Wikipedia:Meetup/Seattle/LGBT films from SIFF 2023 edit-a-thon/Hidden Master: The Legacy of George Platt Lynes
- Synopsis
- A documentary about George Platt Lynes, a gay man at the nexus of the 1930s and 1940s gay scene in NYC and a photographer who created a significant body of work concentrating on male nudes.
Links
- Article: Hidden Master: The Legacy of George Platt Lynes
- On the SIFF website: "Hidden Master: The Legacy of George Platt Lynes". SIFF. 2023-04-26. Archived from the original on 2023-05-12. Retrieved 2023-05-29.
- Official website
Instructions
edit- Please read the general instructions.
- Please consider registering for:
- The Internet Archive; one can sign up here.
- The Wikipedia Library, which provides access to scholarly, newspaper, and genealogical databases. Sometimes one has to apply for additional access through the Library, so it is best to do this immediately.
- Links to Wikidata and ORES assessment can be found at the Wiki List Tool for Hidden Master George Platt Lynes.
- See Wikipedia:Content assessment.
- Any article that has an ORES rating of Start or C can probably be improved. See the B class and the Good article criteria.
- Images by George Platt Lynes that can be used on Wikipedia are scarce. However, we can add a gallery to Lynes's article of his pictures from commons:Category:George Platt Lynes and Category:George Platt Lynes. Note: For any non-free images, {{Non-free media rationale}} should be placed on that image's file page for each article that the image is used in, as recommended by the non-free use rationale guideline.
Chronololgy / comments based on the film
edit- 1925 Lynes goes to Paris aspiring to be a writer
- expatriate scene in paris / gay scene
- Became part of Gertrude Stein's circle
- mentioned in The Autobiography of Alice B. Toklas as "Baby"
- Back in US, started & dropped out of Yale in 1926
- Met Monroe Wheeler & Glenway Wescott, ex-patriates. Meets Wescott in NY
- Wheeler was one of the founders of of the Museum of Modern Art
- John Stevenson (He was in the last ménage à trois with Wheeler / Wescott, Lynes was the first. This wikilink is to a disambiguation page, & this particular person does not appear to be listed there.)
- Lynes, started bookstore in NJ then sold it six months later & went back to Paris on sale money;
- Went to Wheeler & Wescott, then living in Gil France / French Rivera?
- Jean Cocteau lived upstairs
- Travel albums photography by / of the three
- Lynes returns to NYC in 1928
- Beinecke Rare Book & Manuscript Library at Yale University has Lynnes's correspondence with Wheeler & Wescott
- Encouraged to turn from writing to photography by Wheeler & Wescott
- Untrained as a photographer
- Lynes sailed to Paris again in 1931, meets Julien Levy, who displayss Lynes's photos, also a display at MOMA in 1932
- Lecy holds a showing of 50 Lynes photographs in 1934[1]
- Lynes used large format photography
- Themes/subjects were surrealism, mythology, theatre subjects, also fashion photography
- In 1934, Wheeler & Wescott move to NYC & Lynes moves in with them, sharing a bedroom with Wheeler
- image (not usable in WP) https://mfa.org/article/2020/stone-blossom-a-conversation-piece by Paul Cadmus
- Lynes becomes principal photographer for the American Ballet / New York City Ballet
- 1940s relationships with George Tichenor (killed in WW II) & his younger brother Jonathon Tichenor
- 1946 accepts position with Vogue Studio[2]
- Lives beyond his means; suffers from depression because he is in a deeply homosexual town where homophobia is also rampant; misses friends in New York.
- 1948 returns to NYC; out-of-style by then
- Relationship with Laurie Douglas
- After 1948, meets & befriends Alfred Kinsey
- 1954 arranges to give his negatives to the Kinsey institute
- 1955 went to Paris for final time, returns & is hospitalized, & discovers he had lung cancer & had metastasized to his brain.
- In his later years, Lynes destroyed a lot of his early work, particularly his fashion work for which he did not want to be remembered.
In Lynes's circle:
edit- Partly done Article not created but uploaded image & created Wikidata item: Fidelma Cadmus Kirstein
- George Balanchine
- George Tooker
- Jared French
- Jensen Yow
- John Connolly (This wikilink is to a disambiguation page, & this particular person does not appear to be listed there.)
- Kinsey Institute
- Lincoln Kirstein
- Man Ray
- Margaret French
- Marsden Hartley
- PaJaMa
- Paul Cadmus
- Pavel Tchelitchew
Exhibition / Archives
edit- "Sensual/Sexual/Social: The Photography of George Platt Lynes". Newfields. 2019-02-24. Retrieved 2023-05-29.
Additional Biliography / Links
editArticles that need updating
editWikidata item, no article
editNo article or Wikidata item
edit- Jensen Yow / Alexander Jensen Yow
- "Jensen Yow - Biography". MutualArt. Retrieved 2023-05-29.
