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1005 artist Levy provided a venue for Surrealists, who were often viewed as outcasts, with The Julien Levy Gallery. This is significant because his gallery was the first in New York to display the various works from the Surrealists. Visibilidad
1006 writer Charles Henri Ford was the publisher of Blues and View. Visibilidad
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1011 Founder of Dada and contributer to many social and artistic movements in Paris Visibilidad
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1013 artist Cubist painter, famous for incorporating depictions of machinery and technology into Cubist paintings, filmmaker, most famous film: "Ballet Mecanique", experimental film that explores the beauty in machinery Visibilidad
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1015 painter Under the 'orders' of Julien Levy, who scouted Oelze as an artist, Mina Loy befriended this German surrealist painter. Crossing paths in Paris during the mid 1930's, Loy and Oelze are thought to have been lovers; he is also the 'subject' of Loy's only novel, Insel. Visibilidad
1016 filmmaker Bunuel's nuanced techniques in filmmaking pushed the limits of reality and questioned societal standards. He was one of the first and most iconic Surrealist filmmakers to unapologetically use his art to criticize racial equality, gender roles, and the hypocrisy of the church. Visibilidad
1017 painter One of the 20th century’s most influential artists, Max Ernst was one of the founders of Dada and later among the leading artists of Surrealism. Inspired by many different European painters of all periods, his works revolutionized art, with new modernist painting and sculpting techniques. Visibilidad
1018 writer Recognized as the founder of Surrealism Visibilidad
1019 sculptor Brancusi was an avante-garde artist who worked in Paris and was most famously known for his sculptures, which were made from stone, marble, wood, brass, and bronze. Visibilidad
1020 editor Sylvia Beach opened a bookshop called Shakespeare and Company, located in Paris on 12 rue de l'Odéon. Shakespeare and Company was famous for publishing and advocating for key Modernist texts and writers Visibilidad
1021 writer Barney ran a prominent salon at 20 rue Jacob for over half a century. She wrote poetry, prose, and essays, and supported the work of guests at her salon (including Mina Loy and several famous writers of the 20th century.) Visibilidad
1022 artist Djuna Barnes was an extremly influential journalist that was studing and writing about the expatriate movement in Paris. She ended up becoming friends with a working alongside many of the major modernists at the time. Visibilidad
1023 editor Eugene Jolas' career was one marked by globetrotting and exploration. Maintaining an artistic presence in both the US and Europe, Jolas and his work for the little magazine Transition were instrumental in helping the avant garde movements of the early twentieth century find a broader audience and appreciation. His work with authors such as James Joyce and Samuel Beckett is now acknowledged as being invaluable to establishing both their reputations as artists and the reputation of the movements at large. Visibilidad
1024 writer Gertrude Stein was a prominent figure of American literature, known for being host to a circle of avant-garde artists and writers in her Paris salon. Visibilidad
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1027 writer James Joyce became known for his authentic style and pushing boundaries that led to censorship and the agreements and disagreements that come along with the practice. Visibilidad
1028 writer Poet; worked with Ford Madox Ford at the transatlantic review Visibilidad
1029 writer Avant-garde poet, editor of Contact Publishing Company; author of Being Geniuses Together (1934), his memoir of the Lost Generation. Visibilidad
1030 editor Heiress to the Cunard Steamship Company, experimental poet, founder of the avant-garde Hours Press; editor of The Negro 1934), an anthology of black writing. Visibilidad
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1032 artist Jane Heap was a publisher and editor of the modernist experimental little magazine, The Little Review. Visibilidad
