Tuesday, May 28, 2024

Made in 1922

Edward Steichen
Ruth St Denis on Stage
1922
gelatin silver print
National Gallery of Australia, Canberra

Edward Steichen
John Barrymore as Hamlet
1922
gelatin silver print
National Gallery of Australia, Canberra

Emil Otto Hoppé
Ted Shawn in Dance Costume
1922
gelatin silver print
National Gallery of Australia, Canberra

Otto Dix
Lady
1922
watercolor and gouache on paper
Norton Simon Museum, Pasadena, California

Otto Dix
Portrait of Dr Heinrich Stadelmann
1922
oil on canvas
Art Gallery of Ontario, Toronto

Joseph Kleitsch
The Oriental Shop
1922
oil on canvas
Crocker Art Museum, Sacramento, California

Jessie Willcox Smith
Children's Book Week
1922
lithograph (poster)
Delaware Art Museum, Wilmington

Mabel Alvarez
Carmen
1922
oil on canvas
Crocker Art Museum, Sacramento, California

Amédée Ozenfant
Still Life with Bottles
1922
oil on canvas
Los Angeles County Museum of Art

Harold Cazneaux
Dame Nellie Melba
1922
gelatin silver print
Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney

Lionel Lindsay
Romantic Garden
1922
wood-engraving
National Gallery of Australia, Canberra

Percy Leason
Flowers
1922
oil on board
Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney

Eric Pape
The Slave Market
1922
pastel on board
Crocker Art Museum, Sacramento, California

Wassily Kandinsky
Small Worlds I
1922
lithograph
National Gallery of Australia, Canberra

Madeleine Vionnet
Evening Gown
1922
beaded silk
Royal Ontario Museum, Toronto

Madeleine Vionnet
Evening Gown
1922
beaded silk
Royal Ontario Museum, Toronto

Vionnet's dress manifestly defies physical reality.  How can that fragile tube of silk support all those heavy glass beads without puckering or sagging and without throwing all those razor-edged deco squares out of alignment? Very like the simple-seeming muslins worn in the previous century by Jane Austen's women, a sturdy skeletal structure of some sort must have been constructed and concealed beneath this smooth, effortless exterior. 


from Canzone

Dear flesh, dear mind, dear spirit, dearest love,
In the depths of myself blind monsters know
Your presence and are angry, dreading Love
That asks its images for more than love;
The hot rampageous horses of my will,
Catching the scent of Heaven, whinny: Love
Gives no excuse to evil done for love,
Neither in you, nor me, nor armies, nor the world
Of words and wheels, nor any other world. 
Dear fellow-creatures, praise our God of Love
That we are so admonished, that no day
Of conscious trial be a wasted day. 

Or else we make a scarecrow of the day,
Loose ends and jumble of our common world,
And stuff and nonsense of our own free will;
Or else our changing flesh may never know
There must be sorrow if there can be love.

– W.H. Auden (1942)