Showing posts with label Charlotte Rollins. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Charlotte Rollins. Show all posts

Thursday, 27 August 2015

Emil Orlik: of Georgia O'Keeffe, Calla lilies, orthodontics, Jo Steiner, Senta Söneland and Egon Friedell.

Emil Orlik (1877-1932)
Charlotte Rollius (around 1885- ?) 
Georgia O'Keeffe (1887-1986)
Alfred Steiglitz (1864-1946)
Joseph (Jo) Steiner (1877-1935)
Julius (Gulya) Steiner (1878-1940)
Senta Söneland (1882-1934)
Egon Friedell (1878-1938)




Today I invite readers to follow my stream of consciousness starting with Emil Orlik. He appeared in before posting and, his influence great, he appeared in many postings before.

The starting point was: search Google for Emil Orliks still-life works and finding this "Bouquet" against a Japanese background:



and a companion painting based on the same idea (roman-antique background) flowers and a strange choise for back ground, perhaps wall decorations.


Any way: recognizing the Calla Lilies in the centre of Orliks painting brought me once again to Oriks student Charlotte Rollius (or Rollins ?) appearing both in before posting) and her Lily painting very much in the style of her teacher Orlik.


The Calla Lily brought me to Georgia O'Keeffe: who married Berlin/New York photographer Alfred Stieglitz.  She would become very famous with her very large flower paintings. One of her personal paintings (one of many Calla Lily paintings by her hand) fetched 9.000.000 $ in auction. 



It is said the Calla Lily personifies the eccentric artist: strong and independent. The hidden erotic symbolism is obvious. Georgia O'Keeffe was bisexual.  


And then, surfing, in a remote corner of the Internet I stumbled over this auction picture of a portrait by Orlik. Orlik the painter, the printmaker and great portrait artist. A drawing at first glance much like a caricature. But speaking from 2015 that is unfair. 


The lady in question, Senta Söneland, was drawn from life. Including her "Class II/division 1 maxillary protrusion": not orthodontically corrected. A century later it is found "necessary" to correct this God-given facial (skeletal) feature in almost every western youngster when reaching puberty. The horses smile regarded un-aesthetical and undesirable by parents and by society. And inferior to the universally accepted "normal and harmonic" and look-alike magazine advertisement Class-I smile, today the preferred standard. Something to think about. Paying the hand of the orthodontist instead of accepting the hand of God (I'm not religious, and a Class II/1 is not an illness: it's big business). 


Senta (Gerda) Söneland: posters by Jo Steiner. 

What Gerda (Senta) Söneland thought of her nowadays "undesirable" but full and charismatic mouthful of teeth I do not know. She was a popular German film and theatre actress and cabaret performer and had a successful show in the  Berlin Kurfürstendamm theater-world around 1910. She also was active in the women's liberation movement speaking and fighting in public for the right for women to vote. 

Senta Söneland committed suicide shortly after  becoming a widow in 1934. Which brought me to Joseph (Jo) Steiner a "Plakkatkünstler" (poster-artist) and his brother Julius (Gulya)



Selfportrait and his brother Julius by Jo Steiner.

His fabulous posters show the Berlin theater performers of the time (1910-ish) and give a nice picture of the Berlin theatre world and its characters. The poster for the "50 Wilde Togoweiber" (50 wild Togo women + men and children)  my favorite. In our politically correct times an unthinkable show touring  succesfully Europe in the early 1910's and even more unthinkable poster! Free entree, but at home Catholic and other Christians hypocritically saved aluminium chocolate-bar wrappers for the "Christian Mission" trying to convert these poor wild souls (encouraged and still in practice in the 1960's !)  



Finally Jo Steiner brought me to philosopher, journalist, theatre performer and  critic  Egon Friedell (read this great Wiki article about Friedell) whom's Jewish features were innocently  caricatured by Jo Steiner in Jewish self-mockery. In times being Jewish obviously wasn't  considered a problem. 

  



Two decades later Nazi propaganda would use the force of caricature for a dark and sinister reason. Friedell, on his arrest committed suicide by jumping from a window in Vienna in 1938. 


"The worst prejudice we acquire during our youth is the idea that life is serious. Children have the right instincts: they know that life is not serious, and treat it as a game.." (Egon Friedell) 


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All pictures borrowed freely from the Internet for friendly, educational and non commercial use only.  


   

Saturday, 15 August 2015

What has happened to Charlotte Rollius ? Trying to solve the mystery.

Charlotte Rollins

Charlotte, Confusion, Coincidences or Clues ?

Last week I received a most interesting email from American reader Melanie. She'd found the information shared in this Blog on the illusive printmaker and Emil Orlik student Charlotte Rollius/Rollins (here*)


Melanie inherited (or came to own from the artists family) four oil paintings on wood panels. By Charlotte Rollins (signed Rollins not Rollius). With the email came also bits and pieces of information about the artist Charlotte Rollins. Which I now share here. 
  

