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Collections

Florence Henri
Self-Portrait1928

Not on view
Small sepia-toned photograph mounted on cream paper, a figure in near-silhouette in profile at upper left, with a brightly lit flat surface below casting sharp diagonal shadows

Florence Henri, Self-Portrait, 1928, Los Angeles County Museum of Art, The Audrey and Sydney Irmas Collection, digital courtesy Museum Associates/LACMA

Artist or Maker
Florence Henri
United States, 1893–1982, active New York City and Paris, France
Title
Self-Portrait
Place Made
United States
Date Made
1928
Medium
Gelatin silver print
Dimensions
Image: 6 3/8 × 4 9/16 in. (16.19 × 11.59 cm) Primary support: 6 3/8 × 4 9/16 in. (16.19 × 11.59 cm) Secondary support: 11 1/2 × 7 5/8 in. (29.21 × 19.37 cm) Mat: 20 × 16 in. (50.8 × 40.64 cm) Frame: 20 × 16 × 1 in. (50.8 × 40.64 × 2.54 cm)
Credit Line
The Audrey and Sydney Irmas Collection
Accession Number
AC1992.197.67
Classification
Photographs
Collecting Area
Photography
Curatorial Notes

Florence Henri was a major contributor to geometric abstraction in photography. She often used mirrors, prisms, and hard-edged reflective materials to create depth and extend space. The resulting small-scale black-and-white photographs explore a wide range of subjects, including self-portraits, still lifes, the nude, street photography, and photomontage. However, it was her interest in form rather than subject that motivated her experimentation. Self-Portrait represents Henri’s early photographic work and belongs to a group of self-portraits she made between 1927 and 1928 where she pictured herself within architectural spaces amidst linear reflections.

Born in New York, Henri moved to Europe with her father upon the death of her mother in 1895, landing first in Silesia (then Germany), and then relocating to a variety of cities including Paris, Munich, and Vienna. When her father died in 1908, she moved to Rome to live with her uncle, the poet Gino Gori, who was involved with the Italian Futurists and introduced Henri to the avant-garde. At the age of nine, she began learning piano in Paris, continuing her studies in Rome and Berlin, while working as a silent film accompanist during World War I. She abandoned music for painting, concentrating on linear abstraction at the Berliner Akademie in 1914, but was never fully satisfied with the results.

Henri turned to photography in 1927 after auditing a class with László Moholy-Nagy at the Bauhaus in Dessau. Worm’s-eye and bird’s-eye views, multiple exposure, and photomontage echoed through her work, embodying the experimentation of New Vision photography. She was influenced substantially by Lucia Moholy (wife of Moholy-Nagy), who was interested in Bauhaus architecture. About her compositions, Henri said, “I use mirrors to introduce the same subject seen from different angles in a single photograph so as to give the same theme a variety of views that complete each other and are able to expound it better by interacting with each other.”

Rebecca Morse, Curator, Wallis Annenberg Photography Department

2024

Bibliography

Florence Henri: Artist-Photographer of the Avant-Garde. San Francisco: San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, 1990.

Selected Bibliography
  • Sobieszek, Robert and Deborah Irmas. the camera i: Photographic Self-Portraits from the Audrey and Sydney Irmas Collection. Los Angeles: The Los Angeles County Museum of Art and Harry N. Abrams, Inc., Publishers, 1994.
Selected Exhibition History
  • Imagining the Modern Self: Photographs from the Audrey and Sydney Irmas Collection. September 29, 2012 - January 21, 2013
Copyright
© Florence Henri Estate, Galleria Martini e Ronchetti, Genova, Italy

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