IMPORTANT: Onodo will close on June 30th. Please back up your data!
Nodo | Tipo | Descripción | Visible |
---|---|---|---|
0 | artist | 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 |
Agnes Rindge | Visibilidad | ||
Alberto Giacometti | Visibilidad | ||
Aldous Huxley | Visibilidad | ||
Alfred Barr Jr. | Visibilidad | ||
Alfred Kreymborg | 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 |
Alfred Stieglitz | Visibilidad | ||
Allen Ginsberg | Visibilidad | ||
Allen Porter | Visibilidad | ||
Allen Tate | Visibilidad | ||
Amedeo Modigliani | Visibilidad | ||
Amos Bronson Alcott | Visibilidad | ||
Anais Nin | Visibilidad | ||
André Breton | writer | Recognized as the founder of Surrealism | Visibilidad |
Andre Gide | Visibilidad | ||
Andy Warhol | Visibilidad | ||
Anne Brigman | Visibilidad | ||
Arnold Genthe | Visibilidad | ||
Arthur Cravan | 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 |
Arthur Everett Austin Jr. | Visibilidad | ||
Arthur Honegger | Visibilidad | ||
Arthur McComb | Visibilidad | ||
Arthur Pearson Marwood | Visibilidad | ||
Auguste Rodin | Visibilidad | ||
Augustin Daly | Visibilidad | ||
Barbara Guest | Visibilidad | ||
Baroness Elsa von Freytag-Loringhoven | Visibilidad | ||
Basil Bunting | writer | Poet; worked with Ford Madox Ford at the transatlantic review | Visibilidad |
Beatirce Wood | Visibilidad | ||
Beatrice Wood | Visibilidad | ||
Berenice Abbott | 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 |
Beverly Dahlen | Visibilidad | ||
Blaise Cendrars | Visibilidad | ||
Bryher | Visibilidad | ||
Carl Jung | Visibilidad | ||
Carl Van Vechten | writer | Van Vechten was a patron of the Harlem Renaissance and archivist of the New York avant-garde | Visibilidad |
Caroline Gordon | Visibilidad | ||
Carolyn Burke | Visibilidad | ||
Cecil Beaton | Visibilidad | ||
Charles Demuth | Visibilidad | ||
Charles Henri Ford | 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 |
Charles Olson | Visibilidad | ||
Charles Sheeler | Visibilidad | ||
Charlie Chaplin | Visibilidad | ||
Clara Tice | Visibilidad | ||
Coco Chanel | Visibilidad | ||
Constantin Brancusi | 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 |
Daisy Fellowes | Visibilidad | ||
Darius Milhaud | Visibilidad | ||
David Hare | Visibilidad | ||
Denise Levertov | 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 | |
D. H. Lawrence | Visibilidad | ||
Djuna Barnes | 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 |
Dorothea Tanning | Visibilidad | ||
Dorothy Day | Visibilidad | ||
Douglas Goldring | Visibilidad | ||
Dudley Murphy | Visibilidad | ||
Duncan Isadora | Visibilidad | ||
Edith Piaf | Visibilidad | ||
Edith Sitwell | Visibilidad | ||
Eduard Steichen | Visibilidad | ||
Edward Steichen | Visibilidad | ||
Edward Warbury | Visibilidad | ||
E.E. Cummings | Visibilidad | ||
Elsa Schiaparelli | Visibilidad | ||
Elsa von Freytag-Loringhoven | 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 |
Emma Goldman | Visibilidad | ||
Erik Satie | Visibilidad | ||
Ernest Hemingway | Visibilidad | ||
Eugene Atget | Visibilidad | ||
Eugene Jolas | Visibilidad | ||
Eugene O'Neill | Visibilidad | ||
Ezra Pound | painter | Father of imagism; greatly contributed to modernism; brilliant, but controversial; still widely read today | Visibilidad |
Fernand Leger | 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 |
Fernand Léger | Visibilidad | ||
Floyd Dell | Visibilidad | ||
Ford Madox Ford | 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 |
Frances Jaffer | Visibilidad | ||
Francis Picaba | writer | Close friend of Duchamp; one of the fathers of Dadaism | Visibilidad |
Francis Picabia | Visibilidad | ||
Francis Poulenc | Visibilidad | ||
Francis Simpson Stevens | Visibilidad | ||
Frank O'Hara | Visibilidad | ||
Frederick Kiesler | Visibilidad | ||
F. Scott Fitzgerald | Visibilidad | ||
Gabriella Buffet-Picabia | Visibilidad | ||