Charlotte Rollins(!), the painter, had arrived in America in 1919 from France with a ship, the ships manifest mentioning her profession as: teacher. Melanie has information she came from Paris (or le Mans (Fr.) and was from a wealthy or well to do (elite) family background. Shortly after arriving in the US in 1919 she  had married a Hugh Rollins(!). They had a daughter Jacqulene Rollins and lived in Ohio. In 1923 Charlotte traveled with her daughter Jacqulene/Jacqueline for three months to France. This Charlotte Rollins was born 1892.

Melanie states: "in december 1923 Emil Orlik was in Ohio on a two months stay for a private portrait sitting".....  




Still life  by Emil Orlik (1870-1932) 


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Charlotte Rollius

was a Student of Emil Orlik (1870-1932) and worked closely with him on a work of art (woodblock print).
She is mentioned studying and working in Berlin 1905-1908 and 1910.
In 1912 (and 1913) she is mentioned, as Charlotte Rollius, in newspapers and exhibition catalogues in America concerning a large (traveling ?) exhibition with many great German artists (read the earlier blog-article).

In 1930 Charlotte Rollius is mentioned with the description of a print in a Chicago School Artists Society publication (which is confusing but it may concern a print created before her marriage.....)  
 


What if:

Charlotte Rollius (the Berlin artist and Orlik's student) immigrated to America in 1919 and married a Hugh Rollins in New York.

What if Charlotte Rollins/Rollius and Emil Orlik (1870-1932) had kept contact with het teacher, maybe meeting in Paris and maybe resulting in Orlik's 1923 American trip (could they have travelled together ?)

In that case Malcolm Salaman' s referral/critic in his book "the Art of the Woodcut" of a woodcut by "Charlotte Rollins" could after all be correct because of her marriage in 1919 to Hugh Rollins.  

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Publication of these puzzling pieces in the Internet hopefully will result in solving the biography of Charlotte Rollius/Rollins. Eventually. All your help is very welcomed.

Sunday, 16 February 2014

Carl Christian
 Oluf Jensen

(1871-1934)

Danish painter, printmaker, and ceramist.


Stumbling over this small but very charming print and composition was an invitation to investigate further this obscured printmaker. And I've placed it on  my wish list. For future use and reference I show and share in this posting all prints  by Oluf Jensen I could find in old auction catalogues and websites.      

Oluf Jensen was born in Copenhagen, Denmark on February 17, 1871. He graduated from technical school in 1890 and then studied at the Royal Danish Academy until 1985. 

That same year he apprenticed at Royal Copenhagen as a blue painter and worked for the company until 1934, painting art pottery and porcelain and eventually managing the underglaze departments. Jensen also worked at Holmegaard Glassworks in 1924. 

Jensen is best known for his decorative painting on ceramic but he was also highly regarded painter in oil and watercolor. He also produced etchings in black and white, and in color whose motifs were floral or landscape. 



His etchings are often signed Oluf Jensen. Today Jensen is considered with Arnold Krog as the artists who had the greatest impact on the development the Danish underglaze porcelain. Examples of his decorated porcelain are in the Nationalmuseum, Stockholm. Carl Christian Oluf Jensen died in Copenhagen on January 31, 1934.

As an exception I’ve copied and pasted an artist biography (with permission, thank you Daniel) that I’ve found in Annex Galleries in Santa Rosa, California, USA. Couldn't have done any better myself. The delicate fuchsia etching is for sale among the many fine prints and varied stock of this renowned American gallery.




"Eger Tryck" = Hand pulled in Danish

For reasons I cannot explain almost all pictures I could find and scratch together by Jensen were of thumbnail dimensions. I have enhanced most of them in Photoshop to improve screen visibility and quality. 

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Nice surprise, and "déja vu", was finding this watercolor, roses, by Jensen reminding me of a strikingly similar composition, in print, by a printmaker that I mentioned earlier in this Blog: Charlotte Rollius (aka Charlotte Rollins after an historical typo or simply a mistake by the great Malcolm Salaman in the Studio magazine in 1927). Rollius had been a student of Emil Orlik in Berlin, the Godfather of modern printmaking. 
Very little is known about either her person (born around 1885 and last mentioned 1944/45 in Berlin) or professionally: fewer then a hand full of most wonderful but hardly ever seen woodblock prints is all what remains to remember her. I'll show them in a next posting.   

Opening in march: my new Shop and Swap "Galerie Souris". For sharing and swapping of pre-owned and vintage woodblock prints, etchings, engravings and  drawings from my collections. 



All pictures borrowed freely from the Internet for friendly, educational and non-commercial use.      

Thursday, 13 September 2012

Charlotte Rollins = Charlotte Rollius

This is a follow up from posting on sept. 6th 2012.

