View allAll Photos Tagged groupportraits

I was doing the shot for my calender project, and I offered these free shots as thank you gifts. :)

 

Nikon D300s and Tamron 17-50 Non VC

Number:

179877

 

Date created:

1953

 

Extent:

1 photographic print : gelatin silver ; 7.5 x 9.5 in.

 

Description:

 

Front row, from left to right: 1) Herndon; 2) Hingston; 3) Seidel; 4) Schwentker; 5) Reichelderfer; 6) Sims; 7) Perlman.

 

Second row, from left to right: 1) Mellins; 2) Christu; 3) Ziai; 4) Boks; 5) Phillips.

 

Third row, form left to right: 1) Mosier; 2) Porter; 3) Pinkerton; 4) Hay; 5) Doss; 6) Forworthy.

 

Rights:

Photograph is subject to copyright restrictions. Contact the Alan Mason Chesney Medical Archives for reproduction permissions.

 

Subjects:

Johns Hopkins Hospital. Department of Pediatrics--People

Herndon, Robert E.

Seidel, Henry M.

Schwentker, Francis F.

Reichelderfer, Thomas E.

Sims, Neil H.

Perlman, Anthony

Mellins, Robert B.

Christu, Chris N.

Ziai, Mohsen

Boks, Lydia

Phillips, Ruth M.

Kirkman, Henry N. Jr.

Taylor, Paul M.

Kolls, Alfred C. Jr.

Auld, Richard M.

Kaiser, Theodore H.

Mosier, H. David Jr.

Porter, Frederick Stanley Jr.

Pediatricians

Group portraits

Portrait photographs

 

Notes: Photographer unknown.

There's only a short note on the reverse: "Bazar 1898". Obviously a festive event in Bremen. Photographer: Louis Koch, Bremen.

 

In der Chronik "Dreissig Jahre Bremen 1876-1905" finde ich:

19. - 25. April 1898: Bazar zum Besten des Frauen-Erwerbs und Ausbildungsvereins im Künstlerverein. Eröffnung mit einem Festspiel von Heinrich Bulthaupt.Einnahme: 119 648 M., Überschuss:100.000 M.

 

[ In the chronicle "Thirty Years Bremen 1876-1905" I find:

19. - 25.4.1898: Bazaar for the benefit of women's learning and education association in the Artists Society. Opening with a stage play by Heinrich Bulthaupt. Earnings: 119 648 M. Surplus: 100,000 M.]

Oil on canvas; 190 x 135 cm.

 

Martin Bigum is a Danish painter, poet, writer, and video artist. Born in Copenhagen in 1966. He is best known today for his paintings. During the 1980s he worked as comic artist for the Danish version of Mad Magazine.

 

Bigum's work is focused on uniting High Art and Low Art in comic-style paintings and video installations. Unlike former pop artists such as Andy Warhol and Roy Lichtenstein, his aim is not to show the emptiness of pop culture, but rather its fullness. His ambition is to create his own mythology through art.

 

Works:

 

Heartland, 1990–1991. Bigum's first exhibition Heartland showed a new artist, trying out different techniques, addressing questions to contemporary art. Still, the two paintings in comic art style First Sight 1 and First Sight 2 gave an impression of what he was about to become. Each of these two pictures presents a child thrown into a dream of colours, coping with this situation as well as they can. Maybe they are psychological self-portraits of the artist himself.

 

Radical Myth, 1992–1993

Literary Body, 1994–1995

Millennium, 1995–1996

The Homecoming, 1997–2002

Chr. IV: Barn og Konge, 2003–2004

The Face of God 2002–2006

  

©2016 Allisaber Photography. All Rights Reserved.

Mark Rothko, original name Marcus Rothkovitch, American painter whose works introduced contemplative introspection into the melodramatic post-World War II Abstract Expressionist school; his use of colour as the sole means of expression led to the development of Colour Field Painting.

 

In 1913 Rothko’s family emigrated from Russia to the U.S., where they settled in Portland, Ore. During his youth he was preoccupied with politics and social issues. He entered Yale University in 1921, intending to become a labour leader, but dropped out after two years and wandered about the U.S. In 1925 he settled in New York City and took up painting. Although he studied briefly under the painter Max Weber, he was essentially self-taught.

 

Rothko first worked in a realistic style that culminated in his Subway series of the late 1930s, showing the loneliness of persons in drab urban environments. This gave way in the early 1940s to the semi-abstract biomorphic forms of the ritualistic Baptismal Scene (1945). By 1948, however, he had arrived at a highly personal form of Abstract Expressionism. Unlike many of his fellow Abstract Expressionists, Rothko never relied on such dramatic techniques as violent brushstrokes or the dripping and splattering of paint. Instead, his virtually gestureless paintings achieved their effects by juxtaposing large areas of melting colours that seemingly float parallel to the picture plane in an indeterminate, atmospheric space.

