Early Rufus Porter Moody Theatrical Photograph - Feb 25, 2017 | Orange County Estate Liquidators In Ny
LiveAuctioneers Logo

lots of lots

Early Rufus Porter Moody Theatrical Photograph

Recommended Items

item-51053803=1
Early Rufus Porter Moody Theatrical Photograph
Early Rufus Porter Moody Theatrical Photograph
Item Details
Description

Early Rufus Moody Photograph
(1873-1922)


Signed "To Vera with best wishes Andy"
Blind stamped Moody, NY
Stamped on reverse with his first address of 243 W. 42nd St., New York. He left this location in 1917. Moody a famous New York City theatrical photographer and the primary photographer of Mary Pickford, Gertrude McCoy,
Maude Fealy, Valeska Suratt, & Violet Mersereau


Photographer: Rufus Moody
Signed: Signed "Andy"
Dated: Circa 1913
Medium: Gelatin Silver Print
Demensions: 10 x 7"
Country/Origin: US
Notes: A native of Kentucky, R.P. Moody developed a love of photography in his twenties and became a successful amateur during the first decade of the 20th century while working as a picture framer on 5th Avenue in Nashville, Tennesse. In 1908, on the advice of friends, he established a portrait gallery, the Rock City Art Studio, a venture that proved sufficiently successful to bankroll a move to New York City in 1913. He announced his intention in the photographic press to concentrate exclusively on theatrical photography.
He established his first studio at 243 W. 42nd Street, investing in the latest high intensity spot lamps with a flash mechanism and began working. A reporter observed in 1915, Moody "has devised a light controlled by electricity that gives him an absolutely instantaneous illumination, so bright that a picture can be taken in a hundredth part of a second or less . . . The electric button in his hand gives him his picture at any instant he may choose." Moody thought exposure speed was the key to capturing expression, and so marked a development beyond Benjamin J. Falk, the first proponent of the instantaneous capture of personality in stage portraiture. Unlike his competitors in New York City, Frank Geisler and Ira L. Hill, Moody eschewed backgrounds, making lighting the chief determinant of an image's effect.
While particular repute lay in being identified as a theatrical photographer, Moody, like Frank Puffer, cultivated motion picture performers as well, particularly New York studio based ingénues. His dramatic shades and intense light gave a modeled look to faces. Cheeks and chins became his specialty, and he retouched the flesh to make the cheeks perfectly smooth—an effect that drew clients to his studio. Mary Pickford visited in 1915 sitting for one of the most famous portraits of her career, one of the few images that Moody copyrighted. Most of his production was work for hire, providing performers or studios with publicity portraits.
Within a year of moving to New York, in late April 1914, R.P. Moody’s wife of two years, Octavia Whetstone Moody, left him to live with her parents in Philadelphia. In the ensuing months, Moody sued the parents for alienation of affections, a charge Octavia denied vehemently in the press, arguing instead that R.P.’s possessive and dictatorial behavior drove her away: "I was compelled to remain in the apartment, forbidden to read poetry and good literature, and was forced to study arithmetic and books in the elementary grade. My husband acted as the instructor and said these books were of greater importance to develop my mind than reading fiction. I was forced to do my own housework and then aid with the photography. But when a fat woman, a rope walk, who used to go around in tights, to whom my husband rented a room, was continually in his company, I objected." A divorce was granted in 1916.
After the divorce he moved the studio to 1529 Broadway. Though he remained a performing arts photographer until his death at age 49 in 1922, the fashion for Moody's photographs declined after 1917 when a younger generation of artful photographers captured the eyes of the national magazine editors.

Literature: Bulletin of Photography 12 (1913), 760. "Husband Barred Poetry, Made Her Study Arithmetic, Wife Charges," Washington Post (Jun 13, 1915), 3. "Teaching the Camera to Make You Beautiful," Cleveland Plain Dealer (Oct 10, 1915), 72. David S. Shields/ALS
Condition Report Small stain top left corner. Very good.
Condition
Any condition statement is given as a courtesy to a client, is only an opinion and should not be treated as a statement of fact. Orange County Estate Liquidators shall have no responsibility for any error or omission. The absence of a condition statement does not imply that the lot is in perfect condition or completely free from wear and tear, imperfections or the effects of aging
Buyer's Premium
  • 24%

Early Rufus Porter Moody Theatrical Photograph

Estimate $200 - $400
See Sold Price
Starting Price $100
Get approved to bid.

Shipping & Pickup Options
Item located in Otisville, NY, us
See Policy for Shipping

Payment
Accepts seamless payments through LiveAuctioneers

Orange County Estate Liquidators

Orange County Estate Liquidators

Otisville, NY, United States1,308 Followers
TOP