Visualities

August 5, 2019 By: Alix Beeston

Critical and creative engagements with modernism's cultures, objects, and problems of sight.

February 12, 2026 By: Michael Allan

In 1896, mere months after revealing their revolutionary cinematograph in Lyon, the Lumière Brothers dispatched a team of operators around the globe to showcase the new device and capture moving images for international circulation. Among this cadre of pioneering cinematographers was Alexandre Promio, who traveled to Spain, England, and Italy, before embarking on a journey to Algeria in December that same year. This broader story is part of my forthcoming book,

December 3, 2025 By: Jane Frances Dunlop

I have always liked things that were all at once. Not abundance so much as excess. But excess is not quite the correct word. What I am thinking about, what I have many times tried to make, what I have often loved, is the exuberance of too much possibility. Too much: those things that capture, or at least organize and aestheticize, the ways the world is often too much.

May 1, 2025 By: John Lurz

In October 2018, I took a research trip to the Fonds Roland Barthes at the Bibliothèque nationale in Paris. I had just started writing a book on Barthes, and I wanted to learn more about the amateur painting and doodling that flits through Roland Barthes by Roland Barthes: for example, an early drawing in marker whose pleasure and stupidity Barthes comments on in the lower left corner

March 12, 2025 By: Ria Banerjee

Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger’s midcentury psychological fantasy Black Narcissus (1947) is enjoying something of a resurgence, available to be rewatched and taught more widely than ever before. For much of the 70-plus years since its release, the movie was difficult to find except as written descriptions, movie stills or poster art (fig. 1). It was a tantalizing entry in filmmaker lore that the likes of Martin Scorsese and Tilda Swinton cite as formative influences, while ordinary...

November 25, 2024 By: Alix Beeston

Five years ago, in August 2019, the Visualities forum was established as a site for thinking through the visual relations and ocular regimes of modernity. It posed three broad provocations: “In what new ways might we discuss the visual as a special category—aesthetic, epistemological, political—in modernism? How do different modes and practices of vision interact within the contested terrain of modernity?

October 22, 2024 By: Jordan Brower

Dear Sarah, I’m in the foothills of holiday territory as I write this, so forgive (or at least understand) this opening bout of sentimentality. However, there’s a formal point here, if not a critical one, so I take some comfort in the fact that this is periphrasis with a purpose.

August 8, 2024 By: Elizabeth Alsop

As I watched Marie Menken’s short film, Visual Variations on Noguchi (1945)—screened as part of an exhibit at the Noguchi Museum earlier this year—I found myself thinking about Gertrude Stein. Specifically, I recalled the letter Stein wrote to Samuel Steward in 1940, thanking him for a gift he had sent her and Alice B. Toklas: a countertop stand mixer known as the Sunbeam Mix Master 500. “The Mix master came Easter Sunday, and we have not had time to more than read the literature and put it...

March 21, 2024 By: Alix Beeston

The first section of “Judging by its Cover” consists of pieces that are interested in the cover as a form of compensation, a covering over, as a piece of gorgeous textile can mask or stand in for what one doesn’t want to confront, or what can’t be confronted for whatever nefarious, oblivious, or self-deceptive reason. The pieces are interested, too, in how covers spur questions about what others are thinking and what one’s own book is doing—and what it is about the cover image that links these...

March 13, 2024 By: Alix Beeston

On October 26, 1936, T. S. Eliot wrote a letter to American writer and host of an influential Parisian literary salon, Natalie Barney. In it he admitted with discernible embarrassment that his most recent author at Faber & Faber, Djuna Barnes—whose Ladies Almanack (1928) was about Barney’s salon and featured her as the character Dame Evangeline Musset—did not approve of the design for the first edition of Nightwood. “I must explain,” he writes,

January 25, 2024 By: Robert Volpicelli

In the first decade of the twentieth century, Claude Monet’s world began to go dark. The impressionist painter had experienced problems with his eyesight before: as early as 1867, a young Monet found that his penchant for painting outdoors, in full sun, strained his eyes to the point where he worried he would go blind. [1] Now, some forty years later, he was developing cataracts, a clouding of the eye’s lens that can cause blurring and color distortion. Hoping to avoid an operation, in part due...

