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#Julie Wolfthorn
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Julie Wolfthorn (German, 1864-1944) - Portrait of a woman
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gogmstuff · 8 months
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More images of 1913 fashion -
1913 Ethel Mary, née Bell-Irving, later 15th Countess of Lauderdale by Samuel Henry William Llewellyn (Thirlestane Castle - Lauder, Berwickshire, UK) From centuriespast.tumblr.com/post/148847411164/ethel-mary-18911970-15th-countess-of 815X1200.
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Left 1913 Gazette du Bon Ton "Le Conseiller des Dames Robe et Manteau pour le Theatre" by Barbier 643X844.
Right 1913 Gazette du Bon Ton "Tais-Toi Mon Coeur!… Robe de lingerie de Doeuillet 1913 Gazette du Bon Ton "Le Marriage au Chateau" by Brissaud artophile.com 750X1011.
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1913 Gazette du Bon Ton "Le Marriage au Chateau" by Brissaud. From artophile.com 1797X1125.
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Left 1913 Journal des Dames et des Modes "Manteau de velours frappe citron. Col velours blance et Renard blanc" by Dammy. From artophile.com 750X1189.
Center 1913 Journal des Dames et des Modes "Mantelet de taffetas a la vieille garni de chenille verte - Manchon brode de perles". From artophile.com 757X1200.
Right 1913 Journal des Dames et des Modes "Parure d'Hermine et Putois". From artophile.com 701X1200.
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1913 Lady, traditionally identified as Rosa Lewis by Frank Moss Bennett (auctioned by Christie's). From their Web site 906X1904.
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Left 1913 Journal des Dames et des Modes "Robe de charmeuse blance a tunique de mousseline de soie violette brodee de perl et bordee de skunks. Manteau de velours etrusque" by Pichenot artophile.com 750X1197.
Right 1913 Journal des Dames et des Modes "Robe de charmeuse nore avec corsage et panier formes d'un obi drape" by Barbier artophile.com 734X1200.
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1913 Madame Jean Maillard-Norbert by Léon François Comerre (location ?). From tumblr.com/eirene; fixed most obvious spots w Pshop 1332X3072.
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1913 Lina Bilitis with Two Pekinese by Giovanni Boldini (location ?). From Amber Tree's photostream on flickr 1510X2872.
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1913 Madame Michelham by Giovanni Boldini (location ?). From wikiart.org-en-giovanni-boldini-madame-michelham-1913 1589X2356 @72.
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1913 María Teresa González del Valle by Nicanor Piñole (Fundación Banco Santander - Madrid, Spain). From artsandculture.google.com; fixed spots w Pshop 2036X2698.
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1913 Señora, amiga de Mr. Ryan by Joaquín Sorolla y Bástida (Museo Nacional de Bellas Artes - La Habana, Cuba). From joaquin-sorolla.blogspot.com/search/label/Retrato%20de%20Señora 1191X1600.
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1913 Evening dress of Vera Karakhan by House of Paul Poiret (Hermitage). From tumblr.com/antiquebee/731802632464875520?.
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Left 1913 (June issue) La Gazette du Bon Ton, "Je Suis Perdue Robe d'été de Chéruit" tumblr.com/mote-historie/729728522325753856/pierre-brissaud-je-suis-perdue-robe-d%C3%A9t%C3%A9-de?source=share&.
Center 1913 La Mode cover art La Mode par Boué Soeurs by George Barbier. From tumblr.com/mote-historie/731263453639196672/george-barbier-la-mode-par-bou%C3%A9-soeurs-french?source=share&.
Right 1913 Les Modes Dinner Dresses by Gustave Beer. From tumblr.com/mote-historie/731172312816254976/dinner-dresses-by-beer-1913?source=share& 1975X2861
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Left 1913 Tanzerin by Julie Wolfthorn (location ?). From tumblr.com/random-brushstrokes 727X1024.
Right 1913 Anastasia Mikhailovna de Torby, Philip de László (location ?). From tumblr.com/la-belle-histoire/745161897381445633/portrait-of-anastasia-mikhailovna-de-torby-philip? 608X960.
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Left ca. 1913 Dame in een zwarte strompeljapon met kant by anonymous (Rijksmuseum). From their Web site; fixed flaws & spots w Pshop 3542X5395.
Right ca. 1913 Dame in een geel/groen geruite strompeljapon by anonymous (Rijksmuseum). From their Web site; fixed flaws & spots Pshop 3476X5328; fixed flaws & spots w Pshop 3645X5328
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oldsardens · 25 days
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Julie Wolfthorn - Portrait of a Lady
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ojo-rojo · 1 year
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Julie Wolfthorn: Illustration for a cover of “Jugend”, the seminal german art nouveau journal. 
https://www.lostwomenart.de/en/artist/julie-wolfthorn/
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Julie Wolfthorn (Berlin) :: Titelblätter (Cover). Jugend. Münchner illustrierte Wochenschrift für Kunst und Leben. — G. Hirth’s Verlag in München & Leipzig. 3 September, 1898. Nr. 36, III. Jahrgang
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abwwia · 8 months
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Ida Gerhardi standing right, Julie Wolfthorn (sitting, second woman from the right), Jelka Rosen (standing third woman from the right).
