Pl. LXXI from 'NUS. Cent Photographies Originales de Laryew' by Stanislaw Julian Ignacy Walery

Pl. LXXI from NUS. Cent Photographies Originales de Laryew by Stanislaw Julian Ignacy Walery

Pl. LXXI from 'NUS. Cent Photographies Originales de Laryew'

Stanislaw Julian Ignacy Walery

Please call us at 707-546-7352 or email artannex@aol.com to purchase this item.
Title

Pl. LXXI from 'NUS. Cent Photographies Originales de Laryew'

 
Artist
Year
1923  
Technique
photogravure 
Image Size
8 15/16 x 6 5/8" image size 
Signature
unsigned, as published 
Edition Size
not stated 
Annotations
LXXI printed in lower right corner 
Reference
 
Paper
buff wove 
State
published 
Publisher
Librairies des Arts Decoratifs, Paris 
Inventory ID
14445 
Price
$150.00 
Description

The portfolio from which this image came was titled "NUS" ("Naked") and was credited in the title to Laryew, an anagram used in an effort to separate Stanislas Walery's erotic work with his more formal photography, as well as the work of his father. NUS included 100 heliogravures of nude women in various poses ranging from classical to modernist; some featured stark, angular lighting and architectural details, lending them a machine-age, Art Deco style. It is thought that these women are dancers from the popular Folies Bergere, a subject he frequently revisited.

A note on the Walery name: The photographer most commonly known as Stanislaw Walery was born Stanislaw Julian Ignacy, Count Ostrorog, but went by a variety of acronyms and psuedonyms, including "Laryew", an anagram of Walery. Correct accounting of his work and history is further confused by having inherited his father's name (Stanislas Julian Ostorog) and photography business, as well as his use of his mother's surname (Walery, originally Waleria) - spelled the same as the noted late-19th century photographer Walery Mroczkowski, and used as well by the man who took over the photography shop from Walery himself, Charles Auguste Varsavaux, a.k.a. "Lucien Varsavaux dit Walery".

This confusion unfortunately led to a partially unmarketable body of work. Despite this, NUS and other portraits from this era are considered among the best examples of experimental Art Deco photography.

 
Please call us at 707-546-7352 or email artannex@aol.com to purchase this item.