October 26, 2023 By: Nadine Attewell

For someone who thinks a lot about photography, I have decidedly mixed feelings about being seen. In Canada, where I grew up and once again live, the state’s term for non-Indigenous racialized people like me is “visible minority.” The hypervisibility of racialization often confers a kind of invisibility, however. As a cis scholar of mixed Chinese descent, I am persistently misrecognized by other members of the institutions through which I move, mistaken for a student, staff member, a different...

September 21, 2023 By: Noa Saunders

I first encountered Baroness Elsa von Freytag-Loringhoven (1874–1927) at a conference on modernism and comedy. While her performance style is not exactly comical, the Baroness is most notable for her eccentric writing and elaborate costumes, despite the fact that her title brought her no monetary stability. Born in Germany, she immigrated to the US with a husband who soon abandoned her, she married the Baron (her third husband) who soon died, and she made her way to the Greenwich Village art...

August 31, 2023 By: Sophie Oliver

“Poets in Vogue” is an interdisciplinary exhibition held at the National Poetry Library in the Southbank Centre, London, from 17 February to 10 September 2023. Sophie Oliver (University of Liverpool) and Sarah Parker (Loughborough University) worked with Gesa Werner, an expert costume-maker and mounter, to explore the relationship between poetry and clothes through the work and dress of seven twentieth-century women poets. The exhibition includes imaginative recreations of some of these poets’ signature “looks,” along with archival and reconstructed garments. In the following reflections on making the exhibition, Sophie’s and Sarah’s words are distinct, to emphasize two specific concerns of the project: a collaborative process and the materiality of language.

March 16, 2023 By: Alex Zivkovic

"Objet trouvé par Leonor Fini. Couverture d ’un livre ayant séjourné dans la mer.” Like all object labels, this label tells a story. The first sentence is true. The second, a seductive fiction. The artist Leonor Fini did find this object, but not on a beach. Though seemingly encrusted with mud and marine matter, it has never spent time in a sea. Instead, it is a German-language novelty item created by Carl Maria Seyppel circa 1890, entitled Christoph Columbus Logbuch. An antique discarded object by the time it came into Fini’s hands, Seyppel originally had made the book to look as if it were water-damaged. Though the caption encourages us to imagine Fini having the tides deposit it at her feet, the real moment of encounter would have been far more quotidian: Fini came across it as at a flea market or bookstore.

January 26, 2023 By: Oishani Sengupta

This summer, as I was wrapping up my dissertation and packing my boxes in upstate New York, I started watching Satyajit Ray’s Jai Baba Felunath ( The Elephant God, 1979) after what felt like a lifetime. The film is based on a novel from Ray’s own children’s detective series featuring the celebrated Bengali private investigator Prodosh C. Mitter, aka Felu-da (“da” being an affectionate honorific for elder brother). In a 1980 review, Gene Moscowitz calls it “Ray’s bow to that Yank hardboiled...

September 23, 2022 By: Georgia Monaghan

There’s a recent feminist slogan that, no matter how staunch my feminist allegiance, always troubles me. You’ve no doubt seen it in one form or another: the ubiquitous “This is what a feminist looks like” emblazoned on posters, memes, and fashion apparel such as t-shirts, onesies, and, heaven help us, even aprons! I believe I understand the laudable intention underlying this message: to demonstrate visually that feminists come in all shapes, sizes, colors, ages, classes, genders, and orientations, and to help reclaim and destigmatize the term feminist after decades of conservative backlash. Nevertheless, I cannot escape the many unsettling questions the slogan raises for me: Why the emphasis on image and appearance? What does it matter what a feminist looks like? Isn’t it a person’s actions that makes them a feminist? Wouldn't a better slogan communicate what a feminist believes in and stands for, the changes a feminist demands and is prepared to agitate for? And why the stress on the singular feminist? What about feminists as a collective?

July 29, 2022 By: Alix Beeston

A creature luminous and vexed, the firefly flits in melancholic briefness, brilliant yet burning out, its light’s little lifespan mocked by the starry fixtures of the sky. The firefly’s illumination is a chemical process, like the flash of a camera but without the photograph’s sense of permanence and history. Instead, summer by summer, children chase down these natural lanterns and collect them in mason jars, glass enclosures for viewing their darkening demise. Aquariums of lost energy.

June 24, 2022 By: Emma Heaney

In a scene midway through Alison Bechdel’s 2006 graphic memoir Fun Home, the little tomboy Bechdel sits with her father in a small-town Pennsylvania luncheonette when, together, they look (or rather he swivels to glower and she stares moon-eyed) at a bulldyke standing at the counter. “Is that what you want to look like?” her father hisses derisively across the laminate table, compelling his child to answer, falsely, “no” (fig. 1). This glimpse of a butch truck driver “sustained” the queer child...

