The Nude in Photography
that the truth exhibited more than atones for the especially true in the figure with a bowl poised on
perverted and superfluous facts also recorded. its shoulder, taken by Baron Corvo, an amateur
The chief value of such photographs consists in photographer, who brings artistic instinct into play,
their fairly accurate record of facts, which it would and knows the right moment to choose for repre-
be difficult to reproduce under the same conditions sentation. The platinum print from which the
in a climate like ours. Even apart from social block was made is a delicate study that no silver
reasons, three-quarters of the year the weather is point could parallel. The reclining figure, taken
not adapted for study of the figure in the open air. by the same artist, is so good as a decorative motive
Sunlight and the lighting generally is also an that it is given with no reference to its intrinsic
uncertain problem with us, and the camera may value as a photograph, although distinctly good on
DIVERS AT ENOSHIMA. FROM A JAPANESE PHOTOGRAPH
depict a moment when a peculiar disposition of that ground. The two boys with a dog, the classi-
light has produced a beautiful effect, which the cally draped youths, the stooping figure, and that
accidental circumstances. may never repeat, espe- of a seated boy, need no annotation ; they may be
daily if, as in the case of most of these, it is an offered not merely as graceful studies, but as useful
Italian sun that is the master limner. diagrams, and since, for many reasons, the model
Among many hundreds of photographs examined suitable for the purpose is not always attainable,
for the purpose those selected may be claimed to these photographs may be valuable for designers
represent the average of the best. Many reasons and others. Mr. W. Gloeden, of Taormina, Sicily,
combined to exclude others in spite of their intrin- has kindly permitted the majority of these to be
sic beauty and their importance as memoranda to reproduced. The photograph adapted for an
those seriously engaged in art. initial it was impossible to trace. Like the Sicilian
Hence it was obviously impossible to include ones, it was supplied by Mr. J. Littauer, 2 Odeon
those which, entirely admirable as records, were, Platz, Munich, but it bore no legible address; it is
like many other statistics of science, not suitable possibly one of those studies from nature by Pluts-
for general exhibition. By translation to blocks chow, of Rome, whose admirable series is well
suitable for printing with type, naturally much of known to all interested in this subject, for their
the delicacy of the originals has been lost. This is excellence and artistic composition.
108
that the truth exhibited more than atones for the especially true in the figure with a bowl poised on
perverted and superfluous facts also recorded. its shoulder, taken by Baron Corvo, an amateur
The chief value of such photographs consists in photographer, who brings artistic instinct into play,
their fairly accurate record of facts, which it would and knows the right moment to choose for repre-
be difficult to reproduce under the same conditions sentation. The platinum print from which the
in a climate like ours. Even apart from social block was made is a delicate study that no silver
reasons, three-quarters of the year the weather is point could parallel. The reclining figure, taken
not adapted for study of the figure in the open air. by the same artist, is so good as a decorative motive
Sunlight and the lighting generally is also an that it is given with no reference to its intrinsic
uncertain problem with us, and the camera may value as a photograph, although distinctly good on
DIVERS AT ENOSHIMA. FROM A JAPANESE PHOTOGRAPH
depict a moment when a peculiar disposition of that ground. The two boys with a dog, the classi-
light has produced a beautiful effect, which the cally draped youths, the stooping figure, and that
accidental circumstances. may never repeat, espe- of a seated boy, need no annotation ; they may be
daily if, as in the case of most of these, it is an offered not merely as graceful studies, but as useful
Italian sun that is the master limner. diagrams, and since, for many reasons, the model
Among many hundreds of photographs examined suitable for the purpose is not always attainable,
for the purpose those selected may be claimed to these photographs may be valuable for designers
represent the average of the best. Many reasons and others. Mr. W. Gloeden, of Taormina, Sicily,
combined to exclude others in spite of their intrin- has kindly permitted the majority of these to be
sic beauty and their importance as memoranda to reproduced. The photograph adapted for an
those seriously engaged in art. initial it was impossible to trace. Like the Sicilian
Hence it was obviously impossible to include ones, it was supplied by Mr. J. Littauer, 2 Odeon
those which, entirely admirable as records, were, Platz, Munich, but it bore no legible address; it is
like many other statistics of science, not suitable possibly one of those studies from nature by Pluts-
for general exhibition. By translation to blocks chow, of Rome, whose admirable series is well
suitable for printing with type, naturally much of known to all interested in this subject, for their
the delicacy of the originals has been lost. This is excellence and artistic composition.
108