 

Rothko spent the rest of his life refining this basic style through continuous simplification. He restricted his designs to two or three “soft-edged” rectangles that nearly filled the wall-sized vertical formats like monumental abstract icons. Despite their large size, however, his paintings derived a remarkable sense of intimacy from the play of nuances within local colour.

 

From 1958 to 1966 Rothko worked intermittently on a series of 14 immense canvases (the largest was about 11 × 15 feet [3 × 5 metres]) eventually placed in a nondenominational chapel in Houston, Texas, called, after his death, the Rothko Chapel. These paintings were virtual monochromes of darkly glowing browns, maroons, reds, and blacks. Their sombre intensity reveals the deep mysticism of Rothko’s later years. Plagued by ill health and the conviction that he had been forgotten by those artists who had learned most from his painting, he committed suicide.

 

After his death, the execution of Rothko’s will provoked one of the most spectacular and complex court cases in the history of modern art, lasting for 11 years (1972–82). The misanthropic Rothko had hoarded his works, numbering 798 paintings, as well as many sketches and drawings. His daughter, Kate Rothko, accused the executors of the estate (Bernard J. Reis, Theodoros Stamos, and Morton Levine) and Frank Lloyd, owner of Marlborough Galleries in New York City, of conspiracy and conflict of interest in selling the works—in effect, of enriching themselves. The courts decided against the executors and Lloyd, who were heavily fined. Lloyd was tried separately and convicted on criminal charges of tampering with evidence. In 1979 a new board of the Mark Rothko Foundation was established, and all the works in the estate were divided between the artist’s two children and the Foundation. In 1984 the Foundation’s share of works was distributed to 19 museums in the United States, Great Britain, the Netherlands, Denmark, and Israel; the best and the largest proportion went to the National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.

Number:

164376

 

Date created:

1915

 

Extent:

1 photographic print : gelatin silver ; 7 x 9.5 in.

 

Rights:

Photograph is subject to copyright restrictions. Contact the Alan Mason Chesney Medical Archives for reproduction permissions.

 

Subjects:

Church Home and Hospital (Baltimore, Md.). School of Nursing

Anderson, Mary Cornelia

Daley, Elizabeth

James, Martha E.

McHarry, Mary

Mattfeldt, Paula

Medcalf, Anna Ruth

Price, Hazel

Roberts, Helen

Sloan, Jennie E.

Webb, Caroline Frances

Welty, Edna N.

Young, Florence R.

Patton, May B.

Nursing students--Maryland--Baltimore--1910-1920

Nurses--Maryland--Baltimore--1910-1920

Graduation ceremonies--Maryland--Baltimore--1910-1920

Nursing schools--Faculty

Group portraits

Portrait photographs

 

Notes:

Photographer unknown.

As Living history group Alasin was doing some children larps at Kymppileiri, we decided to do something very different from the official program.

 

Strobist info: one Oly FL50r shot with umbrella from the left and another from the right. Used High speed sync to get background on the level.

 

I would so loved to get one strobe behind the guys to get some rim light, but on this occasion I was running out of strobes and the bushes wouldn't probably allowed it :( Also, this is my first group portrait with strobes.

Number:

178589

 

Date created:

1939

 

Extent:

1 photographic print : gelatin silver ; 7.5 x 9.5 in.

 

Description:

 

Front row: 1) Thomas; 2) Walker; 3) Stifler; 4) McCarty; 5) Pray; 6) Fosdick.

 

Back row: 1) Davis; 2) Davidson; 3) Ickes; 4) Goldburg; 5) Klinkowstein; 6) Greene; 7) Wheeler; 8) Sternfeld.

 

Rights:

Photograph is subject to copyright restrictions. Contact the Alan Mason Chesney Medical Archives for reproduction permissions.

 

Subjects:

Johns Hopkins Hospital. Department of Pediatrics--People

Davis, William W.

Thomas, Elaine M.

Davidson, Douglas T. Jr.

Walker, Ethel

Ickes, Howard J.

Goldberg, Henry P.

Klinkowstein, Alexander L.

McCarty, Maclyn

Greene, D. Crosby Jr.

Wheeler, Stafford M.

Sternfeld, Leon

Fosdick, Elinor W.

Pray, Lawrence

Stifler, W.C., Jr.

Pediatricians

Group portraits

Portrait photographs

 

Notes: Photographer unknown.

Keith, John Frank, 1883-1947, photographer.

