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990_05_X-Chaplin-Charlie_1HR Hollywood, California: April 17, 1919 The creation of the United Artists Corporation. The founders from left to right: D.W. Griffith, Mary Pickford, Charlie Chaplin and Douglas Fairbanks at the signing of the contract. Attorneys Albert Banzhaf and Dennis O'Brien are standing in the back.
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alb3602870 Snuffbox with theatrical scenes of a rope dancer and a puppet show. Artist: Miniature by Louis Nicolas van Blarenberghe (French, Lille 1716-1794 Fontainebleau); and Henri Joseph van Blarenberghe (French, Lille 1750-1826 Lille). Culture: French, Paris. Dimensions: Overall (confirmed): 1 1/16 x 2 13/16 x 1 5/8 in. (2.7 x 7.1 x 4.1 cm); Miniatures: (sight measurements) top 1 3/16 x 2 3/8 (3 x 6 cm.); bottom 1 3/16 x 2 3/8 (3 x 6 cm.). Maker: Box by Joseph Étienne Blerzy (French, active 1750-1806). Date: 1778-79.The box bears four marks, among them the Paris mark for 1778-79, and the mark of Joseph-Étienne Blérzym a master in 1768, working to 1806. The sides and chamfered corners are decorated with plaques of translucent opalescent enamel resembling moss agate with delicate branches in silhouette. Judging by the costumes, the miniatures, this one and that on the lid, A Rope Dance, are contemporaneous. Neither is signed, but the style is typical of the Van Blarenberghes in the late 1770s, the date of the box.Seated to the left are a hunchbacked violinist and a cellist, while to the right, a family group, an elegant couple with small children, enters through a drawn-back curtain. The hall is hung with brightly painted curtains and lit by candles; the audience is seated on plank benches and on risers. A white-faced Pierrot in a traditional costume with a ruff and a hat calls attention to the performance of the marionettes, a dancing Punchinello, also in white but with a colorful plumed hat, and a female figure from whose skirt a tiny clown emerges to join his fellow acrobats.In late eighteenth-century paris, on the boulevard du Temple, there were theaters offering spectacles of various kinds involving actors, marionettes, tightrope walkers, jugglers, and animal acts. The most famous of these was presided over by Jean-Baptiste Nicolet, who was an actor and acrobat and the son of a puppet master. Nicolet's company and others competed with the Comédie Italienne. This vignette shows what such a place of entertainment must have looked like. Museum: Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA.
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alb3552039 21 June 1947, Brussels, Belgium. Pictures of different actors and actresses attending the Brussels Movie Festival during a gala organized by Great Britain. From left to right: Trevor Howard, Piet Vermeylen (belgian politician and founder of the royal Film library of Belgium), Patricia Roc, Joseph Van de Meulebroeck (mayor of Brussels) in the front. Image by (c) Germaine Van Parys - GermaineImage.
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alb3955846 02 July 1986, Brussels, Belgium. From left to right: Eva Robins - Viktor Lazlo - Lou De Prijck - Romy Haag. Presentation of the movie Mascara by the different actors - Charlotte Rampling - Michael Sarrazin - Lou De Prijck (singer of Lou and the Hollywood Bananas) - Romy Haag - Eva Robins - Viktor Lazlo (belgian singer) , the movie director - Patrick Conrad - and the author - Hugo Claus. Image by (c) Odette Dereze - GermaineImage.
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alb3955915 02 July 1986, Brussels, Belgium. From left to right: Michael Sarrazin - Patrick Conrad - Charlotte Rampling and Hugo Claus. Presentation of the movie Mascara by the different actors - Charlotte Rampling - Michael Sarrazin - Lou De Prijck (singer of Lou and the Hollywood Bananas) - Romy Haag - Eva Robins - Viktor Lazlo (belgian singer) , the movie director - Patrick Conrad - and the author - Hugo Claus. Image by (c) Odette Dereze - GermaineImage.
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alb3606798 Ichikawa Danjuro VII (1791-1859) in the Role of Konoshita Tokichi from the Scene "Mountain Gate" in the Play Yakko Yakko Edo Hanayari. Artist: Utagawa Kunisada (Japanese, 1786-1865). Culture: Japan. Dimensions: 8 3/16 x 7 7/16 in. (20.8 x 18.9 cm). Date: 1819.This print, one sheet of a triptych, depicts Ichikawa Danjuro VII holding in one hand an umbrella and in the other a duck, shot with an arrow and clasping a letter in its mouth. Danjuro wears a kimono with a design of gourds, an emblem of his family since the time when Danjuro II was given a gourd formerly used by the famous haiku poet Matsuo Basho to store rice. Museum: Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA.
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alb5148292 colonette crater (A, B: Satyr during olive harvest), clay, quickly turned, painted (ceramic), alternately fired, clay, total: height: 29.5 cm; muzzle diameter: 25.3 cm; Base diameter: 13.5 cm, Ceramics, Satyrs, Fauns, Silene, Trees, Shrubs, Birds, Ornaments, Strict style, The colonette or rod handle crater was already repaired in ancient times. For this purpose the vessel wall was pierced with pin holes in two places on both sides of the damage and then joined together with lead and bronze clamps. Remains of such a repair can be found in three places. Two bronze clamps were placed in the lower part of the picture zone near the surrounding stand lines applied in red opaque paint, one of them horizontally in the area below the colonets to the left of the bearded satyr, the other vertically on the opposite side of the vessel to the left of the beardless satyr. A third clamp connected the foot to the body of the vessel. The vessel is black varnished on the outside and inside except for the bottom of the foot. On the neck between the colonettes there is a bud arch frieze. At the base of the belly above the foot a surrounding halo of rays. On both sides a satyr at the olive harvest is depicted. On side A he squats on the right side in front of an olive tree, with horse's tail and bearded. Around his hair and on his head he wears a knotted ribbon. Both arms are outstretched. In his right hand he holds a long stick with which he knocks the olives from the tree. Above his head a bird flies away with a bandage in its beak. Beard and hair were probably originally indicated in white additional color. On side B there is a young beardless satyr on the left side of a tree. He also has a ribbon wrapped around and over his head. His right holds a stick, the left one a knotted bandage. The headbands, the olives and the bandage in the bird's beak are painted reddish brown, as well as the edge of the muzzle on the outside and inside. Olives and the oil pressed from them were important.
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alb9907672 Antonio Maria Esquivel Suarez de Urbina (1806-1857). Spanish painter. Ventura de la Vega reading a play at the Teatro del Príncipe (Theatre of the Prince), 1846. From left to right (seats): Actress and lyric singer Teodora Lamadrid (1820-1896), actor Julián Romea Yanguas (1818-1868, actress Matilde Díez (1818-1883). Behind her (standing), the actress Josefa Valero (1820-1850), the actor Manuel Osorio Romero (1827-1890), the actress Jerónima Llorente (1815-1848) and the actor Joaquín Arjona (1817-1875). Oil on canvas, 147 x 209,5 cm. Detail. Prado Museum. Madrid. Spain.
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akg6082696 History / Germany / Jews /. Time after war. Third musical event of the Jewish Community Berlin on 24.2.1951 on the occasion of the first meeting of the Central Council of Jews in Berlin:. "Everything from Everything", Leo Stein. Group portrait (from left to right): Heinz Galinski (1912-1992), Norbert Wollheim (1913-1998), Ernst Deutsch (1890-1969) in conversation. Photo, February 24, 1951 (Abraham Pisarek). Copyright: For editorial use only.
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akg6081037 History / Germany / Jews /. Time after war. Third musical event of the Jewish Community Berlin on 24.2.1951 on the occasion of the first meeting of the Central Council of Jews in Berlin:. "Everything from Everything", Leo Stein. Group portrait (left to right) Leo Stein, Annemarie Hase (1900-1971), Willy Prager (1877-1956), Ernst Deutsch (1890-1969). Photo, February 24, 1951 (Abraham Pisarek). Copyright: For editorial use only.
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akg6081943 History / Germany / Jews /. Time after war. Third musical event of the Jewish Community Berlin on 24.2.1951 on the occasion of the first meeting of the Central Council of Jews in Berlin:. "Everything from Everything", Leo Stein. Group portrait (left to right) Willy Prager (1877-1956), Ernst Deutsch (1890-1969) and his wife Anuschka Deutsch (born Fuchs, 1895-1984). Photo, February 24, 1951 (Abraham Pisarek). Copyright: For editorial use only.
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akg6083092 History / Germany / Jews /. Time after war. Third musical event of the Jewish Community Berlin on 24.2.1951 on the occasion of the first meeting of the Central Council of Jews in Berlin:. "Everything from Everything", Leo Stein. Group picture (from left to right): Walter Gross (1904-1989), Leo Stein, Eva Maria Duske. Photo, February 24, 1951 (Abraham Pisarek). Copyright: For editorial use only.
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akg5711974 Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, 1749-1832. Works: Clavigo (Tragedy, 1774). Performance Schauspielhaus Düsseldorf, 22.11.1958, Director: Willi Schmidt (1910-1994). Scene with (from left to right): Martin Benrath (1926-2000), Eva Böttcher (1928-2011), Wolfgang Jarnach (1914-1970), Werner Dahms (1920-1999), Wolfgang Arps (1926-2001) and Ingrid Ernest (1933-1975). Photo, 1958 (Jürgen Theis). Copyright: Additional copyrights must be cleared.
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akg446001 History / Germany / Nazi Germany. Jüdische Kulturbund Berlin. Cultural Federation of German Jews, established in 1933. It hired over 1300 men and 700 women artists, musicians, and actors fired from German institutions and grew to about 70,000 members. Scene from the cabaret "Gemischtes Kompott" with from left to right:. Fritz Grünne, Max Ehrlich, Dolly Salkind and Steffi Rosenbaum, produced by Max Ehrlich and Willy Rosen. Photo, October 1938 by Abraham Pisarek.