April 3, 2022 By: Heidi Kim

Sometime last year, I came across an article in which the director Lee Isaac Chung described the formative influence of Willa Cather’s My Ántonia on his 2020 film Minari. I knew then that I needed to find the right person—or people—to explore these narratives of immigrant families in the harsh and beautiful environs of the rural United States, which form a tether from the modernist moment to the present. The result is this moving and insightful epistolary conversation between Rachel Warner, a...

January 10, 2022 By: Mena Mitrano

The minuteness of her body and the expansiveness of her thought struck some as an odd contrast. In this still, her body crowded by the desk lamp, the large microphone, and the curtains that seem to drift toward her on the window’s breeze, they fuse in one perfect moment (Fig. 1). Mid-February 1994, Rome. She is speaking at the Virginia Woolf Center of the International Women’s House about the convergence of the practice of feminism and the insights of Michel Foucault. Critical of the communion of the “we,” she is taking feminism in another direction, a more theoretical direction, some would say.

November 10, 2021 By: Rafael Walker

Director Rebecca Hall’s recent adaptation of Nella Larsen’s exquisite second novel, Passing (1929), is visually stunning. I had the pleasure of seeing the film on the big screen, during its limited theatrical run and before its Netflix release. It was the ideal atmosphere for absorbing this cinematic rendering of Larsen’s eerie, anxiety-ridden plot: ensconced with a sparse audience (my companion and I comprising two of the four patrons for the 5:10pm showing) in a small independent theater in Manhattan, just a few miles from where the story is set, and with Halloween everywhere looming on this late-October evening.

October 28, 2021 By: Mia Florin-Sefton

In Germany in 1923 everyone was talking about their hormones. This was, in large part, thanks to the popular release of a medical education film called Der Steinach-Film. Der Steinach-Film was sponsored by the Universum Film-Akiten Gescellschaft (Ufa), a German motion-picture production company known for producing artistically outstanding and technically competent films during the silent era, and which from 1918 onwards included a cultural division that produced and distributed medical education...

September 20, 2021 By: Jack Quirk

What do images have to do with the law? A lot, as it turns out. To make sense of an image requires the viewer to imagine a form of life. To imagine a form of life is to imagine a form of law. So law owes its existence to images; they clothe its abstract existence in sensible form. Think of the picture of sovereignty in the famous frontispiece of Thomas Hobbes’s Leviathan, the hallowed federalism of the Stars and Stripes, or Justitia, the anthropomorphic figure promising blind and equitable...

July 28, 2021 By: Maggie Hennefeld

How many feminist scholars and archivists does it take to screw in a lightbulb? There is no punch line to this set-up. Instead, we have spent the past two years curating a four-disc DVD/Blu-ray set on “ Cinema’s First Nasty Women,” a project that features 99 films from over a dozen international archives spotlighting the unrealized histories of feminist revolt and hellraising rebellion. Launched by a series of screenings at the Pordenone Silent Film Festival (Giornate del Cinema Muto), our set...

April 29, 2021 By: Juno Richards

From the start, I wanted Claude Cahun to be like me, or I saw myself in them, and used the pronoun that would make this misrecognition seem the most true. It would be possible to write a different sort of essay than the one I’m writing now, without any recourse to autobiography. This other, more academic essay would make a strong case for Cahun as a key figure in transgender history. But my argument for why Cahun’s pronouns matter is situated in the drama of more personal misrecognitions, mine and those of others, played out between the queer historical past and the present tense of its archival recovery.

March 29, 2021 By: Natalie Ferris

Rain in Lisbon often made me think of notation, of glyphs and dashes inscribing a page |/. I know this sounds too romantic, too neat, particularly for a rain that would often fall in unruly sheets, dislodging cobbles, stripping trees, and running thick with dirt and debris. There was something in the geometry of its fall, however, oblique strokes driven by Atlantic winds that would swing in an arc of directions, backlit by the amber lamplight. Each long strip of water was visible, and, in the labored rate of its fall, traceable.