- "Jensen Yow Artist Biography" (PDF). David Zwirner Gallery. 2019-04-08. Retrieved 2023-05-29.
- "Yow, Alexander Jensen". Social Networks and Archival Context. Retrieved 2023-05-29.
- Chuck Howard
- Rolle, Elisa (March 9, 2023). "queerplaces - Chuck Howard". elisarolle.com. Retrieved 2023-05-29. blog
- "Chuck Howard, José "Pete" Martinez and the others". LiveJournal. 2008-04-03. Retrieved 2023-05-29. blog
- "Artist's Muse: Chuck Howard". Brian Ferrari's Blog. 2022-09-10. Retrieved 2023-05-29.
- "Chuck Howard, 75, Sportswear Pioneer". Women's Wear Daily. 2002-10-03. Retrieved 2023-05-29.
- Ellenzweig, Allen (2022-01-18). "Breaking Away". George Platt Lynes: The Daring Eye. New York: Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/oso/9780190219666.003.0023. ISBN 0-19-021966-1. see page 343
- Brown, Elspeth H. (2019-07-04). ""A Not-So-Simple Love Story" - LRC". Literary Review of Canada. Retrieved 2023-05-29.
- Brown, Elspeth H. (2017-06-01). "Queering Glamour in Interwar Fashion Photography". GLQ: A Journal of Lesbian and Gay Studies. 23 (3). Duke University Press: 289–326. doi:10.1215/10642684-3818429. ISSN 1064-2684.
- Brown, Elspeth H. (2019-05-28). Work!. Duke University Press Books. ISBN 978-1-4780-0214-7. OCLC 1079410751. PDF available here
- Baynes, Thomas D (2019-07-05). More than a Spasm, Less than a Sign: Queer Masculinity in American Visual Culture, 1915-1955. Scholarship@Western (PhD). The University of Western Ontario. Retrieved 2023-05-29.
- "Model Honor for City Girl". Theta Alpha Kappa Journal. 54 (1). Theta Alpha Kappa, University of Missouri: 14–15. November 1939.
- Frederick R. Koch Foundation
Credits
editCrew
edit- film company A Precious Few, LLC.
- director Sam Shahid
- producer Sam Shahid
- producer Matthew Kraus
- producer John MacConnell
- producer Nando DeCarvalho
- executive producer O'Brien Kelley
- executive producer Raja Sethuraman
- cinematography Matthew Kraus
- sound John MacConnell
- lighting John MacConnell
- editor Conor McBride (film editor)
- composer Sarah Lynch
Cast
edit- Allen Ellensweig
- Anne M. Young
- Bernard Perlin
- Bill O'Connor (This wikilink is to a disambiguation page, & this particular person does not appear to be listed there.)
- Bruce Weber (photographer)
- Charles Leslie (This wikilink is to a disambiguation page, & this particular person does not appear to be listed there.)
- Charles L. Venable, Ph.D.
- Demitri Levas
- Don Bachardy
- Duane Michals
- George Platt Lynes II
- James Crump
- James Smalls, Ph.D.
- Jansen Yow
- Jarrett Earnest
- Jerry Rosco
- John Connolly (This wikilink is to a disambiguation page, & this particular person does not appear to be listed there.)
- John Olsen (disambiguation) (This wikilink is to a disambiguation page, & this particular person does not appear to be listed there.)
- John Stevenson (This wikilink is to a disambiguation page, & this particular person does not appear to be listed there.)
- Mary Panzer (art historian)
- Matthew Leifheit
- Michael Scheiber
- Nick Mauss
- Peter Hay Halpert
- Philip Gefter
- Rebecca Fasman
- Robin Cooper (This wikilink is to a disambiguation page, & this particular person does not appear to be listed there.)
- Sarah Morthland
- Steven Haas (art historian), director of the George Platt Lynes Foundation, photographer, & editor of George Platt Lynes: The Male Nudes
- Stewart Shinning
- Vince Aletti
- Vincent Cianni
Contributing institutions
edit- The George Platt Lynes Foundation
- Whitney Museum of American Art
- David Zwirner Gallery
- Philadelphia Museum of Art
- Jerome Robbins Dance Division of the New York Public Library for the Performing Arts
- Woodlawn Cemetery (Bronx, New York), credited as The Woodlawn Cemetery & Conservancy
- Harry Ransom Center, University of Texas at Austin
Contributing family member
edit- Jane Lynes, widow of George Platt Lynes II
References
edit- ^ The History of Photography Archive (2023-05-27). "Julien Levy Gallery - Fifty Photographs by George Platt Lynes, October, 1934". Flickr. Retrieved 2023-05-27.
- ^ Ellenzweig, Allen (2022-01-18). "Exiles in Paradise". George Platt Lynes: The Daring Eye. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 385–C26.F1. doi:10.1093/oso/9780190219666.003.0026. ISBN 0-19-021966-1.