Portrait photograph of Lee Jennings wearing a suit and seated on a bench with one foot pulled up on the bench with his hands crossed over his knee. He holds a cigarette in his left hand.
Portrait photograph of Mariska and Ferenc Geritz, daughters of artist Franz Geritz and Josephine Geritz. Mariska holds a catalog titled "Ren Tang's Books, Christmas 1930."
View of a girl's bedroom, probably Deirdre Conselman's room, in the house of William Conselman, with wood paneled walls and furnished with a canopied bed. A wall cabinet holds a collection of dolls.
Deirdre and William J. Conselman were the children of Mina and William Marien Conselman, an American screenwriter who also wrote newspaper comic strips.
George Joseph Herriman was an American cartoonist best known for the comic strip Krazy Kat (1913–1944). An influential comic strip, Krazy Kat had an appreciative audience among people in the arts.
Photograph of an Asian-looking man seated on a bench and holding a paper in one hand, wearing a cap and a dark Chinese style jacket and trousers against a white backdrop
During an oral history interview in 1964, Kenneth Adams stated that he retained a house in Ranchos de Taos, near Taos (Smithsonian Archives of American Art).
Kenneth Miller Adams studied with G.M. Stone in Topeka, at the Art Institute of Chicago and the Art Students League in New York, and then travelled to Italy and France for further instruction. He summered in Woodstock, NY with Andrew Dasburg, painting the landscape and developing his skills as a modernist. In 1924 Adams moved to Taos and became the last and youngest member of the Taos Society of Artists. He was also one of the most emotionally taught at the University of New Mexico, Taos. In 1938 He moved to Albuquerque during the winters, where he worked on nudes, portraits and still life, returning to Taos in the summer to focus on Indian subjects, with whom he had a close connection. He taught at the University of New Mexico in Albuquerque, as well, eventually earning a tenured professorship and a membership to the National Academy of Design.
During an oral history interview in 1964, Kenneth Adams stated that he retained a house in Ranchos de Taos, near Taos (Smithsonian Archives of American Art).
Kenneth Miller Adams studied with G.M. Stone in Topeka, at the Art Institute of Chicago and the Art Students League in New York, and then travelled to Italy and France for further instruction. He summered in Woodstock, NY with Andrew Dasburg, painting the landscape and developing his skills as a modernist. In 1924 Adams moved to Taos and became the last and youngest member of the Taos Society of Artists. He was also one of the most emotionally taught at the University of New Mexico, Taos. In 1938 He moved to Albuquerque during the winters, where he worked on nudes, portraits and still life, returning to Taos in the summer to focus on Indian subjects, with whom he had a close connection. He taught at the University of New Mexico in Albuquerque, as well, eventually earning a tenured professorship and a membership to the National Academy of Design.
Will Connell (probably) on a Harley Davidson motorcycle wearing a hat, jacket, vest, tie, trousers and high boots, parked next to a dilapidated brick building
Interior view of a room in the Pueblo Revival Style house of William Penhallow Henderson and Alice Corbin Henderson, with a ceiling of wooden beams supported by corbels, furnished with an upholstered bench, table and chairs in a southwest style, and decorated with a painting on the wall, 2 groupings of books, ceramic pots. The house is located at 555 Camino del Monte Sol.
Alice Corbin Henderson was an American poet, author and poetry editor. William Penhallow Henderson was an American painter, architect and furniture designer.
Exterior view of the house of William Penhallow Henderson and Alice Corbin with a covered porch and projecting wooden roof beams (vigas). A bell in a bell stand is in the foreground. The house is located at 555 Camino del Monte Sol.
View of a room in the studio home of Santa Fe artist Sheldon Parsons located at 3 & 5 Cerro Gordo Road. The ceiling has of massive wooden beams and the room is furnished with a wooden table and chairs, a rustic candelabrum, terracotta pots and an Indian throw rug, and there is a fire place in the far corner.
View of a room in the Sheldon Parsons Residence and art studio, located at 3 & 5 Cerro Gordo Road in Santa Fe, with a rustic bent branch rocking chair, an Indian throw rug, 2 paintings on the walls and potted plants on the window sill.
View of the narrow porch beneath projecting wooden roof beams (vigas) along the west facade of the Santa Fe house and studio of painter Sheldon Parsons. The house is located at 3 & 5 Cerro Gordo Road.
This photograph appears on page 24 of a catalog of the Chicago Musical Instrument Co. which is dated to 1933 or later (because it contains a reference to Radio City Music Hall which opened in December 1932).
Advertisement photograph of an F. E. Olds Military trumpet with a hammered finished bell. This line was introduced in about 1933. Engraving visible near the end includes the wing of an American bald eagle above "Olds" and "Military."