 

ca. 1910-1940

 

1 photographic print : gelatin silver; 14 x 9 cm. (5.5 x 3.5 in.)

 

Image provided for reference purposes. Please visit our rights and reproductions website for information about obtaining publication-quality reproductions: www.librarycompany.org/collections/rightsrepro/index.htm.

 

Collection Name: MS349 Otto Kroeger Photograph Collection. Click here to view the entire collection on The State Historical Society's website.

 

Photographer/Studio: unknown

 

Description: There's always that one guy… Otto Kroeger sticks his tongue out in an otherwise solemnly-posed group photograph.

 

Coverage: United States – Missouri – Cole County

 

Date: 1910s

 

Rights: public domain

 

Credit: Courtesy of Missouri State Archives and The State Historical Society

 

Image Number: MS349_116.tif

 

Institution: Missouri State Archives

Number:

179599

 

Date created:

1941

 

Extent:

1 photographic print : gelatin silver ; 7.5 x 9.5 in.

 

Description:

 

Front row, from left to right: 1) Wilson L. Grubb; 2) Harry P. Suedberg; 3) Ethel Walker; 4) John L. Peck; 5) Edward D. Davens.

 

Second row, from left to right: 1) Leo J. Geppert; 2) Margaret H. D. Smith; 3) Margaret J. H. Nickson; 4) Henry B. Strenge.

 

Third row, from left to right: 1) Frederic H. Silverman; 2) Roy Pollack; 3) Eugenia E. Kirk; 4) Theodore E. Allen; 5) Bernard German; 6) Ruth A. Boak.

 

Rights:

Photograph is subject to copyright restrictions. Contact the Alan Mason Chesney Medical Archives for reproduction permissions.

 

Subjects:

Johns Hopkins Hospital. Department of Pediatrics--People

Grubb, Wilson

Walker, Ethel

Peck, John L. Jr.

Davens, Edward

Geppert, Leo J.

Smith, Margaret H.D.

Nickson, Margaret J.H.

Strenge, Henry B.

Silverman, Frederic N.

Pollack, Roy

Kirk, Eugenia E.

Allen, Theodore E.

German, Bernard

Boak, Ruth A.

Pediatricians

Group portraits

Portrait photographs

 

Notes: Photographer unknown.

Local Accession Number: 11_07_003472

Title: Elementary school recess, Reading

Creator/Contributor: Grant, Spencer, 1944- (Photographer)

Genre: Slides; Group portraits

Date created: 1982

Physical description: 1 slide : color ; 35 mm.

General notes: Title from photographer caption.

Subjects: School children; Education; Play (Recreation)

Collection: Spencer Grant Collection

Location: Boston Public Library, Print Department

Rights: Copyright (c) Spencer Grant

Keith, John Frank, 1883-1947, photographer.

 

ca. 1910-1940

 

1 photographic print : gelatin silver; 14 x 9 cm. (5.5 x 3.5 in.)

 

Image provided for reference purposes. Please visit our rights and reproductions website for information about obtaining publication-quality reproductions: www.librarycompany.org/collections/rightsrepro/index.htm.

 

Number: 118142

 

Date created: 1897

 

Extent: 1 photographic print on board : albumen ; 13 x 16 in.

 

Rights: Photograph is in the public domain.

 

Note: Photographer unknown. Female student in this class is absent from the portrait.

Number:

164379

 

Date created:

1918

 

Extent:

1 photographic print : gelatin silver ; 7.25 x 9 in.

 

Rights:

Photograph is subject to copyright restrictions. Contact the Alan Mason Chesney Medical Archives for reproduction permissions.

 

Subjects:

Church Home and Hospital (Baltimore, Md.). School of Nursing

Anderson, Anna Lillian

Badenhoop, Anna L. F.

Buckingham, Lillian A.

Clare, Gladys Holley

Crew, Catherine M.

DuBois, R. Yvonne

Farell, Harriet L.

Gross, Caroline S.

Gross, Elsie Augusta

Hutton, L. Pauline

Jacobs, Constance E.

Kirby, Margaret Armstrong

LaMotte, Elizabeth

Schaub, Louise Kathryn

Stoll, Bertha L.

Wesley, Abbey Gibson

Wiley, Maude Viola

Yeager, Emma Buffington

Nursing students--Maryland--Baltimore--1910-1920

Nurses--Maryland--Baltimore--1910-1920

Graduation ceremonies--Maryland--Baltimore--1910-1920

Nursing schools--Faculty

Group portraits

Portrait photographs

 

Notes:

Photographer unknown.

Real photo postcard. Postally unused.

 

Bought from an eBay seller in Tramore, Waterford, Ireland.