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1037 Film Director, Author, Poet, Artist, Playwright, Actor, Librettist Jean Cocteau was born in Maisons-Laffitte, a horse-riding hub 12 miles outside of Paris. The third child of Georges Cocteau and Eugénie Lecomte Cocteau, “solid” members of the Parisian bourgeoisie. His father committed suicide when Cocteau was 9, and afterwards he was raised along with his siblings by his mother and grandmother in Paris. He adored his mother, whom he once described as “Madonna swathed in velvet, smothered in diamonds, bedecked with nocturnal plumes, a glittering chestnut tree, spiked with rays of light, tall, abstracted, torn between the last promptings to be good and one last look in the mirror” (Jeffries) and perhaps her tastes prompted his later, ardent friendships with stylish women such as Coco Chanel, Edith Piaf, and Russian Princess Natalia Pavlovna. Cocteau’s mother introduced him to her contacts within Paris’s artistic circles and salons, and by 1909 Cocteau had released his first book of poems, La Lampe d'Aladin. In 1917, he wrote the story for the ballet Parade, which included décor by his dear friend Pablo Picasso, which bombed spectacularly. In 1919, Cocteau began a one-sided love affair with the young writer Raymond Radiguet. Though Radiguet did not necessarily return Cocteau’s affections, he relished the attention of the older man. Radiguet died tragically in 1923, which sent Cocteau into a serious opium addiction. In the 1930s, Cocteau wrote his best-received play, The Infernal Machine, but, more significantly, truly began his filmmaking career with 1930’s The Blood of a Poet. His film career reached its apex with 1946’s Beauty and the Beast, though he would make a number of influential films after that. These early films were notable for their surrealistic style and their focus on the themes of love and death. In the 1940s, Cocteau’s legacy became somewhat more complicated. Though his lover, Jean Marais, fought with the Resistance, Cocteau’s affection for “Hitler’s Sculptor” Arno Brecker led to charges of Nazi sympathizing. Though he was later cleared of charges of collaboration, Cocteau’s failure to truly condemn the Nazis leaves a shadow over the man and his work. Cocteau remained active in the film world throughout his final years and passed away in his chateau on Oct. 11, 1963, the same day as his friend Edith Piaf. Relationship to Loy: There is photographic evidence of Cocteau and Loy together in Paris in 1923. Loy had recently returned to Paris after a long absence and Cocteau was mourning the passing of his friend/lover Raymond Radiguet. Loy was seeing increasing success, particularly with the release of The Lunar Baedeker in 1923 and Cocteau had finished his Radiguet-assisted novel Thomas the Imposter. From 1923 to 1936, it can be assumed that Loy and Cocteau, both multi-disciplinary artists and thinkers, were in overlapping circles and frequently experiencing one another’s work, particularly given Cocteau’s twin launches into filmmaking and self-promotion during this time. If nothing else, Loy would have surely come into contact with Cocteau as a result of this promotion, as she was scouting talent for the art dealer Julien Levy. Visibilidad
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1048 editor Man Ray's darkroom assistant in Paris, portraitist in Paris, documentary photographer in New York. With Julien Levy, manager of Paris street photographer Eugène Atget's archive after his death. Visibilidad
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1090 writer The Modernist Era was distinguishable for its incestuous artistic circle of authors, painters, musicians, and the like, but few artists were born into the circle as Ford Madox Ford was in December of 1873—the son of Francis Hueffer, a German music critic, and Catherine Madox Brown, an English painter, pianist, and model; thus much of Ford’s literary success unarguably stemmed from his upbringing. Visibilidad