Charlotte Rollius
(around 1885 – mentioned in 1944/45)
German printmaker, 

and the

Exhibition of Contemporary German Graphic Art
Chicago (USA)- januari 1913


Thanks to reader Archimandrill both identity and nationality of this supposedly British printmaker today is set right.  The enigmatic Charlotte Rollins who existed probably for 90 years is in fact Charlotte Rollius. The confusion and her obscuring are probably caused by Malcolm Salaman in 1929 in the Studio production "The Art of the Woodcut". Either by him or by negligence of the editor/corrector. Salaman’s expertise has great reputation but he is also reputed for his sloppiness.  
Martin Erich Philipp, "in der Grafische Austellung " 1912-1913
etching probably showing the Chicago Exhibition.
16 years before Charlotte Rollius stood in the light of critics and experts on both sides of the ocean. With four of her, at the time highly praised for daring colors, woodblock prints she was selected for the Exhibition of Contemporary German Graphic Art in the Art Institute of Chicago January 2d to January 19th 1913.
Max Liebermann: badende Junge (cat.nr. 190)
The New York Times of December 1th 1912 (note: Titanic sank in April) started the information to the public in a double paged illustrated article.

Carl Thiemann (3 works): Amaryllis, cat.nr. 297
This exhibition showed only the best of the German graphic artists and the catalogue summing up no less than 370 works of art by 90 artist on display and was organized by the New York branch of the Berlin Photographical Company renowned for its editions of high quality art work reproductions 1880-1920.
Lovis Corinth (4 works): Mother and Child, cat.nr.35
In Germany Dr. Otto Michael in Berlin is mentioned but I failed to find anything on this man yet. Maybe it was his collection or he worked for a Berlin Museum. In America the exhibition was organized and revised by Martin Birnbaum (1878-1970), scolar, critic, art dealer and the director of the BPC in New-York 1910-1916.
Max Pechstein (2 works) Somali Dancers, cat.nr.227 
Later, in the 1930’s, a selection of 36 reproductions probably made by this company was distributed for educational display in Chicago schools. Among them works by, Whistler and van Gogh but also by Charlotte Rollius ("for style and distinction") and to my surprise the Sunflowers woodblock print by Else Schmiedeberg-Blume as: "gay example of woodblock, for the lower grades". This print was not in the 1913 exhibition.
Else Schmiedeberg: gay Sunflowers
The exhibition comprises a selection of both established and renowned artists (“Giants” the catalogue states) like Max Liebermann (13 works), Emil Orlik (6 works), Max Klinger (15), Käthe Kolwitz (18), Franz Marc (3), Kandinsky (1), Emil Pottner (20 works, cat.nr. 241) Meta Cohn (2 ) and Walter Klemm (5)
Franz Marc (cat.nr. 6)
But also rookies like Martin Erich Philipp with his 1908 woodblocks no. D5 and D6 and 3 early etchings (cat 231-235). They nevertheless made his fame overseas and explaining why many of his (and others) prints often surfacing in America.
Martin Erich Philipp (cat. 231, 232 and 235)
Without a doubt there was a commercial aspect involved, prints sold or ordered. Probably through mediation from Birnbaum himself.
Emil Orlik (6 works)
Portrait of Ferdinand Hodler, cat.nr. 222
Charlotte may be the daughter of Julius Rollius and Mathilde Charlotte Elise Palm. Their daughter Elisabeth Maria Louise Rollius (born 1884) in 1909 marries into the established Berlin family Betke. As I experienced many of these German lady printmakers (and other artists) were from well to do families partly because University scientific studies weren't accessible for women in those days. 
Heine Rath (7 works cat.nrs 249-255): Pont Royal. 

There's still a lot to be investigated about Charlotte Rollius. First accounts are her studying with Emil Orlik around 1906-08, the last says she was probably still alive in 1944/45. 
Kandinsky Composition IV 1911 (cat.nr. 121) 

Anno 2012 it would be possible to reconstruct the entire exhibition digitally, an endeavour that would certainly be great fun. It would be a great book and time capsule too. But today I will limit myself to a selection interesting for readers of the Linosaurus. 
Max Slevogt (10 works) Nymph and Faun (cat.nr. 278)

I've found some very nice artist too, some famous some obscured but very interesting like etcher Erna Frank (1881-1931) represented with 4 etchings (cat.nrs 50-53, not found) In her days her work was compared to Whistler.
Erna Frank: Charlottenburg Ufer (Berlin), not in the 1913 exh.

Sadly the 4 prints shown by Charlotte Rollius I couldn't find, but I'm confident one day they will surface: (exh.nrs 258 -261, Geraniums, Landscape, Primula and Apples, Still Life).
Walter Klemm (5 works) "Pelican"

The chosen examples are just a fraction of the 370 artworks displayed in 1913 and used here only to illustrate this posting on Charlotte Rollius.
You can find the 1913 Chicago Exhibition catalogue