Fuji X-T1, Fujinon XF50-140mm f/2.8, Adobe Lightroom

Local identifier: SFF 89203_0151_l9_002

 

Photographer: Unknown

 

Caption: "Johane Myawo, Aaron Gameda, Malla Moe".

 

The reverse side of this image can be seen here: www.flickr.com/gp/fylkesarkiv/3Nb7Af

Keith, John Frank, 1883-1947, photographer.

 

ca. 1910-1940

 

1 photographic print : gelatin silver; 14 x 9 cm. (5.5 x 3.5 in.)

 

Image provided for reference purposes. Please visit our rights and reproductions website for information about obtaining publication-quality reproductions: www.librarycompany.org/collections/rightsrepro/index.htm.

 

Keith, John Frank, 1883-1947, photographer.

 

ca. 1910-1940

 

1 photographic print : gelatin silver; 14 x 9 cm. (5.5 x 3.5 in.)

 

Image provided for reference purposes. Please visit our rights and reproductions website for information about obtaining publication-quality reproductions: www.librarycompany.org/collections/rightsrepro/index.htm.

 

Local Accession Number: 06_11_001223

Title: Group in County Ave

Statement of responsibility: S. F. Adams, photographer

Creator/Contributor: Adams, S. F., 1844- (photographer)

Genre: Stereographs; Photographic prints; Portrait photographs; Group portraits

Date issued: 1850-1920 (approximate)

Physical description: 1 photographic print on stereo card : stereograph ; 9 x 18 cm.

General notes: Title from handwritten text on verso.

Date notes: Date supplied by cataloger.

Collection: Stereographs

Location: Boston Public Library, Print Department

Shelf locator: Misc

Rights: No known copyright restrictions.

This must have been towards the end of our parents' marriage, taken at Penn Trail on the Loxahatchee. Pictures of this time make me sad. It was such a sad time.

 

We don't look as crazy as a lot of families looked in 1970.

 

*

Hugh brought my father a plastic cup of water. “You O.K., Lou?”

“Fine,” my father answered.

“Why do you think she did it?” I asked as we stepped back into the sunlight. For that’s all any of us were thinking, had been thinking since we got the news. Mustn’t Tiffany have hoped that whatever pills she’d taken wouldn’t be strong enough, and that her failed attempt would lead her back into our fold? How could anyone purposefully leave us, us, of all people? This is how I thought of it, for though I’ve often lost faith in myself, I’ve never lost it in my family, in my certainty that we are fundamentally better than everyone else. It’s an archaic belief, one that I haven’t seriously reconsidered since my late teens, but still I hold it. Ours is the only club I’d ever wanted to be a member of, so I couldn’t imagine quitting. Backing off for a year or two was understandable, but to want out so badly that you’d take your own life?

“I don’t know that it had anything to do with us,” my father said. But how could it have not? Doesn’t the blood of every suicide splash back on our faces?

NOW WE ARE FIVE

A big family, at the beach.

BY DAVID SEDARIS

Findley Lake. Labor Day. 1952

*

Excerpt from the brilliant John O'Donohue:

 

[...]

 

In life, anything can come along the pathway to the house of your soul, the house of your body, to transfigure you. We're vulnerable externally to destiny, but we're also vulnerable internally, within ourselves. Things can come awake within your mind and heart that cause you immense days and nights of pain, a sense of being lost, of having no meaning, no worth; a kind of acidic negativity can knock down everything that you achieve in yourself, giving your world a sense of being damaged.

 

Another way to approach this is to look at the huge difference between sincerity and authenticity. Sincerity, while it's lovely, is necessary but insufficient, because you can be sincere with just one zone of your heart awakened. When many zones of the heart are awakened and harmonized we can speak of authenticity, which is a broader and more complex notion. It takes great courage and grace to feel the call to awaken, and it takes greater courage and more grace still to actually submit to the call, to risk yourself into these interior spaces where there is very often little protection. It takes a great person to creatively inhabit her own mind and not turn her mind into a destructive force that can ransack her life.

 

[...]

 

[Even some] lovely people feel that their real identity is working on themselves, and some work on themselves with such harshness. Like a demented gardener who won't let the soil settle for anything to grow, they keep raking, tearing away the nurturing clay from their own heart, then they're surprised that they feel so empty and vacant. Self-compassion is paramount. When you are compassionate with yourself, you trust in your soul, which you let guide your life. Your soul knows the geography of your destiny better than you do.

Beechwoods, Summer , 1918

Morris Patton, Don Daugherty, Allison Smith, Anne Stewart, Howard Smith, Helen Scott, JB.Smith, Arthur Smith, Andy Bob, John M. Smith, George Hill, Edwin Smith

 

*

from Inward Outward :

Pierre Teilhard de Chardin, SJ

 

Above all, trust in the slow work of God.