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alb3601755 Commode à vantaux. Culture: German, Neuwied am Rhein. Decorator: Stencil drawings and stamp-cutting of marquetry Elie Gervais (1721-1791) and his workshop. Designer: Designs for figural marquetry by Januarius Zick (German, Munich before 1730-1797 Ehrenbreitstein). Dimensions: 35 1/4 x 53 1/2 x 27 1/4 in. (89.5 x 135.9 x 69.2cm). Maker: David Roentgen (German, Herrnhaag 1743-1807 Wiesbaden, master 1780); Frieze mounts attributed to Pierre Rémond (French, Paris 1747-1812 Paris). Date: ca. 1775-79 with later alterations.This important Roentgen commode, as well as another example in the Victoria and Albert Museum, London (W 51-1948), both have an illustrious provenance. Their histories may have begun in the royal apartments at Versailles. During the nineteenth century this example now at the Metropolitan Museum belonged to Baron Mayer de Rothschild, a member of the distinguished banking and art-collecting family, who kept it at Mentmore Towers, his palatial and splendidly appointed residence in Buckinghamshire. In 1964 it went under the hammer in London and fetched the highest price ever paid at auction for a piece of furniture, attracting tremendous media attention.[1]The New York and London commodes are related closely to each other and to the latter's nearly identical counterpart at the Bayerisches Nationalmuseum in Munich, with which it once formed a pair in the collection of the grand duke of Sachsen-Weimar.[2] All three pieces are so-called commodes à vantaux, which means they have three doors concealing interior drawers; however, they all include a shelf compartment, rather than drawers, behind the central door, which transforms the type into a combination of the commode à vantaux and a variation called commode en bas d'armoire.[3]All three commodes have six feet. The feet of the New York commode, however, represent a unique departure in Roentgen's oeuvre. Although the four outside feet are square as usual, the two front middle feet are trapezoidal and decorated with mounts on the three visible sides, lending an extra element of luxury. The fronts of the commodes are divided into three vertical sections, and the frieze contains a single drawer that runs the full width of each piece. The sides and the three front door panels are decorated with marquetry: the former show musicians--woodwind and stringed-instrument players--and the center panel on the front shows a scene of actors on a stage. In several ways, the marquetry of the New York commode differs from its two counterparts. It probably originally resembled the others closely, but major alterations were undertaken at some point after the French Revolution, when the taste of the ancient régime fell into disrepute. The absorbing story of how the New York commode was changed can be found in an appendix by Mechthild Baumeister in this volume. Suffice it here to mention four major differences: First, the two lateral doors on the front of the Metropolitan's commode show two empty stages, whereas those doors on the London and Munich commodes display theater boxes filled with people watching the performance taking place in the scene on the central door. Second, the panels on the sides of all three pieces are the same, but those on the New York commode are reversed, with the woodwind players on the proper right side. Third, the frieze mounts on the New York commode are replacements of mounts similar to their counterparts and by another hand. The mounts on the feet and stiles are also different. Fourth, the original blue-gray marble tops preserved on the London and Munich commodes have been replaced on the Metropolitan's by a red brocatelle marble slab. [4]Inside the three commodes, the layout is similar, but the hidden mechanisms in the London and Munich examples are more sophisticated. The large frieze drawer, the doors, and the top interior drawers of the latter are opened by different actions of a single key in one keyhole, which is concealed by an ormolu rosette on the frieze drawer when not in use. The mechanism is weight- and spring-driven. On either side of the interior of the three commodes, the upper drawer can be swung sideways to access hidden compartments with secret drawers. The top of the front compartment lifts up on the London commode; it is covered with a tambour on the New York commode, giving access to a well.The finest mounts on the London commode are Paris-made; Neuwied examples are used in less-prominent places. The duotone gilding and surface chasing of the box-tie handles on the drawers are of the highest level that the workshop of François Rémond produced. The similarly delicate frieze mounts were replaced on the New York commode with a bold scrolling ornament, probably the work of the Paris bronze caster Étienne Martincourt.Januarius Zick, who frequently worked for David Roentgen, certainly designed the marquetry scenes on the front of the commodes as well as the ones on the sides, and undoubtedly Roentgen's engraver Elie Gervais produced the line drawings for the marquetry cutters to work from. The central scene on the front features well-known characters from the Italian theatrical tradition known as the commedia dell'arte, which enjoyed a revival during the second half of the eighteenth century. Pictured are the clever servant Harlequin at right, his sweetheart, the lady's maid, Columbine, in a flower-decorated straw hat on the left, and the aged Anselmo with a tricorne and walking stick in the center.[5] The scenes on the sides of the three commodes depict two musician in an airy room with an arched casement window: on one panel, a violinist and a cellist share a trestle stand with two sheets of music on it as they play. Brass horns hang on the wall. In the other panel, two woodwind players rest at a table. On the wall behind them are two oboes, and a bassoon leans against the music stand on which sheets of music are propped.The New York commode is branded twice on the uprights of its paneled back with a double V beneath a crown, which is the inventory mark of Versailles. Although it is uncertain that the back panel is original to the piece, it is not impossible that the commode originated in the private apartments of Louis XVI. Indeed, records of the king's expenditures mention the payment of 2,400 livres on April 11, 1779, "to the Germans for a big commode."[6] But in an inventory of 1792, the scenes on the sides of that same commode are said to depict Astronomy and the Arts, rather than musicians.[7] This may represent a misunderstanding on the part of an inventory taker who did not recognize the oboes as musical instruments and thought the bassoon was a telescope. Moreover, the inventory was almost certainly made in a hurry, for the furniture was to be removed from Versailles and sold in Paris for cash to support the Revolution. Specific woods, including their coloration, and small chased ornaments mentioned in the inventory are found on the New York commode and not the other two, yet it is surprising that no mention is made of the commedia dell'arte scene. Another inventory of Versailles furnishings, made in 1793, that documents a smaller commode owned by the comtesse d'Artois, the sister-in-law of Louis XVI, does mention the commedia dell'arte scene.[8] But the measurements given in the inventories for the two commodes make Louis XVI's slightly larger example a better match with the New York commode.[Wolfram Koeppe 2012]Footnotes:[1] On the Rothschilds, see Georg Heuberger, ed. The Rothschilds. 2 vols. Exh. cat. Jewish Museum, Frankfurt; 1994-95. Sigmaringen, 1994. [Published in German as Die Rothschilds. Sigmaringen, 1994.] On the commode while it was at Mentmore, see Mentmore. 2 vols. Edinburgh, 1884, vol. 2, p. 187, no. 10, where it is described as in an upstairs gallery and as by David de Luneville (David Roentgen) and the Parisian mount maker Pierre Gouthière. Jack and Belle Linsky purchased the commode in 1964 for 63,000 pounds sterling ($176,000).[2] According to Hans Huth, the commode now in the Victoria and Albert Museum, London, and the very similar example now in the Bayerisches Nationalmuseum, Munich, were owned as a pair by the Grand Duke of Sachsen-Weimar; Hans Huth. Roentgen Furniture: Abraham and David Roentgen, European Cabinet-Makers. London, 1974, p. 46 [Also published in German as Abraham und David Roentgen und ihre Newuwieder Möbelwerkstatt. Munich, 1974]. See also Hans Huth. Abraham und David Roentgen und ihre Neuwieder Möbelwerkstatt. Deutscher Verein für Kunstwissenschaft. Berlin, 1928, p. 66, commentary on plate 40. One of the two was offered in the Sachsen-Weimar sale (Sotheby's, London, June 10, 1932, lot 136), and the photographs reproduced in the accompanying catalogue are undoubtedly of the commode now at the Bayerisches Nationalmuseum. An annotated copy of the sale catalogue (archives of Sotheby's London), however, clearly states that Lady Eckstein purchased the piece, which since 1948 has been in the collection of the Victoria and Albert Museum. Both museums believe that their commode is the one bought at that sale. A label preserved on the underside of the marble top of the London commode, "Weimar R Schloss 21," and a pencil inscription also on the underside of the marble, "Weimar 20," clearly refer to its Weimar provenance. Recent research by Dr. Gert-Dieter Ulferts and Christian Pönitz of the Klassik Stiftung Weimar did not reveal any further information about the history of the London and Munich commodes before the 1920s. In an e-mail of June 21, 2012, to Wolfram Koeppe, Gert-Dieter Ulferts mentioned that the label text and pencil inscription on the underside of the marble top of the London commode most likely refer to an inventory of the furniture in the Weimar residence (Residenzschloss Weimar) possibly made by the Hofmarschallamt in the 1920s and that the numbers 20 and 21 do not relate to a specific room in the castle. On the Bayerisches Nationalmuseum commode's provenance, see Georg Himmelheber. "Roentgenmöbel in Münchner Museen. XI. Kommode, um 1779, Bayerisches Nationalmuseum." Weltkunst 61, no. 20 (October 15, 1991), pp. 3012-15.[3] Henry Havard. Dictionnaire de l'ameublement et de la décoration depuis le XVIIIe siècle jusqu'à nos jours. 4 vols. Paris, 1887-90, vol. 1, pl. 54, col. 937; John Fleming and Hugh Honour. The Penguin Dictionary of Decorative Arts. New ed. London and New York, 1989, p. 210.