1092 writer One of the most influential intellects of the 20th century, T.S. Eliot was not only a poet and a dramatist but also a literary critic, editor and publisher. Eliot’s relationship with Loy was one of acquaintance: they never met, but their work was published in the same magazines and periodicals, and Eliot was a critic of Loy’s poetry. Visibilidad
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1099 artist Professional boxer and performance artist; publisher of the polemical art review Maintenant, second husband of Mina Loy, presumed lost at sea when traveling to Buenos Aires to escape the draft. Visibilidad
2000 writer His greatest contributions to the movement were the establishment of Glebe, and even more so, Others. He was also a member of the Arensberg circle and worked with many famous figures in the movement. He was a judge on the pulitzer committee, a member of a number of literary societies. Charles Allen said "“The significance of Glebe and Others is no greater or no less than the estimate that one places on the desirability of securing the reputations of such poets as Williams, Moore, and Stevens” and Frank Waldo said “He has more claim to be called a founder [Of the American Theater] than Eugene O’Neill.” Visibilidad
2001 artist Hosted a literary salons at Villa Curonia, on Fifth Avenue, and in Taos, NM; wrote a four-volume memoir in the 1930s and three other books about Taos; acted as a confidante, an inspiration, and a muse for those who attended her salons. Visibilidad
2002 painter Played major role in the formation of the Society of Independent artists and their first exhibition. Contributed erotic and revolutionary illustrations to the Modernist movement. Visibilidad
2003 writer Moore was a Pulitzer Prize winning American modernist poet whose work was characterized by linguistic precision and vivid description. She served as the editor of the little magazine The Dial from 1925-1929, was well respected amongst her modernist contemporaries, and well known for her distinctive style. Visibilidad
2004 writer Known as the “Mother of Dada,” the Baroness was an emblematic figure of the New York Dada scene. She worked in poetry and sculpture, but her best-known contribution came from her performance art. Visibilidad
2005 artist Stevens is the American artist most associated with the Italian Futurists. Featured at the Armory Show (1913) and the International Exhibition of Futurism (1914), her work influenced the Futurist movement and Modernism in the United States. Visibilidad
2006 writer Van Vechten was a patron of the Harlem Renaissance and archivist of the New York avant-garde Visibilidad
2007 dancer Visibilidad
2008 writer Close friend of Duchamp; one of the fathers of Dadaism Visibilidad
2009 painter Father of imagism; greatly contributed to modernism; brilliant, but controversial; still widely read today Visibilidad
2010 artist Founder of modern dance and proponent of women's freedoms. Visibilidad
2011 writer Poet; worked with Ford Madox Ford at the transatlantic review Visibilidad
2012 writer Artist; extremely sccessful painter Visibilidad
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3002 writer Kathleen Fraser is a contemporary American poet, writer, and visual artist. Born in 1935, in Oklahoma, and raised in Colorado and California, she graduated from Occidental College (California) with a degree in English Literature in 1959. She moved to New York City, working as an editorial assistant for Mademoiselle magazine before pursuing her poetic studies with Stanly Kunitz at The 92nd St. Y “Poetry Center.” Additionally, she studied briefly with Robert Lowell and Kenneth Koch at The New School. It was during this time when she began to meet several prominent New York poets and artists, associated with Black Mountain, The Objectivists, and the New York School. Some influences on Fraser’s work included Frank O'Hara, Barbara Guest and George Oppen. Fraser also attributes the works of Lorine Niedecker, Charles Olson, and Basil Bunting as having a serious impact on her poetics. After the publication of her first book - Change of Address (Kayak, 1968), Fraser taught, as a poet-in-residence for two years at the Iowa Writer's Workshop. She taught contemporary literature and writing programs at Reed College and at San Francisco State University where she remained as a Professor