We are quite naturally impatient in everything to reach the end without delay.

We should like to skip the intermediate stages.

We are impatient of being on the way to something unknown, something new.

And yet it is the law of all progress that it is made by passing through some stages of instability---and that it may take a very long time.

 

And so I think it is with you.

Your ideas mature gradually--let them grow,

Let them shape themselves, without undue haste.

Don't try to force them on,

as though you could be today what time

(that is to say, grace and circumstances acting on your own good will)

will make of you tomorrow.

 

Only God could say what this new spirit gradually forming within you will be.

Give our Lord the benefit of believing that his hand is leading you,

and accept the anxiety of feeling yourself in suspense and incomplete.

 

*

 

We may have been interested in our world when we were little children, but then we were taught how to handle it by our parents who had already developed a system to deal with the world and to shield themselves from it at the same time. As we accepted that system, we lost contact with the freshness and curiosity of experience.

- Chögyam Trungpa

 

*

from Bill Scheffel

 

"The fading away of the Tao is when openness turns into spirit, spirit turns into energy, and energy turns into form. When form is born, everything is thereby stultified. The functioning of the Tao is when form turns into energy, energy turns into spirit, and spirit turns into openness. When openness is clear, everything thereby flows freely.

 

Therefore ancient sages investigated the beginnings of free flow and stultification, found the source of evolution, forgot form to cultivate energy, forgot energy to cultivate spirit, and forgot spirit to cultivate openness.

 

When openness turns into spirit, spirit turns into energy, energy turns into form, and form turns into vitality, then vitality turns into attention. Attention turns into social gesturing, social gesturing turns into elevation and humbling. Elevation and humbling turn into high and low positioning, high and low positioning turns into discrimination.

 

Discrimination turns into official status, status turns into cars. Cars turn into mansions, mansions turn into palaces. Palaces turn into banquet halls, banquet halls turn into extravagance. Extravagance turns into acquisitiveness, acquisitiveness turns into fraud. Fraud turns into punishment, punishment turns into rebellion. Rebellion turns into armament, armament turns into strife and plunder, strife and plunder turn into defeat and destruction."

 

From The Immortal Sisters: Secret Teachings of Taoist Women, translated and edited by Thomas Cleary. This section was written in the 10th century by Tan Jingsheng. It’s called Transformational Writings, and it sums up the Taoist view of the evolution and involution of both individuals and collective processes:

Read: THE LUXURY OF WALKING

 

*

Number:

178312

 

Date created:

1919

 

Extent:

1 photographic print : gelatin silver ; 7.5 x 9.5 in.

 

Description:

 

Back row: 1) Horace G. Stewart; 2) Albert S. McCown; 3) C. Creighton; 4) Benjamin Kramer; 5) Paul G. Shipley; 6) Hugh W. Josephs.

 

Middle row: 1) Eugene M. Carr; 2) Happ; 3) Grover Powers; 4) James L. Gamble; 5) Kenneth Blackfan.

 

Front row: 1) Charles E. Wagner; 2) Tisdall; 3) John Howland; 4) Harold L. Higgins.

 

Rights:

Photograph is subject to copyright restrictions. Contact the Alan Mason Chesney Medical Archives for reproduction permissions.

 

Subjects:

Johns Hopkins Hospital. Department of Pediatrics--People

Stewart, Horace G.

McCown, Albert S.

Creighton, C.

Kramer, Benjamin

Shipley, Paul G.

Josephs, Hugh W.

Carr, Eugene M.

Happ, William M.

Powers, Grover F.

Gamble, James L.

Blackfan, K.D.

Wagner, Charles G.

Howland, John

Higgins, Harold L.

Pediatricians

Group portraits

Portrait photographs

 

Notes: Photographer unknown.

kerri, matty and bec visit, largs bay, december 2000

 

adelaide, south australia

Teitl Cymraeg/Welsh title: Tri o ddynion ifanc

Cyfrwng/Medium: Tintype

Maint/Dimensions: 92 x 80 mm, 69 x 56 mm visible image area

Cyfeiriad/Reference: fmc00094 (pz8236)

Rhif cofnod / Record no.: 4446225

 

Ceir mwy o ffotograffau a rhagor o wybodaeth ar wefan y Llyfrgell Genedlaethol.

 

More images and further information can be found on the National Library of Wales' website.

Keith, John Frank, 1883-1947, photographer.

 

ca. 1910-1940

 

1 photographic print : gelatin silver; 14 x 9 cm. (5.5 x 3.5 in.)