February 15, 2021 By: Kevin Riordan

In 1888, the George Eastman Company put the first film-roll camera on the market. The new “Kodak” put photographic practice into the hands of many amateurs and hobbyists for the first time. This camera had immediate cultural effect, shaping how people saw and recorded things—even when they didn’t have a Kodak with them. In 1890, for example, the American journalist Nellie Bly had few regrets about her record-breaking trip around the world, except that in her “hasty departure [she] forgot to take a Kodak.”

January 21, 2021 By: Lorraine Sim

When I first saw this image on the National Gallery of Australia’s website, I wasn’t quite sure who, or what, I was seeing (fig. 1). What is the shadowy form lurking in the bottom-left-hand-corner of the image? Is it a person emerging out of the basement, a playful photographic superimposition, or something more banal: just another painting propped in the corner?

December 29, 2020 By: Grace Brockington

This article is the final installment of a special series on the Visualities blog exploring digital archives connected to modernism’s visual cultures. Contributors to the series introduce and model the uses of online resources spanning art, film, media, book history, print cultures, and more. In attending to specific visual artifacts from these collections, they also reflect on issues of methodology raised by developing and using digital archives, including in times of crisis and remote working...

December 3, 2020 By: Alice Staveley

Virginia Woolf records in her diary, September 22, 1925, clarion testimony to the transformational power of the Hogarth Press on her writing life. The avowed feminism of that final sentence has the force of proleptic aphorism; one woman’s victory over a male-dominated publishing industry might well become the rallying cry for later women printers and press owners. [2] But the future-making turn of the last sentence also eclipses the quiet force of the first: Woolf’s lament that she has sacrificed, willingly, her handwriting to the Hogarth Press.

October 21, 2020 By: Suzanne W. Churchill

Although Mina Loy consorted with nearly every historical avant-garde movement, she was contained by none and is rarely mentioned in their histories. She’s not alone in this regard. Canonical histories and theories of the avant-garde typically marginalize the work of women, people of color, queer, and disabled artists. Despite significant efforts to articulate the importance of gender, sexuality, and race to the avant-garde, scholars have yet to offer a comprehensive theory of the avant-garde that accounts for the experiences of marginalized artists who were often ambivalent about claiming affiliation with white, male-dominated movements.

August 17, 2020 By: Kate Saccone

This article is part of a special series on the Visualities blog exploring digital archives connected to modernism’s visual cultures. Over the next few months, contributors to the forum will introduce and model the uses of online resources spanning art, film, media, book history, print cultures, and more. In attending to specific visual artifacts from these collections, they will also reflect on issues of methodology raised by developing and using digital archives, including in times of crisis...

August 5, 2020 By: Brandon Truett

For their final writing assignment in a course on contemporary art, my students were required to analyze a single artwork from the last sixty or so years. The point was to encourage them to apply the theories of visuality that we’d studied throughout the quarter, and the assignment had one nonnegotiable stipulation: the artwork must be accessible somewhere in Chicago, where our class was held.

July 28, 2020 By: Amy E. Elkins

The crown jewel in the 1937 Hollywood musical Ready, Willing, & Able is an elaborate song-and-dance number called “Too Marvelous for Words.” A lovestruck male theater producer, attempting to write a love letter by dictation, is surrounded by an army of female secretaries: hanging on his words, clinging to ladders, sitting at typewriters. As the music picks up tempo, the secretaries tap their keys in time.

May 13, 2020 By: Louise Hornby

Glass tears do not leave a trace. In Man Ray’s photograph, Les Larmes de Verre (Glass Tears) (1932), they rest on the model’s cheekbones—hard, cold drops, threatening to fall (fig. 1). The tears are too smooth, too round, too still. If the tears were to slide off her face, they would scatter like tiny marbles across the studio floor. Man Ray worked on the image after he and Lee Miller broke off their relationship, and so critics have said both that the glass tears represent female duplicity and...

March 2, 2020 By: Phillip Maciak

The apocalypse stressed me out. This is an obviously true, maybe irresponsibly glib statement in material terms—the sixth extinction, global pandemic, nuclear annihilation, space rocks, methane farts, these all terrify me daily in ways that I have the luxury to be terrified.

November 13, 2019 By: Pardis Dabashi

Dear Nella, I was terribly disappointed that you didn’t get here last week. And I was furious with myself for mentioning the damned wedding to you because it turned out that I didn’t go. People kept coming in and then deciding not to go on to the wedding, so we were here until eight o’clock. Then we went out to dinner. It was very amusing too because the sandwiches kept getting fewer and fewer, and I kept rescuing them from hungry guests and saying firmly, “You’ll have to leave some for Nella Larsen Imes and Elmer.” Then when you didn’t appear they accused me of trying to save the food.