[4] In an e-mail of May 7, 2012, to Wolfram Koeppe, Ferdinand Heinz said that in David Roentgen's time, the blue-gray marble called bleu turquin was also known as bardiglio di Carrara. He added that the quarries of true bardiglio marble are located in the Apuan Alps, at a few locations north and east of the town of Carrara, in Tuscany. Koeppe has suggested elsewhere that the bleu turquin slabs on the London and Munich commodes came from a quarry near Leun on the Lahn River, not far from Neuwied, which belonged to the counts of Wied or their relatives; see Wolfram Koeppe in Daniëlle Kisluk-Grosheide, Wolfram Koeppe, and William Rieder. European Furniture in The Metropolitan Museum of Art: Highlights of the Collection. New York, 2006, p. 181. Only a mineralogical analysis of the slabs will tell us exactly where the marble originated. The slab of red brocatelle marble on the New York commode comes from a Catalonian quarry near Tortosa; see Harald Mielsch. Buntmarmore aus Rom im Antikenmuseum Berlin. Staatliche Musseen Preussischer Kulturbesitz, Berlin, 1985, p. 42, pl. 5, nos. 165, 167.[5] For a summary of the subject as treated in eighteenth-century decorative arts, see Meredith Chilton. Harlequin Unmasked: The Commedia dell'Arte and Porcelain Sculpture. George R. Gardiner Museum of Ceramic Art, Toronto. New Haven, 2001, and see p. 150 for a discussion of Anselmo with a cocked hat and cane. For Zick see Othmar Metzger. "Januarius Zicks Entwürfe für Intarsien David Roentgens." Pantheon 39, no. 2 (April-June 1981), pp. 176-79; Josef Strasser. Januarius Zick, 1730-1797: Gemälde, Graphik, Fresken. Weissenhorn, 1994; Daniëlle O. Kisluk-Grosheide. "Versailles au Metropolitan Museum de New York." Versalia, no. 8 (2005), p. 88.[6] "aux allemands pour une grande commode L 2400"; Comte R. de Beauchamp. Comptes de Louis XVI. Paris, 1909, p. 71 (cited in Christian Baulez. "David Roentgen et François Rémond: Une collaboration majeure dans l'histoire du mobilier européen." L'estampille/L'objet d'art, no. 305 (September 1996), p. 101); Dietrich Fabian. Abraham und David Roentgen: Das noch aufgefundene Gesamtwerk ihrer Möbel- und Uhrenkunst in Verbindung mit der Uhrmacherfamilie Kinzing in Neuwied. Leben und Werk, Verzeichnis der Werke, Quellen. Bad Neustadt an der Saale, 1996, p. 347, doc. no. 2.171 [translated from the French]).[7] Following is the full text of the 1792 Versailles inventory and the English translation.Une Commode mechanique en bois de Placage dites des allemants la ditte Commode ouvrante a trois Vanteaux par Différent Mouvement le dedans Composé D'un Mechanisme particulier dont le Roi a la clef [.] lextérieur [sic] de la commode plaque a tableaux de bois fond Satiné et ombré Sur les trois faces deux Medaillons et Un tableau Sur le devant 1 tableau de chaque côtée Representant, l'astronomie et arts en figures de bois de Rapports ombrés au feu, les champs des paneaux en bois Satiné Vert Ceux des pieds et pilastres en bois Rose, les pieds a guaisnes Carré le tout orné de bronze Savoir les frises pilastres et les corp des pieds a tables Saillantes dans les frises Renfoncé et ciselés dans les pilastres avec de petits ornements Saillants Ciselés les Medaillons du devant Entouré d'un cadre a perles les portants de tiroirs en paquets de lauriers le tout De bronze doré or Moulüe et Moulures Idem Canelures etc, le Marbre du dessus en bleu turquin; 4 pieds 2 pouces de large 25 pouces de profondeur et 2 pieds 9 pouces de haut, Marbre Compris. (A mechanical commode veneered said from the Germans the said commode opening with three doors by different movements the interior composed of a special mechanism for which the king has the key [.] The exterior of the commode veneered with [marquetry] panels of bois satiné ground and shaded on the three sides two medallions and one [marquetry] panel on the front 1 [marquetry] panel on each side representing, Astronomy and the Arts, figures in various pieces of wood shaded by burning, the fields of the panels in green bois satiné. Those of the feet and pilasters in tulipwood, the square tapering feet the whole decorated with bronze to wit the friezes pilasters and the body of the feet with plates projecting in the friezes recessed and chased in the pilasters with small chased ornaments in relief of the medallions on the front surrounded with a beaded frame the handles of the drawers in sprays of laurel the whole of gilt-bronze ormolu and moldings idem fluting etc, the marble top bleu turquin; 4 pieds 2 pouces wide 25 pouces deep and 2 pieds 9 pouces high, marble included).Archives Nationales, Paris, O1 3426, Versailles, Recépissés des Meubles envoyés à Paris, Le 5. Jer. [janvier] 1792. The passage is also cited, in updated French in Christian Baulez. "David Roentgen et François Rémond: Une collaboration majeure dans l'histoire du mobilier européen." L'estampille/L'objet d'art, no. 305 (September 1996), pp. 101-2, and Daniëlle O. Kisluk-Grosheide. "Versailles au Metropolitan Museum de New York." Versalia, no. 8 (2005), p. 87. We thank Ulrich Leben and Bertrand Rondot for photographing and assisting us in interpreting the original text.[8] Following is the English translation of the 1793 Versailles inventory quoted in Christian Baulez. "David Roentgen et François Rémond: Une collaboration majeure dans l'histoire du mobilier européen." L'estampille/L'objet d'art, no. 305 (September 1996), p. 108 and Daniëlle O. Kisluk-Grosheide. "Versailles au Metropolitan Museum de New York." Versalia, no. 8 (2005), p. 88: "a veneered commode with three doors with human figures enacting comedy scenes as well as on the sides, with three drawers in the pareclose, covered with millesraies plates, garlands forming handles and laurel leaves, the whole in matte gilt-bronze and with beaded frame, with bleu turquin marble top, 2 pieds 8 pouces high, 4 pieds wide, and 2 pieds deep (estimated) 4,000 livres."[9] Before the introduction of the metric system in 1799, French units of measurement were organized in much the same way as the British Imperial System. The pied (foot), or pied du roi (king's foot), equaled 32.48 centimeters, and the pouce (thumb, equivalent to the inch) measured 2.71 centimeters. Accordingly, the dimensions of Louis XVI's commode given in the 1792 inventory would translate to 89.35 centimeters high (including the marble top), 135.34 centimeters wide, and 67.75 centimeters deep. The dimensions of the comtesse d'Artois' commode given in the 1793 inventory would translate to 86.64 centimeters high, 129.92 centimeters wide, and 64.9 centimeters deep. The Metropolitan Museum's commode is 89.5 centimeters high, 135.9 centimeters wide, and 69.2 centers deep (including the later red brocatelle marble top), and 86.5 centimeters high, 135.6 centimeters wide, and 66.8 centimeters deep without the marble top. It should be borne in mind, however, that until 1799 no single consistent system of measures was used in France, so these calculations must be viewed with caution. Museum: Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA.
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alb5145391 Hugo Erfurth, Paul Wiecke as Hamlet, silver gelatin paper, black and white positive process, image size: height: 22.8 cm; width: 14.7 cm, signed, exposed: HUGO ERFURTH, DRESDEN, photographed, inscribed: recto: top right, exposed: PAUL WIECKE, KGL. AXIS. HOFSCHAUSPIELER, ALS HAMLET; exposed lower left: 1600, in lead: repro no, inscribed: cardboard: repro no, Stamp: cardboard o. r.: handwritten in lead added: 311, portrait photography, portrait, man, actor, actress, At the beginning of the 20th century Hugo Erfurth is one of the most famous professional photographers in Germany, next to Rudolph Dührkoop and Nicola Perscheid. After completing an apprenticeship as a photographer, he opened his own studio in Dresden at the age of only 22. Soon Erfurth orientated himself towards the up-and-coming pictorialist photography, participated in numerous amateur photographic exhibitions from 1894 onwards and managed to make a name for himself both as an artistically ennobled amateur and successful professional photographer. Portraits are central to his work, which he began taking in 1906 in his new studio, a classicist palace, in a stylishly elegant ambience, appealing to the wealthy bourgeoisie. He also produced numerous portraits of famous personalities, including Käthe Kollwitz, Otto Dix and Joachim Ringelnatz. While his studies around 1905 still show full-length figures depicted in an atmospheric way, from the 1920s onward the focus is on the face, which is photographed against a simple monochrome background. Here, his pictorial approach corresponds to the portrait of classical modernism, whereby the technique of oil printing emphasizes the softness and materiality of the pigments and at the same time places the portraits in the art-photographic tradition. Erfurth is a co-founder of the Gesellschaft Deutscher Lichtbildner (1919), teaches at the Leipzig Academy and moves from Dresden to Cologne in the 1930s, where he builds up an art collection. After his Cologne studio and.
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ado00076332 Members of the troupe "Les Branquignols", from left to right : Louis de Funes (1914-1983), Colette Brosset (1922-2007), Micheline Dax (1924-2014) and Robert Dhry (1921-2004). In 1949. Author: Maurice Zalewski.
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alb5151666 Rudolph Dührkoop, Frau Franziska Ellmenreich, heroine and societary of the Deutsches Schauspielhaus from the portfolio Hamburgische Männer und Frauen am Anfang des XX. Century, Staatliche Landesbildstelle Hamburg, Collection on the History of Photography, paper, heliogravure, picture size: Height: 21,90 cm; Width: 13,80 cm, signed: recto below the picture: Exposed signature of the sitter, inscribed: recto: engraved on printing plate, below the picture: photograph and photogravure R. Dührkoop, Hamburg, top left above picture 79; top right in the corner in lead:54, stamp: recto: handwritten addition: Inv.Nr. and reference to repro, portrait photography, full-length portrait, actor, actress, fashion, clothing, historical person, Franziska Ellmenreich, part of the portfolio Hamburgische Männer und Frauen am Anfang des XX. Jahrhunderts - Kamera Bildnisse - Photographed, etched in copper and printed by Rudolph Dührkoop Hamburg 1905.
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alb5148815 Rudolph Dührkoop, Mrs. Adéle Doré, Heroine and member of the Deutsches Schauspielhaus from the portfolio Hamburgische Männer und Frauen am Anfang des XX. Century, Staatliche Landesbildstelle Hamburg, Collection on the History of Photography, paper, heliogravure, picture size: Height: 22,60 cm; Width: 12,40 cm, signed: recto below the picture: Exposed signature of the sitter, inscribed: recto: engraved on printing plate, below the picture: photograph and photogravure R. Dührkoop, Hamburg, top left above picture 75; top right in the corner in lead:50, stamp: recto: handwritten addition: Inv.Nr. and reference to repro, portrait photography, full-length portrait, actor, actress, fashion, clothing, historical person, Adele Milan-Doré, part of the portfolio Hamburg Men and Women at the Beginning of the XXth Century - Camera Portraits - Photographed, etched in copper and printed by Rudolph Dührkoop Hamburg 1905.
