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1922. |
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"Semi-Nude - Billy Justema in a Summer Kimono", 1923. |
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Circa 1921. |
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Circa 1930. (Two images.) |
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"Hands, B.J.", circa 1925. |
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Circa 1925. |
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1922. |
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Billy Justema and Al Chan, circa 1922. |
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Circa 1922. (Four images.) |
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Circa 1923. |
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1931. |
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1927. |
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Circa 1930-31. (Two images.) |
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Rudolf Abel and Billy Justema, circa 1935. |
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Circa 1927-43. (Five images.) The posted dates on these portraits vary wildly, but they were clearly taken at the same time or, at most, during two separate sessions. |
William Justema (7 December 1905, Chicago - 7 January 1987, San Francisco), artist, writer, and actor. He moved to California at an early age and, after spending several years as a monk in a monastery in Oregon (?), he studied art under Xavier Martinez and Stanton MacDonald-Wright; as a fine artist, his painting style evolved from modernism into what he referred to as "magic realism." After living in Los Angeles and San Francisco, he relocated to New York, where for forty years he designed wallpapers and fabrics for the home furnishing industry.
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1944. |
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The author photo is the same one taken by Mather and shown above. |
Portraits of Justema by other photographers.
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Carl Van Vechten, 1937. (Three images.) |
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Judy Dater, 1980. |
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Margrethe Mather (née Emma Caroline Youngreen; 4 March 1886, Salt Lake City - 25 December 1952, Los Angeles), American photographer. One of the most prominent female photographers of the early twentieth century, she had an intense and mutually influential, decade-long artistic and professional relationship with Edward Weston. At her death at the age of sixty-six, she was all but forgotten, while Weston is, of course, a legend in the world of photography. But in the words of another legendary photographer, Imogen Cunningham, who knew them both:
"In artistic matters Margaret [sic] was, of course, the teacher, Edward (Weston) the pupil."
Portraits all at once handsome and cutting edge, interspersed with startling erotic images.
ReplyDeleteMargarethe Mather and her talent should be widely known, but like others, cast aside and forgotten.
One can see why Justema was a muse. -Rj
Beautiful subject and beautiful photos
ReplyDelete