August 5, 2019 By: Alix Beeston

Mirror, mirror, on the wall, or so the story goes. For Snow White’s stepmother, the evil Queen, the terrible magic of the mirror is its unimpeachable veracity, its devotion to the truth. The mirror doesn’t lie about what it knows; and what the mirror knows, it knows precisely; and what the mirror knows precisely, it knows visually. Who is the fairest one of all? It sees what it knows and it knows what it sees.
Print Plus Exclusive

“Improbable Life”: Bain, the Baroness, and Public Photography

September 21, 2023 By: Noa Saunders

Volume 8 Cycle 1

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I first encountered Baroness Elsa von Freytag-Loringhoven (1874–1927) at a conference on modernism and comedy. While her performance style is not exactly comical, the Baroness is most notable for her eccentric writing and elaborate costumes, despite the fact that her title brought her no monetary stability. Born in Germany, she immigrated to the US with a husband who soon abandoned her, she married the Baron (her third husband) who soon died, and she made her way to the Greenwich Village art scene as a figure model, poet, and sculptor in 1913. She tried in vain to earn money through posing for painters and other artists, and she failed to hold down a job at a cigarette factory. Often, she resorted to theft—for her art and sustenance both—and was frequently jailed in the notoriously squalid prison, “The Tombs,” in Manhattan. Her reputation, as is often the case for New Women—the visual representations of whom Georgia Monaghan has recently explored in this forum—also lent her no security. Djuna Barnes and other friends were called on often for financial and emotional support. The Baroness eventually learned, however, that her life as an artist was a way to survive these troubling scenarios; when caught stealing parasols or dime-store beads, she would jump “from patrol wagons with such agility that policemen let her go in admiration.”[1] Sharing the title of Mama Dada with Gertrude Stein, the Baroness came to be known for her innovative gestures namely through the performative dimension of Dada, as explored by Amelia Jones.[2] I’d like to examine, here, how the Baroness fuses her everyday precarity with aesthetic ambition. In her performances, her body represents her vulnerability and her endurance simultaneously, which has implications both for what Dadaism is and how the archive captures it.

While the Baroness’s visage has been brought to us by various painters and photographers—including George Biddle, Theresa Bernstein, and Man Ray—she also posed for George Grantham Bain, an independent news photographer who would later be known as a significant contributor to international news photography. Bain would seek out newsworthy events and develop photographs to sell to newspapers, which were increasingly using photographs, rather than illustrations, as the visual norm in the 1910s and 1920s. In his wanderings around New York hoping to document the life of the city, Bain snapped two photographs of the Baroness in the 1920s, but he never sold them. As Bain participates in a developing documentarian aesthetic and conventionalizing of photography, he coincidentally stumbles into the burgeoning New York street culture in a way that complicates our memory of Dadaism's cultural presence. Most studies of the Baroness and Dadaism readily mark the movement’s incorporation of everyday objects as central to its modernist revolution. Dadaism’s fetish for the everyday, however, tends not to capture the stakes of actual everyday living—keeping oneself clean, healthy, and out of trouble. But when a news photographer captures a Dadaist in the wild and then those images are released into the expanse of a public archive, they inherit those stakes, taking on the burden of actual, unspectacular, and precarious living. At this incidental intersection between news photography and Dadaism, Bain’s photographs of the Baroness highlight the lived and living dimension of the archive.

Because Bain never sold these photographs, their existence as public photography typifies the aspect of the archive that is merely a reservoir of stuff, of uncritical objects, of an absence of answers—modernism’s attic of old junk. The circumstances of Bain’s photographs draw us into a space of cultural meaning-making that isn’t exactly aesthetic nor entirely historical. The Baroness’s gestures initiate a funny inversion of meaning-making; she prefers to show meaning’s hand or call meaning’s bluff. Through her, art does not help us find meaning in our lives, but rather contributes to our everyday lives by giving us activity, humor, and atmosphere that come from an abundance of aesthetic passion. Strangely enough, her flamboyant contortions exemplify the ordinariness of her archive precisely because they illustrate the excesses of modern living.

Woman standing on porch in costume
Fig. 1. George Grantham Bain. Baroness v.Freytag-Loringhoven. Photograph. between ca. 1920 and ca. 1925. George Grantham Bain Collection, Library of Congress, Washington, D.C.