of Creative Writing through 1992. In her early years at SFSU, Fraser directed The Poetry Center and founded the American Poetry Archives and founded the American Poetry Archives. While teaching a course on Feminine Poetics at SFU, Fraser founded, published, and edited the publication HOW(ever), which ran from 1983-1991, as a small magazine focused on innovative writings by contemporary women and “erased” or neglected texts by Anglo/American modernist women writers, together with associate editors Frances Jaffer, Beverly Dahlen and Susan Gevirtz and contributing editors Carolyn Burke and Rachel Blau DuPlessis. Additionally, she wrote and narrated the hour-long video Working Women in Literature. Fraser’s honors and awards include the New School’s Frank O’Hara Poetry Prize (1964) and the American Academy’s Discovery Award (1964), as well as a fellowship from the National Endowment for the Arts (1971, 1978) and a Guggenheim Fellowship (1981). Working primarily with small press publications, Fraser has published more than fifteen books, including mixed-genre collections, a chapbook of collaged wall pieces, and an essay collection. Her published works include twelve volumes of poems and two children’s books: What I Want (1974), New Shoes (1978), Magritte Series (1977), Each Next: narratives (1980), Something (even human voices) in the foreground, a lake (1984), Notes Preceding Trust (1987), when new time folds up (1993), WING (1995), il cuore : the heart—Selected Poems 1970–1995 (1997), Translating the Unspeakable (2000), and Discrete Categories Forced into Coupling (2004). Fraser now splits her time between San Francisco and Rome where she lives with her husband, the philosopher/playwright Arthur Bierman. She lectures and gives readings at local Italian universities and has translated Lampi e acqua, a book-length serial poem by Maria Obino (excerpts published in AVEC), and a selection of poems by Toni Maraini, Daniela Attanasi, Sara Zanghi and Giovanna Sandri (published in Thirteenth Moon, "Italian Women Writers" issue). Visibilidad
3003 Spiritualist/Writer Rachel blau DuPlessis was born in Brooklyn, New York in 1941. During her undergraduate studies at Barnard College she began to develop her pin both poetic style, pushing against formalism in her writing and against sexism in society. DuPlessis’ poetry as well as her work in poetics and critical essay writing have maintained a feminist positionality while representing the unique intersections of poetry, politics, society, and gender. For DuPlessis, the unique character of Loy’s work emerged as both distinctly feminist, and politically subversive. Loy’s work as a poet, play write, and artist drew out DuPlessis’ affinity for the modernist style of poetics and various experimental, aesthetic expressions. Intrigued and inspired by Loy’s works, DuPlessis devoted a great deal of time in her own writing to Loy as a key modernist poet. Visibilidad
3004 Denise Levertov is remembered as a poet of the Black Mountain school. In the 1960s and '70s, Levertov's poetry took on a political dimension as Levertov became more interested in protesting the Vietnam War and taking part in the feminist movement. Visibilidad
3011 artist Janet Flanner was an American expatriate who resided in Paris both before and after WWII. She worked for The New Yorker for over 50 years, writing pieces on notable figures, such as Pablo Picasso, Adolf Hitler, Bette Davis, and the Queen of England. Visibilidad
3012 artist Thomas Merton was a Trappist monk and writer on spirituality. Visibilidad
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4000 Founder of Religion Visibilidad
4001 writer Marinetti's Futurist movement moved Loy to beginning writing poetry in the 1910s, styled after the ideologies of the Founding and Manifesto of Futurism. He and Loy had an intermittent affair, which eventually turned into a love triangle with Giovanni Papini. Visibilidad
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4009 artist Walter Conrad Arensberg intermingled with and befriended some of the most important artists of the 20th century. He and his wife Louise played an integral role in the formation and promulgation of avant-garde artistic ideas and activities in the United States. Visibilidad