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alb5147937 Hugo Erfurth, Maria Carmi, Staatliche Landesbildstelle Hamburg, collection on the history of photography, paper, oil print, image size: height: 21,2 cm; width: 15,5 cm, signed and dated: recto u. li.: in lead: Hugo Erfurth 1914, inscribed: verso on the cardboard: in lead: LBH, Erfurth, repro no, Stamp: verso and right on the cardboard: Landesbildstelle Hamburg, inscribed: verso and left on the passepartout: in lead: repro no, Measurements, Maria Carmi (1880-1957); with black felt-tip pen: Hugo Erfurth 1914, No. 311 oil print, stamp: verso passe and left: portrait photography, woman, fashion, clothing, full-length portrait, actor, actress, profile (side view), Maria Carmi, At the beginning of the 20th century, the artist's life was marked with a black felt-tip pen. At the beginning of the 20th century, Hugo Erfurth, along with Rudolph Dührkoop and Nicola Perscheid, was one of the most famous professional photographers in Germany. After completing an apprenticeship as a photographer, he opened his own studio in Dresden at the age of only 22. Soon Erfurth orientated himself towards the up-and-coming pictorialist photography, participated in numerous amateur photographic exhibitions from 1894 onwards and managed to make a name for himself both as an artistically ennobled amateur and successful professional photographer. Portraits are central to his work, which he began taking in 1906 in his new studio, a classicist palace, in a stylishly elegant ambience, appealing to the wealthy bourgeoisie. He also produced numerous portraits of famous personalities, including Käthe Kollwitz, Otto Dix and Joachim Ringelnatz. While his studies around 1905 still show full-length figures depicted in an atmospheric way, from the 1920s onward the focus is on the face, which is photographed against a simple monochrome background. Here, his pictorial approach corresponds to the portrait of classical modernism, whereby the technique of oil printing emphasizes the softness and materiality of.
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alb9567160 Roman times. From left to right: 1 to 4- tribune costumes, 5 and 6- actors. Chromolithography. "Historia Universal", by César Cantú. Volume II, 1881.
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alb9567164 Roman times. From left to right: 4- tribune costume, 5 and 6- actors. Chromolithography. "Historia Universal", by César Cantú. Volume II, 1881.
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alb2622215 Oyone magoshichi taheiji, Actors in the roles of Oyone Magoshichi and Taheiji., Utagawa, Kuniyoshi, 1798-1861, artist, [between 1848 and 1854], 1 print (2 sheets) : woodcut, color ; 36.6 x 24.2 cm (left panel), 35.9 x 23.8 cm (right panel), Print shows two warriors and a woman around a fire, one warrior appears to be protecting the woman from the other warrior.
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alb2617158 Oyone magoshichi taheiji, Actors in the roles of Oyone Magoshichi and Taheiji., Utagawa, Kuniyoshi, 1798-1861, artist, [between 1848 and 1854], 1 print (2 sheets) : woodcut, color ; 36.6 x 24.2 cm (left panel), 35.9 x 23.8 cm (right panel), Print shows two warriors and a woman around a fire, one warrior appears to be protecting the woman from the other warrior.
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alb9503153 Scenes from Kygen Theater right of a pair, mid 19th century, Fukushima Chikaharu, Japanese, 1811 - 1882, 63 1/8 × 136 1/2 in. (160.34 × 346.71 cm) (image)64 1/2 × 138 × 3/4 in. (163.83 × 350.52 × 1.91 cm) (outer frame), Ink, color, and silver foil on paper, Japan, 19th century, In this pair of screens, Kygen actors perform two comic plays. The left screen depicts a scene from Fuku no kami ('God of Good Luck') during which the god, shown in red at the left, descends to earth for a night of frolicking at New Year's. The right screen portrays a scene from the skit Suehirogari ('The Fan of Felicity'), in which the young country bumpkin and servant Tar-kaja, shown at the left, holds the umbrella he has been tricked into buying instead of the fan his master requested. The four men in a row provide the musical accompaniment of drums.
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alb9495522 Four actors under cherry blossom, Four actors under a blossoming cherry tree. From left to right: Kataoka Gadô II in the role of Hikaru Uji attacking Tasogare, played by Nakamura Keishi (Tomijûrô II). Actor Onoe Baikô (Kikugorô III) in the role of Shinonome with hat in front of face and Nakamura Shikan III in the role of Kiyonosuke, sitting on a porch. Scene from the play 'Inakagenji yûgao no maki'. Four-panel., print maker: Sadanobu (I) , Hasegawa, (mentioned on object), publisher: Kinkado Tenki, (mentioned on object), print maker: Kumazô, Osaka, c. Mar-1841, paper, color woodcut, height 375 mm × height 985 mm.
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alb9498879 Noh costume with geometric pattern for the role of Okina, 19th century, Unknown Japanese, 63 x 81 7/16 in. (160.02 x 206.85 cm), Twill-weave silk with supplementary weft patterning, Japan, 19th century, Kariginu, literally 'hunting robe' was originally an informal jacket worn by noblemen during Japan's Heian era (794-1185). Later, elite warriors donned kariginu as their most formal garment. Since warrior-patrons expressed their appreciation for fine performances by presenting actors with articles from their own lavish wardrobes, it is likely that the first kariginu used on stage were originally worn by samurai-aristocrats. This robe is decorated with an overall pattern of octagons connected by smaller squares to the left, right, top, and bottom, a design the Japanese call 'shokk' (Shuchiang in Chinese), after a style favored in neighboring China during the Ming dynasty. Kariginu with the shokkpattern are reserved for the most lofty of all N roles, that of the god-like Okina (divine old man) whose felicitous dance bestows happiness and prosperity on the community.
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alb9460352 Scenes from Kygen Theater left of a pair, mid 19th century, Fukushima Chikaharu, Japanese, 1811 - 1882, 63 1/2 × 137 1/2 in. (161.29 × 349.25 cm) (image)65 × 139 × 3/4 in. (165.1 × 353.06 × 1.91 cm) (outer frame), Ink, color, and silver foil on paper, Japan, 19th century, In this pair of screens, Kygen actors perform two comic plays. The left screen depicts a scene from Fuku no kami ('God of Good Luck') during which the god, shown in red at the left, descends to earth for a night of frolicking at New Year's. The right screen portrays a scene from the skit Suehirogari ('The Fan of Felicity'), in which the young country bumpkin and servant Tar-kaja, shown at the left, holds the umbrella he has been tricked into buying instead of the fan his master requested. The four men in a row provide the musical accompaniment of drums.
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alb9457570 Commemorative plaque on the occasion of the 100th anniversary of the Rotterdamse Schouwburg on the Coolsingel, December 28, 1874. Below left the old original building from 1774, right the renovated building in 1874. Above medallions with portraits of three actors Ward Bingley, Andreas Snoek and Johanna Wattier. Below symbols of the theatrical arts and a two-line verse, Commemorative plaque to the 100th anniversary of the Rotterdam Theatre, 1774-1874, print maker: anonymous, Johannes Jacobus Franciscus Wap, (mentioned on object), printer: Samuel Lankhout, (mentioned on object), print maker: Netherlands, Netherlands, printer: The Hague, publisher: Netherlands, 1874, paper, h 226 mm × w 157 mm.
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alb9423863 Four actors at an autumn flower exhibition, Four-panel painting showing on each leaf an actor near a wooden fence, behind which is an exhibition of autumn flowers. From left to right: Nakamura Karoku I in the role of Ushiwakamaru, Mimasu Gennosuke I as servant Chienai, Nakamura Tamasuke I (Utaemon III) as Kiichi Hôgen and Nakamura Tomijûrô II as Minazuru-hime, in the play 'Kiichi Hôgen sanryaku no maki,' performed at the Naka Theater, in the ninth month of 1837., print maker: Sadamasu (II) , Utagawa, (mentioned on object), publisher: Tenmaya Kihei, (mentioned on object), Kumazô, (mentioned on object), Osaka, Sep-1837, paper, color woodcut, height 377 mm × width 1027 mm.
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alb9411245 Man with chrysanthemum seated in pine tree, A Chinese man, seated on the jagged trunk of a pine tree, holds a chrysanthemum in his right hand. The print refers to the actor Onoe Shoroku I (Matsusuke I). The text is by his adopted son Onoe Kikugorô III (Baikô III). The first words read: This year is the 27th Buddhist Memorial Day of my late father Shôroku. Kikugorô further writes that the commemoration will take place during his temporary stay in Naniwa, or the Osaka-Kyoto region. This refers to his stay from the eleventh month in 1840 to the first moon in 1842. To the left of the text is a poem. The chrysanthemum refers to the actor Kikugorô III, who in the Ônishi Theater in the 9th month of 1841 paid special attention to the 27th death anniversary commemoration of Shôroku (ref. Kabuki Nenpyô volume 6, p. 430)., print maker: Ryûsai Shigeharu, (mentioned on object), publisher: Tenmaya Kihei, (mentioned on object), Osaka, 1841, paper, color woodcut, height 48.2 mm × width 21.2 mm.
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akg8556998 Alexander Osang, journalist, writer, Germany, premiere of the television film "Die Nachrichten" at Kino International, based on the novel by Alexander Osang. The participants after the premiere: from left to right Director Matti Geschonneck, producer Dietrich Kluge (?), Screenwriter Alexander Osang and the actors Dagmar Manzel, Christina Schorn, Hermann Beyer, Uwe Kokisch, Jan Josef Liefers. Berlin, September 25, 2005.
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akg8556997 Alexander Osang, journalist, writer, Germany, premiere of the television film "Die Nachrichten" at Kino International, based on the novel by Alexander Osang. The participants after the premiere: from left to right Director Matti Geschonneck, producer Dietrich Kluge (?), Screenwriter Alexander Osang and the actors Dagmar Manzel, Christina Schorn, Hermann Beyer, Uwe Kokisch, Jan Josef Liefers. Berlin, September 25, 2005.