In Bain’s first image (fig. 1), the Baroness’s body is a pylon that pulls one leg up abnormally high, maybe even to prove her acrobatic agility. Rather than shifting her weight forward, moving her center of gravity as one would mid-step, she keeps herself stationary as if not to walk but instead to strut in place. That strut would surely be peculiar, accompanied as it would be by eerily angled arm movements that jut and swim along with her. In some ways, her pose echoes the awkwardness of acrobats or athletes who pose superficially in a position ready for action; this kind of picture was often used for “spot news” where something like a big sporting event was reported on as rapidly as possible.[3] Instead of waiting for the photographer at the event to get the picture to the newspaper, they’d take press release photographs with the athletes beforehand. Doing so gives the event the illusion of action even if it can’t be captured directly. Similarly, the Baroness’s oddly deliberate position gives us a paratext of gesture, something beyond, before, or after movement that suggests the trajectory of motion without visibly apprehending it (much as with the photographic effects of blur described by Alix Beeston).

The Baroness’s costume is representative of her daily pageantry. She was notorious for her elaborate costumes that illustrate her method of making her body, as Irene Gammel puts it, “art in process,” “an eternal serializing of art without end” through an intimacy with everyday things.[4] The Baroness’s dresses were always made from familiar objects; she made elaborate dresses and headpieces from rubbish off the street, rotting vegetables, kitchen utensils, toys, car parts, and parrot feathers (from her own pet parrot). She often exposes a slippage between hand-made and ready-made, wearing acrobatic leotards, teaspoons as earrings, and tomato cans as accessories, with her favorite make-up to match: yellow face powder and black lipstick. As much as the pieces were ordinary, they were also bizarrely arranged in the fabric of her life of extremes, juxtaposing poverty with the gleaned surplus of modern production to render a complex amalgam of material need and material rejection. She adorned her body with whatever connoted the busy-ness of everyday life: vehicle taillights hung on her dress as she moved through the streets alongside the cars and motorbuses; a letter stamp on her cheek embodied both New York traffic and the postal circulations (Gammel, Baroness Elsa, 187). The Baroness understood everyday life as “perpetual motion” and so she became an index for the city, performing her own documentation of New York (290).

So, what does it mean for Bain to go around independently documenting New York City, to arrive at the Baroness, and then for her to do this? I can only speculate about the circumstances that bring Bain and the Baroness together ever so briefly, in a mode increasingly common in scholarship on archival gaps.[5] Methodological speculation is well suited for Bain’s public photographs because we are reading the Baroness’s image as well as the circumstances by which her image is here with us. Bain’s other photograph from the same occasion features Claude McKay, whom the Baroness visited frequently in the Village offices of his leftist newspaper, Liberator (fig. 2). It’s likely that McKay is there with her as they prepare to attend a party, one which they’ll no doubt be late for because she’ll be busy with the costume’s finishing touches (or humoring a man with a camera). In intersecting with Bain’s documentary aesthetic, the Baroness represents a modern imperative to live art rather than simply make it; the photographs witness the Baroness making art into a lifestyle, and her peculiarities anticipate the colorful liberation of New York street culture.

Man and woman standing in costume
Fig. 2. George Grantham Bain. Claude McRay, Baroness v.Freytag [sic]. Photograph. between ca. 1920 and ca. 1925. George Grantham Bain Collection, Library of Congress, Washington, D.C.

Despite her best effort at turning her physical body into art in the name of a nonconformist lifestyle, the Baroness slips into the quietude of the archive for nearly a century. Before Bain started his own news firm, Bain News Service (BNS), he worked for the United Press. In 1948, the Library of Congress acquired the BNS photographic files, putting most of his collection into the public domain; only a select few were purchased and used contemporaneously. To be in the public domain suggests access, mass visibility, and a sort of aesthetic and political freedom that is nevertheless cheapened by its extraction from the material laws of commerce. Indeed, though these public domain images may be highly visible or accessible, no one really wants them—public domain images connote a sense of worthlessness, because they cost nothing. In the case of the Baroness, we see that no private party wanted to own her image, and despite her exhibitionism, she was not even newsworthy. Although publicity is not the same as ordinariness, the archive, particularly the huge body of work called the public domain, paradoxically collapses that distinction at the same time as it exacerbates it. The Baroness comes to us via the public domain because of this precise perceptual paradox of publicity and mundanity. The Baroness helps us get at everyday modernity by way of the images we capture and then leave in disuse.