4010 artist Joseph Stella was one of the founders of Futurism in America. Visibilidad
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4016 photographer Beatrice Wood was considered a mother of Dada and later became a prominent lusterware ceramicist. Visibilidad
4017 painter Katherine Dreier was a founding member of the Société Anonyme. She was also a member of the Society of the Independent Artists. Visibilidad
4020 activist Elsa Schiaparelli was known for the surrealist fashion designs she produced at her famous 21 Place Vendome boutique in Paris. Some of her most well known pieces were the result of collaborations with Salvador Dalí and Jean Cocteau. Though it is unknown if she and Mina Loy knew each other, they mingled with the same group of Surrealist artists and both lived in Paris in the 1920s. Visibilidad
4021 artist Photographer Lee Miller, friend of Mina Loy, lived many lives: she pursued careers as a Vogue model, a surrealist artist, a World War II photojournalist, and an experimental gourmet chef. Visibilidad
4025 writer Hermine David was a 20th-century painter and book illustrator. The wife of Jules Pascin, she was also close friends with Mina Loy for much of their lives. Visibilidad
4027 writer Poet, fiction writer and ex-patriate, Wescott was introduced to Mina Loy through Marianne Moore in the 1920s. The two writers were involved in the same literary circles and it was rumoured that Wescott was deeply infatuated with Loy. Visibilidad
4033 artist Founder of the Catholic Worker Movement, Member of Provincetown Players Visibilidad
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4052 Mary Baker Eddy founded the Christian Science Religion. Visibilidad
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Boyce began working as the sole woman reporter for The Commercial Advertiserin 1898 after moving to New York (Trimberger 102). There, she met her future husband, Hutchins Hapgood and Mabel Dodge. A novelist and playwright, Boyce is known for her novel, The Bond, and two plays written in 1915: Constancy and Enemies. She was a leading figure in the Provincetown Players. She befriended Mina Loy in Florence, 1914, at the Villa Curonia. Both women were considered part of the New Woman movement. Visibilidad
Origen Relación Destino Fecha Name Relationship
1000 1001 Mina Loy
1000 1015 Mina Loy Lover
1000 1016 Mina Loy Acquaintance
1000 1017 Mina Loy Acquaintance
1000 1019 Mina Loy Friend
1000 1023 Mina Loy Acquaintance
1000 1027 Mina Loy Acquaintance
1000 1037 Mina Loy Acquaintance
1000 1040 Mina Loy Collaborator
1000 2001 Mina Loy Friend
1000 2007 Mina Loy Acquaintance
1000 2008 Mina Loy Collaborator
1000 2009 Mina Loy Acquaintance
1000 3000 Mina Loy Acquaintance
1000 3002 Mina Loy Collaborator
1000 3003 Mina Loy Influenced by
1000 3004 Mina Loy Influenced by
1000 3011 Mina Loy Acquaintance
1000 3012 Mina Loy Acquaintance
1000 4009 Mina Loy Friend
1000 4021 Mina Loy Friend
1000 4033 Mina Loy Acquaintance
1001 1003 Joseph Cornell Acquaintance
1001 4052 Joseph Cornell Influenced by
1002 1001 Matta
1003 1001 Julien Levy Friend
1003 1015 Julien Levy Acquaintance
1003 1016 Julien Levy Collaborator
1003 1017 Julien Levy Friend
1003 1048 Julien Levy collaborator
1003 4021 Julien Levy Lover
1004 1001 Robert Motherwell
1005 1001 Charles Henri Ford
1005 1037 Charles Henri Ford collaborator
1005 3017 Charles Henri Ford collaborator
1006 1001 Peggy Guggenheim
1006 1017 Peggy Guggenheim Spouse
1006 1019 Peggy Guggenheim Friend
1006 1022 Peggy Guggenheim Collaborator
1006 1048 Peggy Guggenheim collaborator
1006 4017 Peggy Guggenheim Acquaintance
1007 1001 Robert Indiana
1008 1001 Andy Warhol
1008 1005 Andy Warhol Friend
1009 1001 Marcel Duchamp
1009 1003 Marcel Duchamp Acquaintance
1009 1005 Marcel Duchamp Influenced by
1009 1017 Marcel Duchamp Collaborator
1009 1019 Marcel Duchamp Friend
1009 1023 Marcel Duchamp Acquaintance
1009 2008 Marcel Duchamp Friend
1009 3017 Marcel Duchamp Collaborator
1009 4009 Marcel Duchamp Collaborator
1009 4010 Marcel Duchamp Friend
1009 4016 Marcel Duchamp Collaborator
1009 4017 Marcel Duchamp Friend
1009 4020 Marcel Duchamp Friend
1010 1001 Dorothea Tanning
1010 1017 Dorothea Tanning Spouse
