as the wall, when viewed of O'Keeffe's while the textured wall alludes to brush- mastermind behind this abstract reality. Frederick Sommer Ernst's invented pays tribute to his friend, the Surrealist technique offrottage in his photograph leader of Surrealism, an international intellectual tural values Max artist Max Ernst, by hinting Ernst (cat. no. 19)." Ernst movement at was a that sought to revise Western cul- through unconventional techniques and compositions containing strong elements of surprise. Ernst, influenced by Freud, used dream imagery in method of drawing he named frottage. surface, doorway after that the wall in Daniell's portrait capture a sense some a and explore the changing relations of forms painted edges, vision of . series the compositions of which this portrait evokes, between 1946 austere the She wrote, "That wall with a door ten years to get door was painted many times."" O'Keeffe completed her maybe such as a wood floor, to the emerging shapes to create In frottage, paper is representations of his work and perfected rubbed over obtain a patterned image. The new much artist a textured object or draws inspiration from — plants, animals — that have no relation to the original object,"' and disrupt the stable relations of time and space. Sommer juxtaposed two negatives, one of Ernst standing in front of wooden planks and one of a cement culvert, to give Ernst's figure the textured appearance of a frottage drawing. His ghost-like body appears fused to the background, transforming his three-dimensional torso into a two-dimensional part of the wall. Sommer Surrealism, /rotto^e, while simultaneously placing highlights Ernst's unique contribution to him within the broader Surrealist movement 19 Frederick Sommer, by Max setting and dark Ernst, /946 ® 1946 Frederick Sommer up the ambiguous space of wood and cement. stripe in the charged portrait of a cement negative, man who pop out at Ernst's eyes, caught between a light the viewer to create a psychologically believed in the visual expression of his inner fantasies." Portraying creative people as admired individuals, world-famous celebrities, and pioneers of unique styles are a few of many ways artists honored their colleagues through portraiture of this period. The exhibition also contains images of people actively engaged in creating a photograph, or choreographed dance, of painters and writers print, tion, and of sitters lending artists who made their likenesses to artists for stilled in spells showcasing the of inspira- artists' talents. these portraits were able to explore the identities of these people The and of themselves with a subjectivity not always possible in commissioned portraiture. The portraits in Picturing Creativity captivate us with the creative expression. bond the artist and sitter share in their quest for WORKS NOTES would Later Degas 1. Manet as a "painter," a label he and would purchase several of Manet's refer to reserved for a select few, works. Marianne Karabelnik, "Au Milieu des Artists Hommes de Lettres," Degas Portraits, ed. Felix et in the Museum College of Art. Starred works are illustrated Leopold Flameng 1. French, 1831-1911 , Meryon Portrait of Charles Barbara Stern Shapiro, "Degas's Printed Portraits," Degas Baumann and (French printmaker, 1821-1868) David de Giustino, Conquest of Mitid: Phrenology and Victorian 3. Thought (Totowa, N|: Rowman and on heliogravure reproduction Karabelnik, 139. Littlefield, 1975), 16-17. paper of the drawing dated laid May 1858 11 Social in this Baumann and 1994) 260. Portraits, permanent colleaion of the Bowdoin brochure. Measurements are height before width. des Marianne Karabelnik (London: Merrell Holberton Publishers, 2. THE EXHIBITION IN works are All sheet: 33.5 x 48.5 image: 18.3 x 24.4 Gift of David P. cm (13 cm (7 3/16 x 19 1/8 inches) 1/4 x 9 9/16 inches) Becker '70 1979.59 Quoted 4. & in Catherine Lampert, Rodin: Sculpture David Macey (London: Arts Council of Great trans. Drawings, Britain, 2. James Abbott McNeill Whisder American, 1834-1903, worked 1986), 106. Drouet, (Charles, French sculptor, Lampert, 118. 