Unknown photographer : Académie Colarossi, ca. 1892 : photograph
LWL-Museum für Kunst und Kultur (Westfälisches Landesmuseum), Münster/Gerhardi-Archiv , Germany (www.lwl.org/LWL/Kultur/museumkunstkultur/) via Female Artists in History
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pwlanier · 9 months
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Julie Wolfthorn (Thorn 1868 - Theresienstadt 1944)
Gentleman
Oil on board
Stahl Auctions
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kontrafantastisk · 2 years
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Witch of the Woods (Girl with Blue-green Eyes)
Julie Wolfthorn
(Geman, 1864-1944)
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Q&A with Kerry Wallach
The author of Traces of a Jewish Artist discusses Rahel Szalit, Szalit's relationship to other Jewish artists of her time, and more.
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What made you want to write a book about Rahel Szalit?
I first discovered Rahel Szalit while doing research in Berlin archives. I kept finding her artwork in newspapers from the 1920s, but there wasn’t much information available about the artist herself. Her images enchanted and haunted me, and I couldn’t stop wondering about the person who created them. Like so many who were murdered in the Holocaust, Szalit’s story had never been told at length. I realized that if I didn’t tell her story, no one would.
How did Szalit differ from other women artists of her time?
Rahel Szalit (née Markus; also Szalit-Marcus; 1888–1942) came to Germany as an outsider from Eastern Europe with a working-class background. Many German women artists in the early twentieth century had middle-class backgrounds and were supported financially by their families or husbands. Szalit couldn’t afford enrollment fees for art academies, though she eventually learned painting and lithography. Yet no matter how successful she became, Szalit’s situation always remained precarious. She made ends meet by giving lessons in drawing, painting, and fencing. Probably the biggest difference between Szalit and most of her female contemporaries is that Szalit was relatively successful in Jewish circles, perhaps even more so than in mainstream artists’ circles. Szalit is known for lithographic prints, and it makes sense to compare her with Käthe Kollwitz, who likewise depicted impoverished members of the working class. Around 1927, Szalit became active in the Association of Women Artists in Berlin. Through this group, she exhibited alongside artists including Käthe Kollwitz, Lotte Laserstein, Renée Sintenis, and Milly Steger. Many depicted women as subjects, though only a few (such as Julie Wolfthorn) were known for portraying Jewish subjects.
What did Szalit have in common with other Jewish artists?
Because of her personal connections to Eastern Europe (Lithuania, Poland), Szalit’s work conveyed a sense of authenticity that was in demand. She contributed to the Jewish Renaissance in Germany alongside Jakob Steinhardt and Ludwig Meidner, who—like Szalit—depicted Jewish subjects in an Expressionist style that emphasized distorted, angular shapes and powerful colors. In fact, Szalit was one of only a handful of women mentioned in studies of Jewish art of this period.
What was Szalit's relationship to modern art movements?
Both Expressionism and New Objectivity were important for Szalit’s career in Germany. Whereas many of Szalit’s lithographic illustrations from the early 1920s experiment with an Expressionist style, many of her later paintings and drawings offered realistic portraits of social types more in line with New Objectivity. Additionally, we know Szalit was friends with painter Karl Hofer and other artists in his networks. In 1933, Szalit fled Germany for France, where she became affiliated with the School of Paris. Here she exhibited with Marc Chagall, Eugen Spiro, Emmanuel Mané-Katz, Chana Orloff, and other Jewish artists, including many who hailed from Eastern Europe. Szalit was later included in Hersh Fenster’s Yiddish memorial volume, which commemorated over eighty Jewish artists of France who died in the Holocaust. In the epilogue to my book, I discuss how Szalit—whose life and work spanned several countries and movements—could be claimed and remembered.
Traces of a Jewish Artist: The Lost Life and Work of Rahel Szalit is now available from Penn State University Press. Find more information and order the book here: https://www.psupress.org/books/titles/978-0-271-09559-2.html. Save 30% with discount code NR24.
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agresteview · 10 months
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Julie Wolfthorn, Die Tanzerin, 1926
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Julie Wolfthorn “Floral Still Life”
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random-brushstrokes · 9 months
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Julie Wolfthorn - Tänzerin (1913)
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gogmstuff · 8 months
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1913 Tanzerin by Julie Wolfthorn (location ?). From tumblr.com/random-brushstrokes 727X1024.
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justineportraits · 2 years
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Julie Wolfthorn     Liegende am Strand      before1940
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peaceinthestorm · 3 years
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Julie Wolfthorn (1864-1944, German) ~ Flötenbläser, 1900
[Source: wsimag.com]
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vertigo1871 · 3 years
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Julie Wolfthorn, Hauteclaire (Fechterin), 1903
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