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akg8556995 Alexander Osang, journalist, writer, Germany, premiere of the television film "Die Nachrichten" at Kino International, based on the novel by Alexander Osang. The participants after the premiere: from left to right Producer Dietrich Kluge (?), Screenwriter Alexander Osang and the actors Dagmar Manzel, Christina Schorn, Hermann Beyer, Uwe Kokisch, Jan Josef Liefers. Berlin, September 25, 2005.
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akg8556996 Alexander Osang, journalist, writer, Germany, premiere of the television film "Die Nachrichten" at Kino International, based on the novel by Alexander Osang. The participants after the premiere: from left to right Director Matti Geschonneck, producer Dietrich Kluge (?), Screenwriter Alexander Osang and the actors Dagmar Manzel, Christina Schorn, Hermann Beyer, Uwe Kokisch, Jan Josef Liefers. Berlin, September 25, 2005.
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akg8360546 Otto Sander (* June 30, 1941 - September 12, 2013), actor, Germany, with Ulrich Wickert in the Paris bar in Kantstrasse. From left to right Julia Jäckel, Ulrich Wickert, N.N., Otto Sander. Berlin, April 6, 2001.
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alb4152811 A Box at the Kabuki Theater, from the illustrated book "Guide to the Actors' Dressing Rooms (Yakusha gakuya tsu)". Kitagawa Utamaro ??? ??; Japanese, 1753 (?)-1806. Date: 1799. Dimensions: 19.5 x 24.1 cm (left sheet); 16.4 x 22.4 cm (right sheet). Color woodblock print; double-page illustration from book. Origin: Japan. Museum: The Chicago Art Institute, Chicago, USA.
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alb4152026 The Actors Nakajima Mihoemon II as Aramaki Mimishiro (right), Matsumoto Koshiro II as Otomo no Yamanushi (center), and Ichikawa Danzo III as Hannya no Goro (left), in the Play Kuni no Hana Ono no Itsumoji, Performed at the Nakamura Theater in the Eleventh Month, 1771. Katsukawa Shunsho ?? ??; Japanese, 1726-1792. Date: 1767-1777. Dimensions: 17.1 x 27.2 cm (6 3/4 x 10 11/16 in.). Color woodblock print; from the illustrated book Yakusha Kuni no Hana (Prominent Actors of Japan). Origin: Japan. Museum: The Chicago Art Institute, Chicago, USA.
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alb4152018 The Actors Ichikawa Yaozo II as Kujaku no Saburo, Matsumoto Koshiro II as Hata no Daizen Taketora, Nakajima Mihoemon II as Aramaki Mimishiro, and Nakamura Shocho I as Ki no Tsurayuki (right to left), in the Play Kuni no Hana Ono no Itsumoji, Performed at the Nakamura Theater in the Eleventh Month, 1771. Katsukawa Shunsho ?? ??; Japanese, 1726-1792. Date: 1767-1777. Dimensions: 17.2 x 27.2 cm (6 3/4 x 10 11/16 in.). Color woodblock print; from the illustrated book Yakusha Kuni no Hana (Prominent Actors of Japan). Origin: Japan. Museum: The Chicago Art Institute, Chicago, USA.
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alb4152071 The Actors Nakamura Nakazo I as Omi no Kotoda (right), and Otani Hiroji III as Bamba no Chuda (left), in the Joruri "Sono Chidori Yowa no Kamisuki" (The Plovers: Combing Hair at Midnight), from Part Two of the Play O-atsurae-zome Soga no Hinagata (A Soga Pattern Dyed to Order), Performed at the Nakamura Theater from the Tenth Day of the Third Month, 1774. Katsukawa Shunsho ?? ??; Japanese, 1726-1792. Date: 1769-1779. Dimensions: Each sheet approx. 28.2 x 13.3 cm (11 1/8 x 5 1/4 in.). Color woodblock print; hosoban diptych. Origin: Japan. Museum: The Chicago Art Institute, Chicago, USA.
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alb4151964 The Actors Otani Hiroji III as Yokambei (right), Nakamura Tomijuro I as Kuzunoha (center), and Bando Mitsugoro I as Yakambei (left), in the Last Scene from the Play Shinodazuma (The Wife from Shinoda Forest), Performed as a Supplement to the Play Kikyo-zome Onna Urakata (Female Diviner in Deep Violet), at the Morita Theater from the Ninth Day of the Ninth Month, 1776. Katsukawa Shunsho ?? ??; Japanese, 1726-1792. Date: 1771-1781. Dimensions: 31.1 x 14.6 cm (12 1/4 x 5 3/4 in.) (right); 31.3 x 14.9 cm (12 5/16 x 5 7/8 in.) (center); 31.1 x 14.3 cm (12 1/4 x 5 5/8 in.) (left). Color woodblock print; hosoban; triptych. Origin: Japan. Museum: The Chicago Art Institute, Chicago, USA.
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alb4151826 The Actors Ichikawa Monnosuke II as Karigane Bunshichi, Bando Mitsugoro I as An no Heibei, Ichikawa Danjuro V as Gokuin Sen'emon, Nakamura Sukegoro II as Kaminari Shokuro, and Sakata Hangoro II as Hotei Ichiemon (right to left), in "Gonin Otoko" (Five Chivalrous Commoners), an Interlude in Part Two of the Play Hatsumombi Kuruwa Soga (A Soga Drama on the First Festival Day in the Pleasure District), Performed at the Nakamura Theater from the First Day of the Second Month, 1780. Katsukawa Shunsho ?? ??; Japanese, 1726-1792. Date: 1775-1785. Dimensions: 31.3 x 14.5 cm (12 5/16 x 5 3/4 in.); 31.3 x 14.1 cm (12 5/16 x 5 9/16 in.); 31.3 x 14.5 cm (12 5/16 x 5 3/4 in.); 31.3 x 14.8 cm (12 5/16 x 5 13/16); 31.3 x 14.1 cm (12 5/16 x 5 9/16 in.) (right to left). Color woodblock print; hosoban; pentaptych. Origin: Japan. Museum: The Chicago Art Institute, Chicago, USA.
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alb4152314 The Actors Bando Zenji I as Nagahashi Saburo, Iwai Hanshiro IV as Otatsu-gitsune, Nakamura Konozo as Hagai Ujitsune, and an Unidentified Actor (right to left), in the Play Nue no Mori Ichiyo no Mato, Performed at the Nakamura Theater in the Eleventh Month, 1770. Katsukawa Shunsho ?? ??; Japanese, 1726-1792. Date: 1767-1777. Dimensions: 17.6 x 27.7 cm (6 15/16 x 10 7/8 in.). Color woodblock print; from the illustrated book Yakusha Kuni no Hana (Prominent Actors of Japan). Origin: Japan. Museum: The Chicago Art Institute, Chicago, USA.
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alb4152377 The Actors Iwai Hanshiro IV as Otatsu-gitsune, Nakamura Nakazo I as Raigo Ajari, Sakata Tojuro III as Kamada Gon-no-kami Masayori, and Ichikawa Yaozo II as Sakon-gitsune (right to left), in the play "Nue no Mori Ichiyo no Mato," performed at the Nakamura Theater in the eleventh month, 1770. Katsukawa Shunsho ?? ??; Japanese, 1726-1792. Date: 1767-1777. Dimensions: 17.6 x 27.7 cm (6 15/16 x 10 7/8 in.). Color woodblock print; page from the illustrated book "Yakusha Kuni no Hana". Origin: Japan. Museum: The Chicago Art Institute, Chicago, USA.
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akg8276099 Berlin, press conference of the "Rock against right-wing violence" initiative, from left to right Actors Ben Becker, Wolfgang Thierse (President of the Bundestag, SPD), singer Udo Lindenberg and cabaret artist Ingo Appelt. Berlin, October 20, 2001.
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ado00048319 From left to right: Jean Renoir, Jacques Becker, Ingrid Bergman and Roberto Rossellini. Ca. 1950. Author: Georges Dudognon.
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ado00015442 Jacques Copeau studying a play with the actors of his troupe of the Vieux-Colombier theatre. From left to right: Charles Dullin, Jacques Copeau, A. Tollier, Blanche Albane, G. Roche, Jane Lary, Suzanne Bing, Louis Jouvet, Roger Karl and A. Karifa. Ca. 1915. Author: Unknown photographer.
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ado00060473 During the first adaptation of '"Exercices de Style" by Raymond Queneau at the cabaret La Rose Rouge in Saint-Germain-des-Prs in Paris (France). In 1949. From left to right : Francis Lemarque, Olivier Hussenot, Claude Dauphin, Francis Blanche and Pierre Dac. Author: Georges Dudognon.
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ado00085101 Representation of the play "Le dner de ttes" by Jacques Prvert at the cabaret "La Fontaine des Quatre-Saisons" in Paris (France). In the third row from left to right : Jean Renoir, Daniel Glin, Charlie Chaplin, Oona Chaplin, Dido Renoir, Simone Signoret and Yves Montand. In 1951. Author: Georges Dudognon.
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ado00104185 The jury of the Simon Dramatic Art Course in Paris (France) in 1949. Below, from left to right : Jean-Jacques Bernard, Henri Jeanson, Ren Simon, Marcel Achard, Marc Allgret, Jean-Jacques Gautier, Franois Perrier and Jacques Dumesnil. Author: Georges Dudognon.
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ado00104186 The jury of the Simon Dramatic Art Course in Paris (France) in 1949. Below, from left to right : Jacques Berthon, Jean-Jacques Bernard, Henri Jeanson, Ren Simon, Marcel Achard, Marc Allgret, Jean-Jacques Gautier, Franois Perrier, Jacques Dumesnil, Julien Bertheau and Georges Lacombe. Author: Georges Dudognon.