5. in England after 1859 1859 1836-1908) drypoint Maria Morris Hambourg, Fran<;oise Heilbrun, and Philippe 6. Neagu, Nadar (New York: Metropolitan Museum of Art, 1995), 9 and 20. sheet: 28.1 x 18.8 cm 1/16 x 7 3/8 inches) (11 x 15.2 (8 7/8 x 6 inches) Gift of Miss Susan Dwight Bliss plate: 22.5 1963.432 7. Hambourg, 246. 8. Nigel Gosling, Nadar *3. (New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1976), Nadar (Gaspard-Felix Tournachon) French, 1820-1910 George Sand, 178. 1864 ca. (Amadine Aurore Lucie Dupin, Baroness Dudevant, French 9. Eric Denker, In Pursuit of the Butterfly: Portraits of author, lames McNeill Whistler (Washington, D.C.: National Portrait Gallery, 1995) , mount: 33.3 x 25.4 cm 17. sheet 10. 1804-1876) woodburytype Museum Denker, 16. ( 1 3 1/8 x 10 inches) and image: 23.7 x 18.9 cm (9 15/16 x 7 7/16 inches) purchase, Lloyd O. and Marjorie Strong Coulter Fund 1989.7 11. Quoted in Barbara L. Michaels, Gertrude Kdsebier: The Photographer and Her Photographs (New York: Harry N. Abrams, 1992), 102-103. 4. Sir Francis British, Seymour Haden 1818-1910 Portrait of Francis 12. Joseph Coroniti, "Igor Fyodorovich Stravinsky," Dictionary of American Biography, Supplement Nine, 1971-1975 (New York: Charies Scribner's Sons, 1994), 777. Seymour Haden, No. sheet: 25.1 x 36 plate: 19.7 x 27 cm cm Georgia O'Keeffe, Georgia O'Keeffe 1976), n. p. 14. Lloyd Goodrich and Doris (New York: Viking Press, (9 7/8 x 14 3/16 inches) Whitney Museum of American (New York: h '22 1923.86 *5. Bry, Georgia O'Keeffe (While Etching), 1862 (7 3/4 x 10 5/8 inches) Gift of Charies A. Coffin 13. II etching and drypoint Edgar Degas French, 1834-1917 Edouard Manet (bust-length), 1864-1865 Art, 1970), 26. (French painter, 1832-1883) 15. Sommer and Ernst met in 1941 United States during World War when Ernst fled to the etching with drypoint and aquatint, canceled fourth state sheet: 32.8 x II. 25 plate: 13 x 10.6 16. Uwe M. Schneede, Max Ernst, trans. R. W. Last (New York: 17. Kirk Varnedoe, Modern Columbia University 1976), 46. Portraits: Art purchase 1959.25 Praeger Publishers, 1972), 73. York: Museum cm (12 15/16 x 9 7/8 inches) cm (5 1/8 x 4 3/16 inches) The Self and Others (New and Archaeology Department, *6. Atelier Nadar Active in Paris, 1854-early 1940s Sarah Bernhardt in (French 1844-1923) actress, Le Baiser, 1 890s gelatin silver print mount: 35.1 x 26.5 cm (13 13/16 x 10 7/16 inches) and image: 31 x 21.8 cm (12 3/16 x 8 9/16 inches) sheet Museum 1988.34 purchase, Lloyd O. and Marjorie Strong Coulter l imd Auguste Rodin '7. 1 Victor I 1885 Three- Quarter View, luf^o, c;hilde I lassam loseph Pennell, 1917 (French author, 1802-1885) (American printmaker and author, 1860-1926) drypoini lithograph cm cm sheet: 30.7 x 22.2 plate; 22.5 x 17.6 Gift of 5 American, 1859-1935 French, 1840-1917 David P. 1/8x8 3/4 inches) 7/8x6 15/16 inches) (12 sheet: 45.4 x (8 Gift of Becker '70 cm 30 4 Mrs Maud I (17 7/8 x 15/16 inches) 11 lassam 1940.75 1994.10.321 16. 8. American, 1848-1907 (Scottish poet and Head Second Version, Robert Louis Stevenson, 1 889 cm 1926 of MiLX l.iebermann, ca. (German 1850-1894) novelist, bronze medallion, reduction, remodeled diameter: 44.6 Rudolf Cirossmann German, 1882-1941 Augustus Saint-Gaudens painter and printmaker, 1847-1935) graphite 24 sheet: 30.7 x slightly Museum (17 3/4 inches) Bequest of Miss Mary Sophia Walker cm (12 1/16x9 1/2 inches) purchase 1957.93 1904.29 17. 9. American, 1816-1906 (limnianuel Radensky) R,iy Space Writing (Self Portrait). 1935 1890-1900 Inspiration (Setf-Portrait), ca. gelatin silver print cm sheet and image: 8.1 x 5.9 graphite sheet: 18 x 26.6 Museum Man American, 1890-1976 Daniel Huntington cm Museum (7 1/8 x 10 1/2 inches) purchase, Florence C. Quinby Fund in memory of (3 3/16 x 2 5/16 intlics) purchase, Lloyd O. and Marjorie Strong Coulter I'und 1987.15 Henry Cole Quinby h 16 1970.27.3 • Arnold 18. American, 10. Alphonse Legros 1946 (printed No. 2), 1905 1984) sheet: 27.7 x 35.3 cm ( 1 image: 17.1 x 32.5 2 3/4 x 9 7/16 inches) Susan Dwight 1 882-1971 gelatin silver print lithograph sheet: 32.4 x 23.9 ca. (Russian composer working in the United Slates, Portrait of Legros (Medallion Museum Bliss 1956.24.83 •11. 