1011 1017 Tristan Tzara Friend
1011 1019 Tristan Tzara Friend
1011 1023 Tristan Tzara Acquaintance
1011 1030 Tristan Tzara lover
1011 1032 Tristan Tzara Acquaintance
1011 1037 Tristan Tzara Acquaintance
1011 4020 Tristan Tzara Friend
1012 1003 Man Ray Acquaintance
1012 1017 Man Ray Collaborator
1012 1019 Man Ray Friend
1012 1022 Man Ray Acquaintance
1012 1037 Man Ray Collaborator
1012 2008 Man Ray
1012 3017 Man Ray Collaborator
1012 4009 Man Ray Friend
1012 4016 Man Ray Friend
1012 4017 Man Ray Collaborator
1012 4020 Man Ray Friend
1012 4021 Man Ray Collaborator
1013 1017 Fernand Leger Acquaintance
1013 4017 Fernand Léger Acquaintance
1016 1017 Luis Bunuel Collaborator
1017 1012 Max Ernst Friend
1017 1016 Max Ernst Collaborator
1017 4021 Max Ernst Friend
1018 1005 André Breton Influenced by
1018 1017 André Breton Enemy
1018 1099 André Breton Friend
1018 4021 Andre Breton Friend
1019 1003 Constantin Brancusi Acquaintance
1019 1030 Constantin Brancusi influenced by
1019 1032 Constantin Brancusi Acquaintance
1019 1040 Constantin Brancusi Collaborator
1020 1021 Sylvia Beach Friend
1020 1027 Sylvia Beach Collaborator
1020 1090 Sylvia Beach Acquaintance
1020 3011 Sylvia Beach Friend
1021 1022 Natalie Barney Acquaintance
1021 1090 Natalie Barney Acquaintance
1021 2010 Natalie Barney Acquaintance
1022 1005 Djuna Barnes Lovers
1022 1021 Djuna Barnes Friend
1022 1027 Djuna Barnes Collaborator
1022 1032 Djuna Barnes Lover
1022 1048 Djuna Barnes acquaintance
1022 3011 Djuna Barnes Friend
1024 1005 Gertrude Stein Friend
1024 1019 Gertrude Stein Friend
1024 1021 Gertrude Stein Friend
1024 1022 Gertrude Stein Collaborator
1024 1032 Gertrude Stein Acquaintance
1024 1037 Gertrude Stein Friend
1024 1090 Gertrude Stein Collaborator
1024 2001 Gertrude Stein Friend
1024 2008 Gertrude Stein
1024 2010 Gertrude Stein Friend
1024 3011 Gertrude Stein Friend
1024 4017 Gertrude Stein Friend
1024 4052 Gertrude Stein Influenced by
1025 4016 Isadora Duncan Acquaintance
1027 1003 James Joyce Acquaintance
1027 1019 James Joyce Friend
1027 1022 James Joyce Collaborator
1027 1023 James Joyce Friend
1027 1048 James Joyce acquaintance
1027 1090 James Joyce Friend
1027 3000 James Joyce Friend
1027 3017 James Joyce Influenced by
1028 3002 Basil Bunting Influenced by
1029 1003 Robert McAlmon Friend
1029 1022 Robert McAlmon Collaborator
1029 1027 Robert McAlmon Collaborator
1030 4020 Nancy Cunard Acquaintance
1031 1001 Susan Sontag Friend
1032 1019 Jane Heap Acquaintance
1032 1037 Jane Heap Acquaintance
1033 1005 Ezra Pound Friend
1033 1019 Ezra Pound Friend
1033 1021 Ezra Pound Friend
1033 1027 Ezra Pound Collaborator
1033 1030 Ezra Pound lover
1033 3000 Ezra Pound Friend
1034 1019 John Quinn Friend
1035 1019 Erik Satie Friend
1036 1019 Margaret Anderson Friend
1036 1032 Margaret Anderson Lover
1036 3011 Margaret Anderson Friend
1037 1005 Jean Cocteau Collaborator
1037 1019 Jean Cocteau Friend
1037 1048 Jean Cocteau acquaintance
1037 4020 Jean Cocteau Collaborator
1037 4021 Jean Cocteau Collaborator
1038 1019 Henri Pierre Roche Friend
1040 1003 Alfred Stieglitz Friend
1040 1019 Alfred Stieglitz Friend
1040 1099 Alfred Stieglitz Acquaintance
1040 2008 Alfried Stieglitz
1040 4021 Alfred Stieglitz Collaborator
1041 1019 Walter Pach Friend
1042 1019 Blaise Cendrars Acquaintance
1042 1099 Blaise Cendrars Friend
1043 1019 Henri Bergson Acquaintance
1044 1019 Auguste Rodin Friend
1044 1040 Auguste Rodin Collaborator
1045 1022 Marsden Hartley Collaborator
1045 1029 Marsden Hartley Collaborator
1046 1022 Elsa von Freytag-Loringhoven Collaborator
1046 1048 Elsa von Freytag-Loringhoven acquaintance
1047 1022 Laurence Vail Collaborator
1048 1012 Berenice Abbott influenced by
1048 1022 Berenice Abbott Collaborator
1048 3069 Berenice Abbott Influenced By
1049 1022 Emma Goldman Acquaintance
1049 1049 Emma Goldman Acquaintance
1050 1017 Hans Arp Friend
1051 1017 Paul Eluard Friend
1051 1037 Paul Éluard Friend
1051 4021 Paul Eluard Friend
1052 1017 Alberto Giacometti Friend
1053 1005 Salvador Dali Collaborator
1053 1012 Salvador Dali Friend
1053 1015 Salvador Dali Acquaintance
1053 1016 Salvador Dali Friend
1053 1017 Salvador Dali Collaborator
1053 4020 Salvador Dali Collaborator