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alb3511055 Album of Thirty-Two Triptychs of Polychrome Woodblock Prints by Various Artists, Meiji period (1868–1912), 1883–86, Japan, Album of thirty-two triptychs of polychrome woodblock prints; ink and color on paper, Each, H. 14 in. (35.6 cm); W., 9 1/4 in. (23.5 cm), Prints, Toyohara Kunichika (Japanese, 1835–1900), print 2 by Morikawa Chikashige (Japanese, second half of 19th century), prints 13,17,18,20,26,29 by Yoshu (Hashimoto) Chikanobu (Japanese, 1838–1912), prints 25,27,31,32 by Kunimasa (Japanese), print 28 by Hiroaki (Japanese, 1871–1945), Triptych 1: Kunichika Toyohara. Japanese, 1835–1900; Actors Onoe Kikugoro V as Mikawaya Giheiji, Ichikawa Danjuro IX as Danshichi Kurobei, and Ichikawa Sadanji I as Issun Tokubei in The Summer Festival at Naniwa (Natsumatsuri Naniwa Kagami) ?????? ? Triptych 2: Morikawa Chikashige, Japanese, active second half of the 19th century; Actor Ichikawa Danjuro IX as Mongaku Shonin in The Austerities of Mongaku (Hashikuyo Bonji no Mongaku [???????]) “(From right to left) Kongara Doshi: Suketakaya Takasuke IV, Fudo no Reizou: Ichikawa Danjuro IX, and Nakamura Shikan IV: Seitaka Doshi” Triptych 3: Kunichika Toyohara.
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alb1508457 Charles Dickens, from a recent daguerreotype by Mayall, 1 December, 1855. Memoir of Charles Dickens. The lives of men of genius when happy, are ordinarily uneventful. It may, perhaps, be one of the reaspms for the paucity of materials available for the life of him who was "not for an age but for all time," that our Shakespeare went through life a prosperous gentlemen, that he had shares, and rents, and messages, and tenements, and that he died at last in affluence, in his bed, in his own house, near the pleasant town he loved so well. But the most moving and most copious literary memoirs are merely records of miseries. The blindness of Milton, the weary life-struggle of Dryden, the deformity of Pope, the persecution of Defoe, and the melancholy of Swift; the stern woe of Dante, the heart-sickness of Petrarch, the despair of Butler; Tasso's fetters, Cervantes' neglect, Camoens' hospital pallet, Guilbert's starvation, and Chatterton's suicide; all these are bold and jutting headlands in the seascape of life - stern and rugged rocks, all beaten by the tempests of time, and seamed and furrowed by the salt waters of sorrow. These the painter can seize and transfer to canvas, giving force and variety to his picture. He can paint the surging billows and the angry sky; but what scope has he for display when the sea is smooth as glass, calm as a good man's bossom, when the bark glides placidly along, when the log of the mariner may be summed up in two words: Genius or Success?. These two words are really the summary of the career of the famous writer whose portrait graces our page. There are no moving accidents by flood or field in his life to tell; his life has been one of uniform industry and prosperity. Yet, as our readers must naturally be anxious to learn even the minutest particulars concerning one who possesses such remarkable talents, and has occupied for so long so conspicuous a position in society, we will proceed, to the best of our ability, to tell how Mr. Dickens won that fame he preserves so staunchly and wears so gently.. Charles Dickens was born in February, 1812, at Landport, Portsmouth. His father, Mr. John Dickensm, had been, in the earlier part of his life, a clerk in the Navy Pay department, and his duties rendered it necessary that he should make frequent changes of residence from one naval dockyard to another - moving from Portsmouth to Plymouth, and from Portsmouth again to Sheerness and Chatham. The future novelist received his education in a school in or near Rochester; and it is to his youthful peregrinations in the county of Kent, and his Kentish schoolboy experiences, that we may ascribe much of the minute knowledge he displays in his writings on the topography and scenery of the county of "hops, apples, and pretty girls," and of the fondness he evinces for recurrence to Kentish scenes and Kentish people. "On revient toujours à ses premières amours." The memorable equestrian expedition of Mr. Pickwick (as noteworthy, surely, as the expedition of "Humphrey Clinker") started from the Mitre, at Rochester; Dingley Dell was near Cobham; the catastrophe of the Tubbs family took place ar Ramsgate; it was in the Theatre Royal, Portsmouth, that Nicholas Nickleby played Romeo to poor Smike's Apothecary; it was to Dover, through Rochester, Chatham, and Maidstone, that little David Copperfield travelled, weary and footsore, to his aunt Trotwood; it was at Canterbury he went to school to Doctor Strong; and, finally, it was in the keeping room of Master Richard Watt's charity, at Rochester, that the "seven poor travellers," "not being rogues or proctors," told their Christmas stories.. We have no means of judging how far, or to what age, the scholastic curriculum of Charles Dickens extended. We learn, however, that at the peace, Mr. John Dickens retired, with a pension, from the Government service, and, removing to London, found lucrative employment for his talents, as a reporter for the public press. It is therefore probable that his son completed his education in the metropolis. The fact of his father being a newspaper reporter, would, it has been somewhat flippantly remarked, have "familiarised him with 'copy'" from an early age; yet such implied familiarity did not, on his entrance into authorship, exempt him from the delightful tremour, that anguish of delight, incidental to all tyros in printers' ink, and that moved him, as he himself graphically describes, after reading in a magazine his first effusion, "dropped stealthily one evening at twilight, with fear and trembling, into a dark letter box, up a dark court in Fleet Street," to walk down to Westminster Hall, and turn into it for half an hour, because his eyes "were so dimmed with joy and pride that they could not bear the street and were not fit to be seen there.". Like many other future celebrities thrust into lawyers' dens to engross deeds instead of penning stanzas, the youthful Charles Dickens was for some time in an attorney's office. We were turning over a biographical notice of the author of "Pickwick" the other day, where, in reference to this portion of his career, it was stated that "his father took the preliminary steps to make him an attorney;" but this we think to have been no more the case than the appointment of a youth to a Clerkship in the Stamp Office is a "preliminary step" towards making him Chairman of the Board of Inland Revenue. However, in the sojourn in the domains of Themis, Charles Dickens became intimately acquainted with the mysteries of legal penetralia, and the intricacies of legal chicane, both of which he has so admirably depicted and exposed in his novels. But the literary vocation, the cacoethes scribendi, was not to be kept down by pounce and green "ferret." To use a French idiom, it "pierced," and doubtless after the irretrievable ruin of many skins of parchment and blotting of office foolscap, it asserted and made itself recognised. Charles Dickens's literary début took place, like those of Talfourd and Campbell, in the Reporters' Gallery. He became a member of the parliamentary corps of the "True Sun," an ultra liberal paper. He was subsequently one of the reporters on the "Mirror of Parliament," a journal whose avowed object was to give in extenso, word for word, all the speeches of every member of the Legislature. It was splendidly printed, produced at an enormous expense, and after a session or two fell to the ground in the true heroic style. Mr. Dickens, about 1835-6, passed to the staff of the "Morning Chronicle," and in its succursal, the "Evening Chronicle," appeared serially those delightful daguerreotypes of life and character, the "Sketches of Boz." After a lapse of twenty years' cheap literature, these "sketches" seem at the first glance to be very slight performances indeed. There is probably not a number of Mr. Dickens's own periodical, "Household Words," that does not contain an article on London life or manners, either from his own or a coadjutor's pen, possessing more thought, and observation, and graphic truth than can be found in a dozen of the "Sketches." But they were the first of their class. Dickens was the first to unite the delicately playful thread of Charles Lambe's street musings, half experiences, half bookish phantasies, with vigorous wit, and humour, and observation of Goldsmith's "Citizen of the World," his "Indigent Philosopher," and "Man in Black," and twine them together into that golden cord of essay which combines literature with philosophy, humour with morality, amusement with instruction. The Sketches by "Boz," (the pseudonym originated with one given to a pet brother, who, rechristened "Moses," in honour of the "Vicar of Wakefield," facetiously pronounced the name through the nose, "Bozes," and at last corrupted it to "Boz"), made a great sensation at the time. They were afterwards collected into one volume, with numerous etchings by George Cruikshank, then in the zenith of his fame, and were published by Mr. Macrone, of St. James's Square, a young and enterprising bookseller. We are not aware of the exact sum paid to Mr. Dickens for the copyright of the "Sketches," but it is patent that, a few months afterwards, the publisher, falling into difficulties, sold his copyright in the work either to Mr. Bentley or to Messrs. Chapman and Hall, for eleven hundred pounds. Poor Macrone was unfortunate, fell into ill health, and died, leaving a widow and young children, for whose benefit Mr. Dickens, with the assistance of some literary friends, edited and published a work composed of "voluntary contributions," called the "Pic-Nic Papers.". The "Sketches by Boz," were, as all the world knows, succeeded by the "Pickwick Papers". Originally intended as a mere vehicle to Robert Seymour's admirable caricatures, a foil to his redundant humour, they became, after he lamented the inexplicable death of the artist, attractions in themselves. The wit and genius of the author soon elevated Mr. Pickwick from a burlesque elderly Cockney to the rank of the hero of a comic epic. It would be useless, impertinent were there indeed space, to descant on the merits of this glorious book. Many more has Dickens written since the last number of "Pickwick" has been given to the world. Thousands and thousands have since laughed and wept at the bidding of this kindly magician, but no work of his has ever created, will ever create, the excitement, excite the curiosity, compel the attention, give half the genial pleasure, felt by the whole public when they perused the "Posthumous Papers of the Pickwick Club." As when a man is blet with many children, and looks around and knows not which he loves the most, but yet remembers the first little child that died, the "baby" - there have been many "babies" since then, but this was "baby" par excellence - so we, gratefully and pleasurably calling in review the many good books, which, in the familiar green covers, have delighted us from year to year, can never forget or conceal our preference for the first-born - the book of books. We put him not first because he was the best, but we like him best because he was the first. "Pickwick" brought about the same result with Dickens as "Childe Harold" with Byron. He awoke one morning and found himself famous. From the ranks of the great army of literary martyrs, he came calmly and smilingly to take the bàton of field-marshal as of right. That is very nearly twenty years ago, and bravely has he kept his high command. Reader, remember, when Charles Dickens was an unknown newspaper reporter, William Makepeace Thackeray was a "crack" writer on "Fraser's Magazine," and lo! it is but four or five years since the author of "Vanity Fair" attained an equally elevated seat on the literary daisas the author of the "Pickwick Papers".. The history of Mr. Dickens, from the publication of "Pickwick" to the present time, is little more than a history of his successive works - "Oliver Twist," "Nicholas Nickleby," "The Olde Curiosity Shop," "Martin Chuzzlewit," "Barnaby Rudge," "Dombey and Son," "David Copperfield," and "Bleak House,"; the Christmas books - the "Christmas Carol," the "Chimes," the "Cricket on the Hearth," the "Battle of Life," and the "Haunted Man". Beyond the fact that he has produced these good works, that he has made journeys to the United States and to Italy, and embodied his travelling experience in "American Notes" and "Pictures from Italy," that he has been since 1850 the conductor and (we believe) the proprietor of "Household Words," and that he has avowed himself lately to be a thoroughgoing Administrative Reformer, and made an eloquent speech at the great meeting at Drury Lane Theatre, very little more can be said of Mr. Dickens's public career. Of him, in his private capacity, a few more words remain to be written. Our fair readers will be glad to learn that he married, in the morning of his fame, Miss Catherine Hogarth, the daughter of Mr. George Hogarth, a well-known musical critic and writer, and that he is blessed in having a quiver full of arrows - male and female. For his personal appearance, we must refer our readers to the portrait; and to those who would wish to form an idea of his more youthful semblance, we may commend the engraving from Mr. Maclise's picture, prefixed to the first edition of "Nicholas Nickleby". To yet more curious amateurs of sayings and doings, we may add that Charles Dickens is an early riser and worker, an indefatigable pedestrian, averaging, we have heard, ten miles a day; that he is a vivacious companion, a brilliant conversationalist, and an accomplished amateur actor. Were the writer of this notice in the habit of eating toads or hunting tufts, he could add a great deal more concerning Mr. Dickens's private character, and of certain things he does with his right hand, letting not his left hand know that he does them. Some women that are widows, and same children that are fatherless, and, we regret to say, too many members of the ingenious confraternity of begging-letter writers, will understand our meaning. Of course, Mr. Dickens has had his detractors: of course, Sir Benjamin Backbite has shaken his head, and said "It could not last"; of course, Mrs. Sneerwell has smiled sarcastically and whispered "overrated, my dear". What else could be expected? Some charitable people even circulated a report a few years ago, that he had gone raving mad! Some even set afloat a joke (good, but stolen from an honester wit) that Dickens had "gone up like a rocket, and would come down like the stick." Somehow, he has not come down yet. Then the army of detractors took refuge in the safe insinuation, "that he had written himself out." Somehow, "Bleak House," his last work had a larger sale than any of its predecessors.. This is not the place to criticise the writings of Charles Dickens. The best criticisms, perhaps will be spontaneously evoked from the hearts of thousands of our readers, when they glance at this portrait, and remember how many smiles they have given to young Bailey - how many tears to Little Nell. Criticism! - if such were indeed needed - the noblest, would be found in the admission of William Thackeray, that he had wept for the death of Tiny Tim, and sung a paean of triumph when he found that Bob Cratchit's little child did not really die.