 

Image provided for reference purposes. Please visit our rights and reproductions website for information about obtaining publication-quality reproductions: www.librarycompany.org/collections/rightsrepro/index.htm.

 

Purchased at a flea market or antique store in Maryland.

"Summer 1927" & names of women written on verso

 

Infant Baptism Nov 2019 English

Oil on gesso-primed hardboard; 50.8 x 35.6 cm.

 

Irish painter and decorative artist. His sister, Melanie le Brocquy (b 1919), was a distinguished sculptor. In 1934 he joined the family business and studied chemistry at Trinity College and teaching himself to paint. He first exhibited at the Royal Hibernian Academy in 1937 and from 1938 spent two years studying Old Master paintings at the National Gallery, London, the Louvre, the Prado, and in Venice and Geneva.

 

There's something reverant and poetic about the entire body of work, as is evidenced by le Brocquy's frequent portraits of fellow Irish greats such as Oscar Wilde, WB Yeats and Samuel Beckett. Yet le Brocquy's poetry is always rigorously painterly and visual. He never falls off into literary illustration or compositional melodrama. As Francis Bacon once remarked, le Brocquy continues to be "obsessed by figuration outside and on the other side of illustration". And there is certainly a thematic otherness haunting all of his painterly and graphic work, whether it be the psychologically incisive portraits, ritualized figure gatherings, lyrical still-lifes or the long series of mist-drenched watercolor landscapes.

French painter who was the rival of Le Brun but an exponent of the same Academic theories. Like Le Brun he was a pupil of Vouet, but he went to Rome in 1636 and remained there until 1657, forming his style on the approved models of the Carracci, Domenichino and Poussin. He returned to Paris on the orders of Louis XIV and decorated the dome of the Val-de-Grâce (1663), but his principal importance was as portrait painter to the Court. He revived the earlier Italian type of allegorical portrait, and a good example is the Marquise de Seignelay as Thetis (1691, London, National Gallery). He was strongly opposed to the Académie royale, and, in spite of his own stylistic origins, championed the Venetian or 'colourist' school; this, however, was probably only to oppose Le Brun. When Le Brun died in 1690 Mignard was at once made 'premier peintre', and, on the King's orders, the Academy had, in a single sitting, to appoint Mignard Associate, Member, Rector, Director and Chancellor of the body he had so long opposed. There are pictures by him in the Royal Collection, Windsor, Honolulu, London and many French museums.

Swim team, University of Washington, 1921

 

Photographer:

Webster & Stevens

 

Subjects (LCSH):

Athletes--Washington (State)--Seattle

College students--Washington (State)--Seattle

University of Washington--Students

Portraits, Group--Washington (State)--Seattle

University of Washington--Swimming

 

Digital Collection:

University of Washington Campus Photographs

http://content.lib.washington.edu/uwcampusweb/index.html

 

Item Number: UWC0594

 

Persistent URL:

http://content.lib.washington.edu/u?/uwcampus,364

 

Visit Special Collections reproductions and rights page for information on ordering a copy.

 

University of Washington Libraries. Digital Collections http://content.lib.washington.edu/

  

Number:

179873

 

Date created:

1959

 

Extent:

1 photographic print : gelatin silver ; 7.5 x 9.5 in.

 

Description:

 

Front row, from left to right: 1) Budner; 2) Due; 3) Rubsen; 4) Cooke; 5) M. Jelks; 6) Gibson; 7) Freeman.

 

Second row, from left to right: 1) Dong; 2) Hardman; 3) Hotta; 4) Schuster.

 

Third row, form left to right: 1) Beskind; 2) Caterinicchio; 3) Jelks; 4) Drachman; 5) Hayes.

 

Fourth row, from left to right: 1) Gartner; 2) Benson; 3) Ottenheimer.

 

Fifth row, from left to right: 1) Drash; 2) ___; 3) Plauth; 4) Breibart; 5) Pakula; 6) ___; 7) Neerhout; 8) Vita.

 

Sixth row, from left to right: 1) Kramer; 2) Evans.

 

Rights:

Photograph is subject to copyright restrictions. Contact the Alan Mason Chesney Medical Archives for reproduction permissions.

 

Subjects:

Johns Hopkins Hospital. Department of Pediatrics--People

Budner, Harvey M.

Due, Dora

Cooke, Robert E.

Jelks, Mary Larson

Gibson, Lewis E.

Freeman, John M.

Dong, Bock L.

Hardman, George W. Jr.

Hotta, Shoichi S.

Schuster, Frank F.

Beskind, Harry

Caterinicchio, Benedict S.

Jelks, Allen N.

Drachman, Robert H.

Hayes, James W.

Gartner, Lawrence M.

Benson, Philip Francis

Ottenheimer, Edward J. Jr.