1053 4021 Salvador Dali Friend
1054 1013 Duncan Isadora Acquaintance
1054 1017 Joan Miro Collaborator
1055 1017 David Hare Collaborator
1056 4016 Arthur Cravan Friend
1057 4016 Anais Nin Friend
1058 4016 Henri-Pierre Roche Lover
1059 1030 Aldous Huxley Lover
1060 1030 Louis Aragon Lover
1061 1030 Langston Hughes Collaborator
1062 1030 Zora Neal Hurston Collaborator
1063 1029 Bryher Spouse
1066 1029 Kay Boyle Friend
1081 1023 Samuel Beckett Collaborator
1081 1030 Samuel Beckett influenced by
1082 1015 Paul Klee Influenced By
1082 1023 Paul Klee Friend
1083 1023 Hugo Ball Friend
1084 1023 George Antheil Acquaintance
1085 1023 Carl Jung Friend
1090 1027 Ford Madox Ford Acquaintance
1090 1029 William Carlos Williams Collaborator
1090 3000 Ford Madox Ford Acquaintance
1090 3011 Ford Maddox Ford Acquaintance
1090 4009 William Carlos Williams Friend
1092 1027 T. S. Eliot Acquaintance
1092 3004 T. S. Eliot Collaborator
1093 1027 Ernest Hemingway Acquaintance
1093 1030 Ernest Hemingway influenced by
1093 1032 Ernest Hemingway Acquaintance
1093 1090 Ernest Hemingway Enemy
1093 3011 Ernest Hemmingway Friend
1093 3017 Ernest Hemingway Influenced by
1093 4021 Ernest Hemingway Acquaintance
1094 1027 Herbert Gorman Friend
1095 1027 Wyndham Lewis Acquaintance
1095 1030 Wyndham Lewis lover
1095 3000 Wyndham Lewis Friend
1096 1000 Jules Pascin Friend
1096 1099 Giovanni Papini Enemy
1098 1099 Robert Delaunay friend
1099 1009 Arthur Cravan friend
1099 4009 Arthur Cravan friend
1099 4152 Arthur Cravan enemy
2000 4009 Alfred Kreymborg Friend
2001 4009 Mabel Luhan Dodge Friend
2004 2001 Elsa von Freytag-Loringhoven Acquaintance
2006 1005 Carl Van Vechten Friend
2006 2001 Carl Van Vechten Acquaintance
2006 4016 Carl Van Vechten Acquaintance
2008 1019 Francis Picabia Friend
2008 1032 Francis Picabia Collaborator
2008 1040 Francis Picabia Friend
2008 1099 Francis Picabia Friend
2008 2007 Francis Picaba Spouse
2008 4009 Francis Picabia Friend
2008 4016 Francis Picabia Friend
2008 4020 Francis Picabia Friend
2009 1032 Ezra Pound Collaborator
2009 3017 Ezra Pound Influenced by
2010 1021 Isadora Duncan Acquaintance
2010 1039 Isadora Duncan Lover
2010 1044 Isadora Duncan Friend
2010 2001 Isadora Duncan Acquaintance
3003 3002 Rachel Blau DuPlessis Influenced by
3004 3002 Denise Levertov Collaborator
3011 1032 Janet Flanner Acquaintance
3011 1048 Janet Flanner acquaintance
3013 1090 Joseph Conrad Collaborator
3014 1090 Arthur Pearson Marwood Collaborator
3017 1005 William Carlos Williams Collaborator
3017 1090 William Carlos Williams Friend
3017 3000 William Carlos Williams Enemy
3017 3004 William Carlos Williams Influenced by
3018 3002 Charles Olson Influenced by
3018 3004 Charles Olson Friend
3019 3004 Mitchell Goodman Spouse
3021 1029 Marianne Moore Collaborator
3021 3000 Marianne Moore Acquaintance
3021 3017 Marianne Moore Friend
3023 3000 Virginia Woolf Friend
3024 3000 D. H. Lawrence Enemy
3025 3000 W. H. Auden Acquaintance
3029 1090 Stella Bowen Lover
3030 1090 Violet Hunt Lover
3034 1090 Douglas Goldring Friend
3036 1090 Allen Tate Friend
3037 1090 Caroline Gordon Friend
3038 1090 Robert Lowell Friend
3039 1090 John Crowe Ransom Acquaintance
3040 1090 Graham Green Influenced by
3044 3002 Carolyn Burke Collaborator
3045 3002 Frances Jaffer Collaborator
3046 3002 Susan Gevirtz Collaborator
3047 3002 Myung Mi Kim Collaborator
3048 3002 Frank O'Hara Influenced by
3049 3002 Barbara Guest Collaborator
3050 3002 Beverly Dahlen Collaborator
3052 3011 Solita Solano Lover
3053 3011 Noel Murphy Lover
3054 3011 Natalia Danesi Lover
3055 3011 William Lane Rehm Spouse
3056 3011 Harold Ross Influenced by
3057 1029 F. Scott Fitzgerald Acquaintance
3057 3011 F. Scott Fitzgerald Friend
3058 3000 Ted Hughes Acquaintance
3059 1090 Janice Biala Lover
3060 1003 Raymond Chandler Acquaintance
3061 1003 Salvador Dali Acquaintance
3063 1003 Stella Simon Acquaintance
3064 1003 Anne Brigman Acquaintance
3065 1003 Georgia O'Keefe Acquaintance
3066 1003 Ralph Steiner Acquaintance
3067 1003 Leonce Rosenberg Acquaintance
3068 1003 Allen Porter Acquaintance
3069 1003 Eugene Atget Acquaintance
3070 1003 Dudley Murphy Acquaintance
3071 1003 Lincoln Kirstein Friend
3072 1003 Arthur Everett Austin Jr. Friend
3074 1003 Alfred Barr Jr. Friend