When the Baroness poses for Bain, regardless of the act’s historical (in)significance, she is doing more than performing like a theatrical actor performs. The Baroness navigates the world’s unpredictability by responding in kind, through spontaneity, but in a way that is also distinct from the aleatory methods like those that fellow Dadaist Tristan Tzara might propose. When the Baroness transforms herself through the objects or through the positions she puts her body in, she abandons herself. Social courtesy is denied; she closes her eyes in both of Bain’s images. Instead of yielding to social scrutiny, she chooses to mobilize the most flexible, limber, agile of instruments with which to resist the world’s torque: her own body. She behaves not like a cultural filter, taking the world into herself and producing something by transforming the content. She instead transforms herself.

The camera, in turn, only happens to catch its focus: on her face and arched right hand. With closed eyes, she gives us frowning contortions, as if, despite her body’s exceptionally modern accoutrement, she believed whole-heartedly in her own austerity. In the first image, she does not face Bain head-on—she faces outward from the porch, as if it were a stage, at a forty-five-degree angle. We might imagine Bain coming across her as she is here, or perhaps knowing whom to seek out, knocking on her door and asking her to come pose outdoors, where the late-afternoon sun gives her brighter light. She is not exactly giving the camera what it desires, nor is she quite parodying the camera’s interest in interesting things. Her performance is not peripheral to her other art. She is not, like Charlie Chaplin might, making a film or taking pictures about the performances within films or pictures, which would make this posing for Bain derivative or promotional for her more serious work. Her performance is not special nor even a novelty in the name of reputation. We get the sense that the Baroness poses here as she would pose on the front porch any day of the week.

The Baroness shimmers in and out of the modernist imagination, partly because of her grotesque sexuality and interpersonal skirmishes. The Baroness doesn’t embody the classical beauty ideals that Eva Tanguay or Mae West would in later years. She puts herself into awkward poses and pursues her romantic interests ravenously. If scholars of modernism know about the Baroness, it is primarily as a person of interest in the 1920 obscenity trial against editors Margaret Anderson and Jane Heap for publishing excerpts of Ulysses in The Little Review. Anderson and Heap had become friends with the Baroness and regularly published her poems. For some scholars, the Ulysses trial was a means of vilifying the New Woman, a modern figuration who, alongside the suffragettes, was loudly critical of the sexually-repressive hegemony. Anderson and Heap, after all, were lesbians and closely associated with the rambunctious Baroness, who was radical enough to be made “conspicuously absent” from the charges put against the two editors (Gammel, Baroness Elsa, 256).[6] As a result of the trial, Anderson and Heap disaffiliated from the Baroness socially and professionally, which produced considerable agitation. When Anderson expressed solidarity with Joyce, saying “James Joyce is in Paris—starving!,” the Baroness, too indignant to respond to Anderson, retorted in a letter to Djuna Barnes: “and what do I—in New York?” (Gammel, Baroness Elsa, 258).

While this may appear melodramatic, even narcissistic, of the Baroness, who did not author Ulysses, it indicates that her daily life involved a persistent and gendered erasure by those around her that exacerbated the precarity in which she found herself. “I lived in a filthy tenement,” she wrote, “starving in fighting [sic] wolf bravely with ‘posing’” (cited in Gammel, Baroness Elsa, 258). It seems, then, that the Baroness’s personality and work was difficult to protect, especially in the periphery.

The Baroness was virtually absent from modernist history for seventy-five years, persevering only as a cult figure of the New York underground. We certainly don’t have enough photographs of her costumes, and we only recently have gained better access to her poems. While she published often with The Little Review, her poetry collection was never published in her lifetime, and after her death in 1927 it passed to the guardianship of Barnes, who also never managed to publish it.[7] Her collected poems were finally published nearly a century later in Irene Gammel and Suzanne Zelazo’s Body Sweats (2016).

Perhaps the Baroness is absent from history because she was in fact too much in history. Renewed interest in her modernist standing has yielded experimental forms of documentary like Lily Benson and Cassandra Guan’s The Filmballad of Mamadada (2013), and pseudo-preservation projects like Lene Berg’s imagined remaking of the lost 1921 collaboration between Ray, Duchamp, and the Baroness, “Shaving the Baroness” (2010). Patched together from letters and notes, Berg’s film engages the antecedent of the archive, lost footage that is only referred to but never seen.