1918 Igor Stravinsli}', French, 1837-1911 Gift of Miss Newman b. cm (10 cm (6 7/8 x 13 7/8 inches) 3/4 x 12 13/16 inches) purchase, Lloyd O. and Marjorie Strong Coulter Fund 1984.11 Gertrude Stanton Kasebier • American, 1852-1934 19. Frederick American, Portrait of Auguste Rodin in His Studio, Max 1905 b. Sommer 1905 1946 Ernst, (French sculptor, 1840-1917) (German platinum print gelatin silver print cm sheet and image: 31.5 x 22.7 Gift of Sarah (12 3/8 x 8 15/16 inches) Wilson Hunt painter, collagist, and author, 1891-1976) mount: 30.7 x 35.6 cm (12 1/8 x 14 inches) sheet and image: 18.9 x 24.2 Museum 1984.29 cm (7 7/16 x 9 1/2 inches) purchase, Gridley W. Tarbell II Fund 1997.4 12. Anders Leonard Zorn Swedish, 1860-1920 20. Irving Portrait of August Strindberg, (Svkfedish playwright and novelist, 1849-1912) Marc b. Chagall, 1917 New York, 1948 (printed May-June 1969) (Russian painter and printmaker working in France, etching cm cm sheet: 39.8 x 28.1 plate: Penn American, 1910 29.8 x 19.7 (15 11/16 x 11 1/16 inches) 1887-1985) Wiggins-Teape paper on aluminum, multiple coating and print- (11 3/4 x 7 3/4 inches) Bequest of John Nicholas Estabrook '36 and Dorothy Coogan ing, 1) Estabrook mount: 55.8 x 66 1988.22.112 sheet and image: 46.5 x 58 palladium/iridium, and 2) platinum/palladium Museum 13. Ludwig Meidner cm (22 x 26 inches) cm (18 15/16 x 22 7/8 inches) purchase, Lloyd O. and Marjorie Strong Coulter Fund 1989.22 German, 1884-1966 Portrait of the Poet E. Seyerle, 1 91 21. sheet: 33.9 x 23.2 plate: 14.6 x 11.9 Museum Arnold American, drypoint cm (13 3/8 cm (5 3/4 x Newman b. 1918 x 9 1/8 inches) Pablo Picasso, Vallauris, France, 1954 (printed ca. 1984) 4 11/16 inches) (Spanish painter, sculptor, printmaker, and ceramist working in purchase, Helen Johnson Chase Fund France, 1969.52 1881-1973) gelatin silver print mount: 60.9 x 50.8 cm (24 x 20 inches) '14 Jacques Reich (after Giovanni Boldini) American, born Hungary, 1852-1923 sheet (Italian, 1842-1931) 1984.10 James McNeill Whistler, 1916 (American painter and printmaker working in England, 1834-1903) etching sheet: 65.2 x 47.5 plate: 58.6 x 33.4 Gift of Miss cm cm (25 11/16 x 18 11/16 inches) (23 1/16 x 13 1/8 inches) Susan Dwight 1956.24.137 Bliss and image: 46.6 x 36.7 cm (18 3/8 x 14 7/16 inches) purchase, Lloyd O. and Marjorie Strong Coulter Fund Museum 22 George Georgia O'Keeffe in a Doorway, Abiquiu, Daniell, New Mexico, 1955 ® 1955 George Daniell '22. George Daniell Denker, American, McNeill Whistler. Washington, D.C.: National Portrait 1913 b. Georgia O'Keeffe in a Doonmy, Abicjuiu, New Mexico, 1955 Eric. In Pursuit of the Butterfly: Portraits of James Gallery, 1995. (American painter, 1887-1986) Hambourg, Maria gelatin silver print cm (13 7/8 x 10 26.5 cm (10 13/16 x sheet: 35.2 x 27.8 15/16 inches) Neagu. Nadar. image: 27.5 x 10 7/16 inches) 1995. Gift of Morris, Frangoise Heilbrun, New York: Metropolitan and Philippe Museum of Art, George Daniell Hennessey, William, and 1988.36.5 to 23. Philippe Halsman American, born Jerome Robbins in of Michigan 1906-1979 Latvia, Dance Studio, Ann Arbor from the Unwersily Ml: Regents of the b. Lampert, Catherine. Rodin: Scidpture 1918) & Draivings. Trans. David Macey. London: Arts Council of Great cm image: 34.6x27.5 Gift of Isaac of Art. Smith. From Ansel Adams Self-Portraits University of Michigan, 1994. (American dancer and choreographer 28 Museum Graham and Portraits 1959 gelatin silver print sheet: 35.4 x Andy Warhol: (13 15/16 x cm Lagnado 11 Britain, 1986. inches) Michaels, Barbara (13 5/8 x 10 13/16 inches) Her Photographs. '71 L. Gertrude Kdsebier: The Photographer and New York: Harry N. Abrams, 1992. 1986.94.15 Reaves, Wendy Wick, ed. American Portrait Prints: Proceedings of the Tenth Annual American Print Conference. FOR FURTHER READING Baumann, Felix, and Marianne Karabelnik, Charlottesville: Published for the National Portrait Gallery, ed. Degas Portraits. Brilliant, Richard. Portraiture. Smithsonian Cambridge, MA: Harvard Varnedoe, Kirk. York: University Press, 1991. Graham, ed. I'he I'orirait in Photography. Reaktion Books, 1992. by the University of Virginia, London: Modem Portraits: Columbia University Depanmont, Clarke, Institution, 1984. London: Merrel! Ilolberlon Publishers, 1994. 1 976. Art The Self and Others. and Archaeology New BOWDOIN COLLEGE MUSEUM OF ART BRUNSWICK, MAINE