I concluded my
previous post concerning a book about avant-garde women of the 1920s by posting a picture of Herbert Bayer's extraordinary 1929 photomontage, "Profil en face." I thought it appropriate to show the use of Louise Brooks' image within modernism, specially the work of an artist associated with the Bauhaus.
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Herbert Bayer's "Profil en face" (1929) |
After finishing the blog, I thought to spend a bit of time web surfing and followed a link someone had just posted to Facebook and checked out an article on one of my favorite websites, Open Culture. The 2016 article,
Every Exhibition Held at the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) Presented in a New Web Site: 1929 to Present, detailed a
digital exhibition archive which presents various materials such as installation photos, checklists, brochures, and catalogs related to every show mounted at the famed New York City museum.
Skipping through MoMA's remarkable exhibition history, I came across a show called "
Herbert Bayer: Photographic Works." I have always liked this artist, and checked out the supporting materials. Guess what I found? Bayer's little-known photomontage was included in the exhibit, and there was Louise Brooks' image (
or at least half her profile) hanging in the Museum of Modern Art in New York between October 31, 1977 and January 29, 1978.
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Some of Bayer's most iconic images - photograph by Katherine Keller |
I was excited. And though I already own two other books on Bayer's work, I tracked down a second-hand copy of the out-of-print catalog for this particular show and ordered it. Hopefully, it might contain some information on Bayer's use of Brooks' image.
I continued my tour of MoMA's exhibition history and came across another show which included not one, but two images of Brooks. This exhibit, "
Hollywood Portrait: Photographers, 1921–1941" ran December 5, 1980 to February 28, 1981. It included the famed pearl portrait taken by Eugene Robert Richee, as well as another publicity portrait of Brooks in men's clothing taken around the time she made
Beggars of Life.
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Hollywood photography at its best - photograph by Mali Olatunji |
This particular exhibit, one of a number of nifty film related exhibits mounted by MoMA, was put on at the height of the Brooks' revival prior to her death. The pearl portrait is third from the left.
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More great Hollywood photography - photograph by Mali Olatunji |
The
Beggars of Life publicity portrait of Brooks is sixth from the left. And below is a larger view of the image.
I find it very interesting that Brooks' image was included in exhibits at NY MoMA. I hadn't known they were ... but more than that, it shows Brooks herself to be part and parcel of 20th century modernism, and not just a cult figure within the realm of film history. That is fascinating!
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