Maundelle Bass Weston:
Photo: Hagemeyer:
In 1922 Hagemeyer built a spring-summer studio in
Carmel-by-the-Sea, California, at that time the largest art colony on the Pacific coast, and donated his photographs that December to a local fund-raising exhibit.
[2] It was here that Hagemeyer met
Edward Weston, who encouraged him to further his career in photography. He moved his Carmel address in 1924 to a new "artfully designed studio" at the prominent junction of Mountain View and Ocean Avenues, which became a meeting place for intellectuals as well as a "gallery" to display the works of local and visiting artists.
[3][4][5] In 1928 he relocated to a significantly larger "Johan Hagemeyer Studio-Gallery," where he devoted an entire room to his own pictorial art and held major exhibitions of prominent Post-Impressionists painters, such as
Henrietta Shore, as well as art photographers, including Edward Weston.
[3][6] In February 1932 at the
Haggin Museum in
Stockton, California Hagemeyer displayed his photographs in a joint exhibition with Carmel's most famous Impressionist painter,
William Frederic Ritschel.
[7] Through the spring and summer of 1938 he exhibited his landscape and portrait photos at the Guild of Carmel Craftsmen.
[8][9]
Maundelle Bass Weston, from Wiki
"During the 1920s, the teenager toured Mexico, where she was spotted by the artist
Diego Rivera, who was reportedly enraptured by her beauty. Rivera sought an introduction through the American Consulate, and he secured her services as a model for his portraits.
[2]
Bass spent three years touring Central and South America with the
Folklórico group. Her dance repertoire was influenced by dances from Africa, Egypt, Africa, Cuba, Brazil and America.
[1] In Mexico City, she was a critical darling of the press after her performance at the famed
Palacio de Bellas Artes. The magazine
Hoy wrote, "Maudelle is the high priestess of the dances. She possesses a kind of spiritual mysticism," while
Últimas Noticias wrote, "She tells the story of the dance with rapture and passion."
[2]
Bass Weston moved to Los Angeles around 1933, where she continued her training at John Gray's Conservatory of Music in Los Angeles,
[2] and was trained in ballet by Isobel Keith Morrison.
[1] She was the first African American to study with modern
choreographer Lester Horton.
[4] In L.A., she established herself as a well-known studio model for art schools and for artists such as Rivera,
Johan Hagemeyer, and
Edward Weston.
[4][5] "