Drash, Allan L.

Plauth, William H.

Breibart, Sidney

Pakula, Lawrence C.

Neerhout, Robert C.

Vita, Martin B.

Kramer, Robert A.

Evans, Hugh E.

Pediatricians

Group portraits

Portrait photographs

 

Notes: Photographer unknown.

Count Feodor Petrovich Tolstoy was born into a noble family. In 1802, he graduated from the Naval Academy and entered the St. Petersburg Academy of Fine Arts. He was fond of drawing and painting, but his highest success was in wax modeling.

 

In 1810, he was appointed designer of medals in the St. Petersburg Mint. One of his more interesting works of the late 1810s is a series of 21 medallions devoted to the Russian-Napoleonic war of 1812-1814.

 

Feodor Tolstoy is also characterized as having versatile talents. In 1838, he wrote a ballet Aeol’s Flute, libretto, sketches of set designs and costumes and 60 sketches in which he denoted the choreography of the ballet. In 1828, he became vice-president of the St. Petersburg Academy, in 1842 - professor, in 1859 - the first assistant of the president. By the end of his life he began to go blind and had to stop painting.

Number:

164397

 

Date created:

1930

 

Extent:

1 photographic print : gelatin silver ; 7.5 x 9.5 in.

 

Rights:

Photograph is subject to copyright restrictions. Contact the Alan Mason Chesney Medical Archives for reproduction permissions.

 

Subjects:

Church Home and Hospital (Baltimore, Md.). School of Nursing

Nester, Garnette Anne

Hobson, Harriet M.

Wharton, Catherine

Baker, Ida A.

Dykis, Gladys

Rogers, Mildred E.

Eckenrode, Mary Isabel

Dykis, Mary Louise

Coyner, Isabel

Aspinall, Ruth

Dunnick, D. Leona

Adreon, Sue Joyce

Seim, Lelia

Hardigen, Lola Delelia

Edmonston, Mary Eleanor

Buzzerd, Christina Elizabeth

Hartman, Martha P.

Butcher, Margaret Lucille

Rider, Lola Virginia

Lednum, Ruth A.

Thomson, Margaret Mary

Schoppert, Edna Ruth

Webb, Dorothy

Nash, Jane Evans, 1880-1955

Elliott, Margaret, 1884-1966

Nursing students--Maryland--Baltimore--1930-1940

Nurses--Maryland--Baltimore--1930-1940

Graduation ceremonies--Maryland--Baltimore--1930-1940

Nursing schools--Faculty

Group portraits

Portrait photographs

 

Notes:

Photographer unknown.

Well Dressed Group. Real Photo Postcard.

 

Unposted.

 

Author's Note:

From an album I purchased with a North Dakota Agricultural College cover. The seller noted that the album belonged to a Ms. Henricks. There were only 5 postcards remaining in the album.

 

[06194]

Keith, John Frank, 1883-1947, photographer.

 

ca. 1910-1940

 

1 photographic print : gelatin silver; 14 x 9 cm. (5.5 x 3.5 in.)

 

Image provided for reference purposes. Please visit our rights and reproductions website for information about obtaining publication-quality reproductions: www.librarycompany.org/collections/rightsrepro/index.htm.

 

Local accession number: 13_05_000616

Title: Beecher family [back]

Statement of responsibility: From photographic negative in Brady's National Portrait Gallery

Creator/Contributor: Brady's National Photographic Portrait Galleries (Photographer)

Genre: Photographs; Cartes de visite; Group portraits

Publisher: Published by E & H. T. Anthony, 501 Broadway, New York

Date created: 1859-1870 (approximate)

Physical description: 1 photograph : print on card mount ; mount 11 x 7 cm (carte de visite format)

General notes: Title from item or from accompanying material.

Date notes: Date supplied by cataloger.

Subjects: Clergy; Abolitionists; Beecher, Henry Ward, 1813-1887; Beecher, Lyman, 1775-1863; Stowe, Harriet Beecher, 1811-1896

Collection: Cartes de Visite Collection

Location: Boston Public Library, Print Department

Rights: No known copyright restrictions.

Number:

164378

 

Creator:

Jeffres Studio (Baltimore, Md.)

 

Date created:

1917

 

Extent:

1 photographic print : gelatin silver ; 7.75 x 9.5 in.

 

Rights:

Photograph is subject to copyright restrictions. Contact the Alan Mason Chesney Medical Archives for reproduction permissions.

 

Subjects:

Church Home and Hospital (Baltimore, Md.). School of Nursing

Coale, Maude E.

Dandridge, Marie

Finneyfrock, Ethel V.

Hade, Mary Jane

Halbert, Rhoda W.