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akg8047847 Loriot (actually Vicco von Bülow), * 12.11.1923-22.08.2011 +, caricaturist, director, actor, Germany, reads from Thomas Mann's diaries in the Academy Of Arts. From left to right:. Reinhard Baumf'gart, Loriot, Peter Wapnewski. Berlin, June 18, 2000.
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akg8047850 Loriot (actually Vicco von Bülow), * 12.11.1923-22.08.2011 +, caricaturist, director, actor, Germany, reads from Thomas Mann's diaries in the Academy Of Arts. From left to right:. Reinhard Baumf'gart, Loriot, Peter Wapnewski. Berlin, June 18, 2000.
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akg8047849 Loriot (actually Vicco von Bülow), * 12.11.1923-22.08.2011 +, caricaturist, director, actor, Germany, reads from Thomas Mann's diaries in the Academy Of Arts. From left to right:. Reinhard Baumf'gart, Loriot, Peter Wapnewski. Berlin, June 18, 2000.
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alb4474118 Men's nagajuban with kabuki actors, Onderkimono (nagajuban) for a man with a decoration on the upper half of the backs of four partially overlapping rectangular images, two of actors in checkered kimono of which one with a cloth around the head, two with paper strips with texts, two wide horizontal bands with large and small block motifs. The actor with the headscarf is 'Kirare Yosa' ('Yosa with the cuts'), with two scars of cuts on the chest, the other 'Komori Yasu' ('Yasu the Bat'), to the tattooed bat on (here not visible) cheek. Both men participate in the crime in the kabuki play 'Yo wa nasaki ukina no yokogushi'. The paper strips are probably sponsors' calling cards. On the left back three black family arms (mon), by the officers Nakamura Shikan, Morita Kanya and Ichikawa Sadanji, on the front of the right sleeve two family arms, from Ichikawa Sadanji and Jitsukawa Ensaburo. Gray crepe silk (chirimen) with stenciled yuzen decoration. White silk lining., anonymous, Japan, c. 1920 - c. 1940, silk, painting, h 130 cm × w 129 cm.
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alb4457921 Man with sword during the night, Pilgrim Banryû, played by actor Ichikawa Ebizô V (1791-1859), at night, with a sword in his hands to ward off an attack from Oyana (left sheet). A scene from the play Tanomiaru gohiiki no Tsuna, performed at the Kawarazaki theater in 1832. Right sheet of a diptych. With two poems., Kunisada (I), Utagawa (mentioned on object), Japan, 1833, paper, polishing, h 205 mm × w 185 mm.
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alb3619376 Allegory on the Fidelity of the Lizard (recto); Design for a Stage Setting (verso). Artist: Leonardo da Vinci (Italian, Vinci 1452-1519 Amboise). Dimensions: 7 15/16 x 5 1/4in. (20.2 x 13.3cm). Date: 1496.The exquisite small sketch of a tondo on the recto of the Metropolitan sheet was undoubtedly intended for a medal on a theatrical costume, therefore perhaps related in theme to the verso sketches for the staging of Baldassare Taccone's La Danae or another festa. In its type of design and drawing style, the recto drawing on the Metropolitan sheet is closely comparable to two other sheets with small allegorical scenes inscribed within a tondo shape, one in Cambridge (Fitzwilliam Museum inv. PD.120-1961) and the other in Bayonne (Musée Bonnat inv. 656); all three sheets are rendered with the same style of quick, reinforced outlines and delicate parallel-hatching typical of Leonardo's drawings of the early to mid-1490s, and can be placed close enough to ca. 1496, as a terminus ante quem, based on the verso of the Metropolitan sheet with the Danae sketches.As Leonardo explained at the top in the accompanying inscription on the recto of the Metropolitan sheet, the sketch portrays a man sleeping by a tree, while to his right, a green lizard, or "ramarro," loyally attempts to overcome a grass snake ("biscia") that threatens him: ""il ramarro . fedele allomo vede[n]do quello adorme[n]/tato . co[n] batte . cholla bisscia esse vede no[n]lla potere / vincere core sopra il uolto dello mo . ello dessta accioche / essa . bisscia no no ffenda loadorme[n]tato . homo." The specific fable of the lizard and the sleeping man (though no other allusions to it exist in Leonardo's notes) may be interpreted as an allegory on the virtue of fidelity, which is often defined by the attendant qualities of alertness and protectiveness. Cranes are described by Leonardo (Paris MS H, fol. 9r = H1, fol. 9r), as analogous examples of "fedeltà over lialtà," an idea he closely reprised from an edition of the popular, printed Fior di virtù. Such visual imagery of animal fables and allegorical compositions inspired Leonardo's work during the very late 1480s and 1490s, in reading Aesop's fables, Medieval bestiaries, and Pliny the Elder's Naturalis historia, together with two very popular books of his day, Cecco d'Ascoli's L'Acerba and the anonymous Fior di virtù, editions of which were printed in Venice in 1471, 1474, 1477, 1488, 1491, and later. Leonardo himself had owned exemplars of these books by the mid-1490s (see inventories in Codex Atlanticus, fol. 559r, of ca. 1493-95; and Codex Madrid II (inv. 8936, fol. 3r-2v), of ca. 1503-5: "plinjo," "fiore de uirtu," and "ciecho dasscholj"). He also copied passages from Pliny, Cecco d'Ascoli, and the anonymous Fior di virtù, sometimes almost verbatim, into the Paris MS H1 (fols. 5r-27v), of ca. 1493-94 (cfr. Marinoni 1986-90, MS H; Pietro C. Marani in Marinoni 1986, p. 141). The verso of the Metropolitan Museum sheet depicts sketches and notes intended for the staging of the musical comedy in rhyme, La Danae, on 31 January 1496. This comedy in five acts was written by Baldassare Taccone, chancellor to "Il Moro" and an amateur playwright himself; La Danae was performed at the house of Giovan Francesco Sanseverino, the count of Caiazzo and elder brother of Galeazzo. Based on Ovid's Metamorphoses (Book 4:611), the story line of the play follows the travails of Danae, daughter of Acrisius, king of Argos, seduced by Jupiter disguised in the form of a shower of gold, and eventually transformed into a star, hoisted into heaven. Taccone's text establishes the precise date of Leonardo's sheet, although the drawing on the recto may possibly be somewhat earlier, to judge from its affinity of subject matter with the bestiary notes of the Paris MS H, which firmly dates to ca. 1493-94. The verso of the Metropolitan sheet depicts a quick, working sketch of the actual design for the staging of the piece, drawn "con brevi segni," as counseled in Leonardo's note (Paris MS A, inv. 2185, fol. 27v), of ca. 1490-92. At upper left, a list of names, including that of Danae, identifies the actors for the roles in the performance. As is usual for Leonardo, the sense of his notes is from right to left, so that the numbers and fractions indicating measurements for the positioning of each actor on stage precedes his name; it is possible that the Danae was staged on a moving platform, operated by machinery, which would have required a precise placement of the actors. The sketches render the stage design in an elevation, a plan, and a "bird's eye view." According to Leonardo's note on the verso of the Metropolitan sheet, Acrisius, king of Argos and the father of Danae, was to be played by Gian Cristofano, the gardener Sirus by Baldassare Taccone, while Danae, the headstrong princess and main character, was to be acted by a young man (not unusual for the time), Francesco Romano. The god Mercury, who was to descend from Olympus hoisted from a rope and pulley, was to be played by Gian Battista da Osimo. The lecherous god Jupiter, who transformed himself into a shower of gold to impregnate Danae, was to be portrayed by Gian Francesco Tanzio. The piece also included roles for a servant and for at least one "heavenly messenger" ("annuntiatore"). In the elevation sketch at left, the enthroned figure surrounded by an aureole of flames is Jupiter, the seducer of Danae.(Carmen C. Bambach, 2015). Museum: Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA.