3074 1015 Alfred H., Jr. Barr Acquaintance
3075 1003 Kirk Askew Friend
3076 1003 Philip Johnson Friend
3077 1003 Henry-Russell Hitchhock Friend
3077 1048 Henry-Russell Hitchcock collaborator
3078 1003 John McAndrew Friend
3079 1003 Agnes Rindge Friend
3080 1003 John Becker Friend
3081 1003 Jere Abbott Friend
3082 1003 Arthur McComb Friend
3083 1003 Edward Warbury Friend
4000 1040 Gertrude Stein Friend
4000 4010 Gertrude Stein Friend
4003 2010 Gordon Craig Lover
4009 3017 Walter Arensberg Collaborator
4009 4010 Walter Conrad Arensberg Friend
4009 4016 Walter Arensberg Friend
4009 4017 Walter Arensberg Friend
4010 1040 Georgia O'Keeffe Spouse
4010 4010 Georgia O'Keeffe Friend
4013 3017 Charles Demuth Collaborator
4017 1032 Katherine Dreier Acquaintance
4027 1005 Glenway Wescott Friend
4043 3017 Louis Zukofsky Collaborator
4044 3017 Alfred Kreymborg Collaborator
4100 4021 Arnold Genthe Collaborator
4101 4021 Ladislas Medgyes Collaborator
4102 4021 Edward Steichen Collaborator
4103 1037 Pablo Picasso Friend
4103 4017 Pablo Picasso Friend
4103 4021 Pablo Picasso Friend
4104 4052 Willa Cather Influenced by
4105 4021 Roland Penrose Spouse
4106 4052 Leo Stein Influenced by
4107 4052 Hart Crane Influenced by
4108 4021 Margaret Bourke-White Acquaintance
4109 4052 Amos Bronson Alcott Acquaintance
4110 4021 Charlie Chaplin Lover
4111 4052 Francis Simpson Stevens Influenced by
4112 4052 Mark Twain Enemy
4113 2010 Augustin Daly Collaborator
4114 2010 Konstantin Stanislavsky Friend
4115 2010 Paris Singer Lover
4116 1037 Sergei Diaghilev Friend
4116 2010 Sergei Diaghilev Acquaintance
4117 2010 Sergei Esenin Spouse
4119 4017 Walter Shirlaw Collaborator
4120 4017 Raphaël Collin Acquaintance
4121 4017 Wassily Kandinsky Acquaintance
4122 4017 Gustav Britsch Friend
4123 4017 Heinrich Campendonk Friend
4124 4017 Vincent Van Gogh Friend
4125 1032 George "Ivanovich" Gurdjieff Influenced by
4126 1032 Frederick Kiesler Collaborator
4127 3017 Kenneth Burke Friend
4127 4033 Kenneth Burke Friend
4128 1029 Hilda Doolittle Collaborator
4128 3017 Hilda Doolittle Friend
4129 1029 Wallace Stevens Collaborator
4129 3017 Wallace Stevens Friend
4130 3017 Maxwell Bodenheim Friend
4131 1037 Raymond Radiguet Lover
4132 1037 Jean Marais Lover
4133 1037 Jean Desbordes Lover
4134 1037 Natalia Pavlona Paley Friend
4135 1037 Marcel Khill Lover
4136 1037 Marcel Proust Friend
4137 1037 Andre Gide Friend
4138 1037 Igor Stravinsky Collaborator
4139 1037 Vaslav Nijinsky Friend
4140 1037 Edith Piaf Friend
4141 1037 Jean Genet Friend
4142 1037 George Auric Friend
4143 1037 Louis Durey Friend
4144 1037 Arthur Honegger Friend
4145 1037 Darius Milhaud Friend
4146 1037 Francis Poulenc Friend
4147 1037 Germaine Tailleferre Friend
4148 1037 Coco Chanel Friend
4149 1037 Amedeo Modigliani Collaborator
4150 1037 Romaine Brooks Collaborator
4151 1037 Jacques Lipchitz Collaborator
4152 1037 Guillaume Apollinaire Friend
4153 1037 Maurice Rostand Friend
4154 1037 Lucien Daudet Friend
4155 1005 Louis Zukofsky Collaborator
4156 1005 Paul Bowles Friend
4157 1005 Cecil Beaton Collaborator
4158 1005 Robert Mapplethorpe Collaborator
4159 1005 Pavel Tchelitchew Lovers
4160 1005 George Platt Lynes Friend
4161 1005 Lincoln Kirstein Friend
4162 1005 Edith Sitwell Collaborator
4163 1005 Leonor Fini collaborator
4164 1005 George Balanchine Friend
4165 1005 E.E. Cummings Friend
4166 3017 Allen Ginsberg collaborator
5000 4009 Gabriella Buffet-Picabia Friend
5000 4020 Gabriella Buffet-Picabia Friend
5001 4009 Beatirce Wood Friend
5002 4009 Charles Demuth Friend
5003 1015 Walter Gropius Influenced By
5003 4009 Clara Tice Friend
5004 1015 Laszlo Moholy-Nagy Influenced By
5004 4009 Wallace Stevens Friend
5005 4009 Baroness Elsa von Freytag-Loringhoven Friend
5006 4020 Paul Poiret Influenced By
5007 4020 Lee Miller Acquaintance
5008 4020 Coco Chanel Enemy
5009 4020 Daisy Fellowes Acquaintance
5010 1040 Pablo Picasso Influenced By
5011 1040 Paul Strand Friend
5012 1040 Charles Sheeler Collaborator
5013 1040 Henri Matisse Friend
5014 1040 Eduard Steichen Collaborator
5015 4009 Louise Arensberg Spouse
5015 4033 Eugene O'Neill Friend
5016 4033 Floyd Dell Friend
5017 4033 Malcolm Cowley Friend
5018 4033 Mike Gold Acquaintance