Kelm, Lillian A.

Lamb, Dorothy

McCosh, Louise Alexander

Martin, M. Gladys

Masser, Geraldine H.

Neale, Mary Aline

Richardson, Margaret Hanson

Robinson, Florence V.

Sandrock, Helen Louise

Schneider, Grace Katherine

Shearman, Hetty A., 1894-1967

Smyth, Helen E.

Webster, Kathryn

Cullen, Thomas Stephen, 1868-1953.

Nursing students--Maryland--Baltimore--1910-1920

Nurses--Maryland--Baltimore--1910-1920

Graduation ceremonies--Maryland--Baltimore--1910-1920

Nursing schools--Faculty

Group portraits

Portrait photographs

 

Number:

178316

 

Date created:

1930

 

Extent:

1 photographic print : gelatin silver ; 7.5 x 9.5 in.

 

Description:

 

Front row: 1) Benjamin E. Hodge; 2) [unknown]; 3) B. Hamilton; 4) [unknown]; 5) [unknown]; 6) L. Emmett Holt; 7) [unknown]; 8) [unknown]; 9) [unknown].

 

Second row: 1) [unknown]; 2) Mary Adams; 3) Deborah Jackson; 4) Dorothy R. Meeker; 5) [unknown]; 6) Blandina Worcester; 7) David H. Shelling.

 

Third row: 1) Herbert Rothschild; 2) [unknown]; 3) Gordon Hinds; 4) Henry Lichtenburg; 5) Robert O. Y. Warren; 6) T. Campbell Goodwin; 7) Vivian Tappan; 8) James V. Bickford; 9) Francis Schwentker.

 

Rights:

Photograph is subject to copyright restrictions. Contact the Alan Mason Chesney Medical Archives for reproduction permissions.

 

Subjects:

Johns Hopkins Hospital. Department of Pediatrics--People

Hodge, Benjamin E.

Holt, L. Emmett (Luther Emmett), 1895-1974

Hamilton, B.

Worcester, Blandina

Bickford, James

Shelling, David

Rothschild, Herbert

Hinds, Gordon F.

Warren, Robert O.Y.

Goodwin, T. Campbell

Tappan, Vivian

Schwentker, Francis F.

Pediatricians

Group portraits

Portrait photographs

 

Notes: Photographer unknown.

Tempera on canvas; 172 x 232 cm.

 

Austrian painter. He was the illegitimate son of a peasant girl and the Austrian church artist and photographer Georg Egger. Later he adopted the name of his father and home town. He studied at the Akademie der Bildenden Künste in Munich from 1884 to 1893. The main subject-matter of his early works, which were painted in a naturalistic style and influenced by Franz von Defregger, was determined by his background: scenes from peasant life and from the Tyrolean freedom battles of 1809 against the French troops of Napoleon, for example Ave Maria after the Battle on the Bergisel (1893–6; Innsbruck, Tirol. Landesmus.). He moved in 1899 to Vienna, where his own style developed: its fresco-like monumentality, as in The Dance of Death of Year Nine (1908; Vienna, Belvedere), was a contrast to sophisticated metropolitan culture at the turn of the century. His style was characterized by a concentration on the clearly outlined large form and by a linear rhythm in the picture surface. Bulky figures combine to form voluminous masses that appear against the background as silhouettes. Colors are reduced to mainly monochrome earth-colored tones of brown.

Spaarnestad Photo/SFA022801513

Eerste Wereldoorlog. Mobilisatie vrijwilligers Nederlands-Indië. Na erkenning door de regering worden de blanke en inlandse vrijwilligers door het gouvernement van kleding en wapens voorzien. Groepsfoto na een velddienstoefening met de wapens op Buitenzorg (bij Batavia). Nederlands Indië/Indonesië, 1915.

This painting reminds me both in style and subject matter of Norman Rockwell.

Oil on canvas; 141 x 157 cm.

 

ohn Wootton was an English painter of sporting subjects, battle scenes and landscapes, and illustrator. Born in Snitterfield, Warwickshire (near Stratford-upon-Avon), he is best remembered as a pioneer in the painting of sporting subjects – together with Peter Tillemans and James Seymour – and was considered the finest practitioner of the genre in his day. As such, his paintings were very fashionable and were sought after by those among the highest strata of the British society. These included figures such as George II of England, Frederick, Prince of Wales, and the Duke of Marlborough. He is now some what eclipsed in the field of animal paintings by George Stubbs (1724-1806), who is considered technically superior. Examples of Wooton's animal painting can be found in the Tate Gallery, London, the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts, Richmond, the Yale Center for British Art, and in the Elizabethan Great Hall at Longleat.

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