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alb4152288 The Actors Nakamura Denkuro II as Seno-o Taro, Ichikawa Komazo II as Yorimasa, Nakamura Nakazo I as Taira no Kiyomori, and Ichikawa Danjuro V as Kiou Takiguchi (right to left), in the Play Nue no Mori Ichiyo no Mato, Performed at the Nakamura Theater in the Eleventh Month, 1770. Katsukawa Shunsho ?? ??; Japanese, 1726-1792. Date: 1767-1777. Dimensions: 17.6 x 27.7 cm (6 15/16 x 10 7/8 in.). Color woodblock print; from the illustrated book Yakusha Kuni no Hana (Prominent Actors of Japan). Origin: Japan. Museum: The Chicago Art Institute.
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alb4151843 The Actors Nakayama Kojuro VI as Osada Taro Kagemune (in Reality Hatcho Tsubute no Kiheiji) in the Guise of a Lamplighter of Gion Shrine (left), and Sawamura Sojuro III as Komatsu no Shigemori (right), in Act Three from Part One of the Play Yukimotsu Take Furisode Genji (Snow-Covered Bamboo: Genji in Long Sleeves), Performed at the Nakamura Theater from the First Day of the Eleventh Month, 1785. Attributed to Katsukawa Shunsho ?? ??; Japanese, 1726-1792. Date: 1780-1790. Dimensions: 34.6 x 24.2 cm (13 5/8 x 9 1/2 in.). Color woodblock print; aiban. Origin: Japan. Museum: The Chicago Art Institute.
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iblais01648117 From left to right, Daniel Ludwig in front of Christa Wettstein, Hanspeter Mueller-Drossaart, Carin Lavey, performers in Daellebach Kari - the Musical, Thun Festival, Thun, canton of Bern, Switzerland, Europe
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alb3670992 Women's Kabuki (Onna kabuki zu byobu). Artist: Studio of Kano Takanobu (Japanese, 1571-1618). Culture: Japan. Dimensions: Image: 31 1/2 in. × 8 ft. 9 11/16 in. (80 × 268.4 cm)Overall: 36 in. × 9 ft. 2 5/16 in. (91.5 × 280.2 cm). Date: probably mid- to- late 1610s.The origins of Kabuki theatre are captured in this gloriously complex and meticulously detailed genre screen from the second decade of the seventeenth century. In its earliest phase, Kabuki was performed by female dancers or courtesans, playing both male and female roles in sexually provocative skits. Kabuki as we know it today, a highly respectable "classical" theatre performed entirely by male actors (for roles of both genders) in plays with complex plots, did not begin to emerge until the end of the seventeenth century. The focus of this exuberantly detailed genre screen is the stage performance of a young woman dressed as a man, performing a skit called Chaya asobi, or "Teahouse Entertainments." She is dressed as a gallant samurai in flashy robes, posturing suggestively as she hoists a sword with gilded sheath behind her neck. She is accompanied at the front of the stage by her comic sidekick, the manservant Saruwaka ("Young Monkey")--also played by a woman--holding a branch of maple leaves or flowers. They engage in saucy dialogue with a female teahouse owner or courtesan in the right corner of the stage--a role sometimes played by a young man, according to records of performances of the day. Audiences apparently delighted in the erotic suggestiveness of cross-dressing. This recently rediscovered work is believed to be the left screen of a pair; this scene of Kabuki was juxtaposed with depictions of merrymaking in the Kitano district of Kyoto. Both screens are thought to have been created in the Kano studio, probably under the direction of Takanobu, head of the atelier in the early seventeenth century. Museum: Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA.
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akg5325163 Toyokuni Utagawa, 1769-1825. Print shows the actors Ichikawa Danjuro, Iwai Hanshiro, and Bando Mitsugoro as two warriors about to attack an unarmed person, possibly a scene from the chushingura. Between 1818 and 1825. Woodcut, color; 37.4 × 25.1 (left panel), 37 × 24.3 (center panel), 36.9 × 25.1 (right panel) cm.
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akg5322651 Kuniyasu Utagawa, 1794-1832. Print shows a woman on the left, Kaoyo, wife of Enya (Asano Naganori), who has received a love letter from Morono (Kira Yoshinaka), who is standing on the right, and, in the middle, Wakasanosuke about to draw his sword. Between 1815 and 1818. Woodcut, color; 19.8 × 25.7 cm.
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akg5323233 Toyokuni Utagawa, 1769-1825. Print shows the actors Ichikawa Danjuro, Iwai Hanshiro, and Bando Mitsugoro as two warriors about to attack an unarmed person, possibly a scene from the chushingura. Between 1818 and 1825. Woodcut, color; 37.4 × 25.1 (left panel), 37 × 24.3 (center panel), 36.9 × 25.1 (right panel) cm.
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akg5323235 Toyokuni Utagawa, 1769-1825. Print shows the actors Ichikawa Danjuro, Iwai Hanshiro, and Bando Mitsugoro as two warriors about to attack an unarmed person, possibly a scene from the chushingura. Between 1818 and 1825. Woodcut, color; 37.4 × 25.1 (left panel), 37 × 24.3 (center panel), 36.9 × 25.1 (right panel) cm.
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akg5323234 Toyokuni Utagawa, 1769-1825. Print shows the actors Ichikawa Danjuro, Iwai Hanshiro, and Bando Mitsugoro as two warriors about to attack an unarmed person, possibly a scene from the chushingura. Between 1818 and 1825. Woodcut, color; 37.4 × 25.1 (left panel), 37 × 24.3 (center panel), 36.9 × 25.1 (right panel) cm.
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akg316332 History: Ancient / Theatre. - Left side, after vase painting, above:. Stage from the side w. Cheiron, Achilles etc, below lft.: Stage from front, below rt.: Theatre scene, Ajax & Cassandra in Sanctuary of Athena. Right side, below left: tragic scene, after Roman grave relief. Watercolour, undated, by Peter Connolly (1935-2012). Copyright: Peter Connolly's artistic copyright cleared via akg-images. This artwork is not in the public domain. akg-images represents the artistic copyright of this artist, please contact us from more information and to clear the necessary permissions.
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MCDLINC_FE015 LINCOLN, from left: Daniel Day-Lewis as President Abraham Lincoln, Gulliver McGrath, 2012, ph: David James/TM and Copyright ©20th Century Fox Film Corp. All rights reserved./courtesy Everett Collection/Fotoarena
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00441900 Dall, Karl, * 1.2.1941, German actor, comedian, TV show on the occasion of his 60th birthday, 2001, group picture with guests,
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les26030245 A theatrical performance at the Palais Royal in the presence of (from left to right) Queen Anne d'Autriche (1601-1666) and Louis XIII (1601-1643) talking to Cardinal Richelieu (1585-1642). Location: Musee des Arts Decoratifs, Paris, France.
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akg1555712 Chaplin, Charlie (real name Charles Spencer). English comic actor and director; 1889 - 1977. - Charlie Chaplin having lunch at Lady Adtors's during his visit to England. From left ot right: Amy Johnson (pilot), Charlie Chaplin, Nancy Astor (first woman to sit as a Memberof Parliament in the British House of Commons) and George Bernard Shaw (author & playwright). Photo, February. 1931. Copyright: For editorial use only.
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0170232 LOVE & OTHER CATASTROPHES. /nA publicity still from the Australian film, 'Love and Other Catastrophies,' directed by Emma-Kate Croghan, 1996. Left to right: Matt Day as Michael, Frances O'Connor as Mia, Radha Mitchell as Danni, Matthew Dyktynski as Ari and Alice Garner as Alice.
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0170231 LOVE & OTHER CATASTROPHES. /nA publicity still from the Australian film, 'Love and Other Catastrophies,' directed by Emma-Kate Croghan, 1996. Left to right: Frances O'Connor as Mia, Radha Mitchell as Danni, Matthew Dyktynski as Ari, Matt Day as Michael and Alice Garner as Alice.
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0170230 LOVE & OTHER CATASTROPHES. /nA scene from the Australian film, 'Love and Other Catastrophes,' directed by Emma-Kate Croghan, 1996. Left to right: Matthew Dyktynski as Ari, Radha Mitchell as Danni, Frances O'Connor as Mia.
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0088443 FILM STILL: NABONGA, 1944. From left to right: Julie London, Nabonga and Buster Crabbe.
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0057207 MY DARLING CLEMENTINE. From left to right: Russell Simpson as John Simpson, Victor Mature as 'Doc' Holliday, Ward Bond as Morgan Earp, Roy Roberts as the Mayor and Henry Fonda as Wyatt Earp, 1946.
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0046865 HIGH SIERRA, 1941. From left to right: Arthur Kennedy as 'Red', Ida Lupino as Marie, Alan Curtis as 'Babe,' and Humphrey Bogart as Roy Earle.
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0032443 FILM: CITIZEN KANE, 1941. Joseph Cotten, Orson Welles, and Everett Sloane (seated left-to-right) in a scene from the 1941 motion picture 'Citizen Kane.'
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0050953 HIS GIRL FRIDAY, 1940. From left to right: Ralph Bellamy as Bruce Baldwin, Cary Grant as Walter Burns and Rosalind Russell as Hildy Johnson.
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0001711 THE BEATLES, 1965. Left to right: John Lennon, George Harrison, Ringo Starr, and Paul McCartney in a scene from the 1965 film, 'Help!.'
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