As modernist scholars, we must continue to find generative ways of engaging this fragmentary archive in order to question what it means to accumulate an archive in the first place. My attention to these photographs is not precisely an act of recovery—in fact, of the few remaining images of the Baroness, Bain’s easily became the most popular among her aficionados. Rather, I hope my reading speaks to the relationship between our attention to archival objects and the ordinariness of those objects. Because the public domain is full of surplus material with transitory significance, the Baroness illustrates that an excess of modern living exists not only in our archival objects but in our attention—or inattention—to them as well. To care about the Baroness’s images is simultaneously to care about her archival ordinariness that, counterintuitively, reveals what Melanie Micir calls “a passion that supersedes their formal disarray or their forgottenness in the eyes of history.”[8] Being forgotten by history is the risk of simply living, but it’s just as much a risk of living eccentrically. In her Dadaist liveliness, the Baroness shows that in everyday life, passion takes many understated forms.

Bain’s photographs of the Baroness indicate that amid the ceaseless ephemera in the public domain, publicity does not denote visibility. Our knowledge of the Baroness is informed by archival gaps, but it is tied, further still, to her fading career. When the Baroness returned to Europe in the mid-1920s, she lost all artistic exuberance, being reduced to selling newspapers to pay rent. Claude McKay happened upon her in Berlin, calling it “shockingly sad” that she became “a shabby wretched female selling newspapers, stripped of all her rococo richness of her clothes, her speech, her personality.”[9] The Baroness left us a scrappy record of the time she spent in Europe prior to her sudden death. But in a letter to Eleanor Fitzgerald, she wrote: “In all my utter poverty—my improbable life—standing on [a] windy corner of [the] street selling newspapers in winter at Christmastime—in snow and sleet” (cited in Gammel, Baroness Elsa, 322).

The Baroness calls her own life “improbable”—herself wondering about the nature of avant-garde ordinariness. But “improbable” might also reflect the instability in her life, work, and criticism. In light of Bain’s photographs, the Baroness defamiliarizes our processes of aesthetic evaluation, slows the creation of historical anecdote, and forges a new understanding of how an archive makes an historical figure visible to scholarly or public inquiry. As such, she encourages us to interrogate not only how we construct a memory of modernism, but also how we determine meaning after that construction. The Baroness is not simply a forgotten modern who died extremely poor and without worldly fame. It seems to me that she’s understudied because the peculiarities of her poetry or her gestures are not meaningful enough to transcend those biographical factors. I wonder, then, if Dadaism as a movement conducts its aesthetic work according to an entirely different metric, as if we have no hermeneutic for Dadaism except through life itself.


Notes

[1] Linda Lappin, “Dada Queen in the Bad Boys’ Club: Baroness Elsa Von Freytag-Loringhoven,” Southwest Review 89.2-3 (2004), 307–19, 309.

[2] See Amelia Jones, “’Women’ in Dada: Elsa, Rrose, and Charlie,” in Women in Dada: Essays on Sex, Gender, and Identity, ed. Naomi Sawelson-Gorse (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2001) 142–72. See also Amelia Jones, Irrational Modernism: A Neurasthenic History of New York Dada (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2005).

[3] Peter Galassi, “Pictures of The Times,” in Pictures of the Times: A Century of Photography from The New York Times, ed. William Safire and Susan Kismaric (New York: Museum of Modern Art, 1996), 17–22, 20.

[4] Irene Gammel, Baroness Elsa: Gender, Dada, and Everyday Modernity, A Cultural Biography (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2002), 284.

[5] See, for instance, Pardis Dabashi’s article for Visualities, “Dear Nella, What Did You See?”, as well as recent work attending to archival gaps by Saidiya Hartman, Allyson Nadia Field, Laura Helton, and Jean-Christophe Cloutier.

[6] For the full account of the trial, see Edward de Garzia, “Girls Lean Back Everywhere,” in Girls Lean Back Everywhere: The Laws of Obscenity and the Assault of Genius (New York: Vintage, 1993), 3–39.

[7] Until only recently, the Baroness’s material was held within Djuna Barnes’ repository at the University of Maryland Special Collections.

[8] Melanie Micir, The Passion Projects: Modernist Women, Intimate Archives, Unfinished Lives (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2019), 15.

[9] Claude McKay, Long Way from Home (New York: Harcourt Brace, 1970), 105; quoted in Gammel, Baroness Elsa, 320.