Gabrielle Buffet-Picabia | Visibilidad | ||
George Antheil | Visibilidad | ||
George Auric | Visibilidad | ||
George Balanchine | Visibilidad | ||
George "Ivanovich" Gurdjieff | Visibilidad | ||
George Platt Lynes | Visibilidad | ||
Georgia O'Keefe | Visibilidad | ||
Georgia O'Keeffe | artist | Joseph Stella was one of the founders of Futurism in America. | Visibilidad |
Germaine Tailleferre | Visibilidad | ||
Gertrude Stein | Founder of Religion | 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 |
Giovanni Papini | Visibilidad | ||
Glenway Wescott | 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 |
Gordon Craig | Visibilidad | ||
Graham Green | Visibilidad | ||
Guillaume Apollinaire | Visibilidad | ||
Gustav Britsch | Visibilidad | ||
Hans Arp | Visibilidad | ||
Harold Ross | Visibilidad | ||
Hart Crane | Visibilidad | ||
Heinrich Campendonk | Visibilidad | ||
Henri Bergson | Visibilidad | ||
Henri Matisse | Visibilidad | ||
Henri Pierre Roche | Visibilidad | ||
Henri-Pierre Roche | Visibilidad | ||
Henry-Russell Hitchcock | Visibilidad | ||
Herbert Gorman | Visibilidad | ||
Hilda Doolittle | Visibilidad | ||
Hugo Ball | Visibilidad | ||
Igor Stravinsky | Visibilidad | ||
Isadora Duncan | artist | Founder of modern dance and proponent of women's freedoms. | Visibilidad |
Jacques Lipchitz | Visibilidad | ||
James Joyce | 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 |
Jane Heap | artist | Jane Heap was a publisher and editor of the modernist experimental little magazine, The Little Review. | Visibilidad |
Janet Flanner | 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 |
Janice Biala | Visibilidad | ||
Jean Cocteau | 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 |
Jean Desbordes | Visibilidad | ||
Jean Genet | Visibilidad | ||
Jean Marais | Visibilidad | ||
Jere Abbott | Visibilidad | ||
Joan Miro | Visibilidad | ||
John Becker | Visibilidad | ||
John Crowe Ransom | Visibilidad | ||
John McAndrew | Visibilidad | ||
John Quinn | Visibilidad | ||
Joseph Conrad | Visibilidad | ||
Joseph Cornell | artist | Visibilidad | |
Jules Pascin | Visibilidad | ||
Julien Levy | artist | Visibilidad | |
Katherine Dreier | painter | Katherine Dreier was a founding member of the Société Anonyme. She was also a member of the Society of the Independent Artists. | Visibilidad |
Kathleen Fraser | Visibilidad | ||
Kay Boyle | Visibilidad | ||
Kenneth Burke | Visibilidad | ||
Kirk Askew | Visibilidad | ||
Konstantin Stanislavsky | Visibilidad | ||
Ladislas Medgyes | Visibilidad | ||
Langston Hughes | Visibilidad | ||
Laszlo Moholy-Nagy | Visibilidad | ||
Laurence Vail | Visibilidad | ||
Lee Miller | Visibilidad | ||
Leonce Rosenberg | Visibilidad | ||
Leonor Fini | Visibilidad | ||
Leo Stein | Visibilidad | ||
Lincoln Kirstein | Visibilidad | ||
Louis Aragon | Visibilidad | ||
Louis Durey | Visibilidad | ||
Louise Arensberg | Visibilidad | ||
Louis Zukofsky | Visibilidad | ||
Lucien Daudet | Visibilidad | ||
Luis Bunuel | 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 |
Mabel Luhan Dodge | 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 |
Malcolm Cowley | Visibilidad | ||
Man Ray | activist | Visibilidad | |
Marcel Duchamp | Visibilidad | ||
Marcel Khill | Visibilidad | ||
Marcel Proust | Visibilidad | ||
Margaret Anderson | Visibilidad | ||
Margaret Bourke-White | Visibilidad | ||
Marianne Moore | Visibilidad | ||
Mark Twain | Visibilidad | ||
Marsden Hartley | Visibilidad | ||
Mary Baker Eddy | Visibilidad | ||
Matta | Visibilidad | ||
Maurice Rostand | Visibilidad | ||
Max Ernst | 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 |
Maxwell Bodenheim | Visibilidad | ||
Mike Gold | Visibilidad | ||
Mina Loy | artist | Visibilidad | |
Mitchell Goodman | Visibilidad | ||
Myung Mi Kim | Visibilidad | ||
Nancy Cunard | 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 |
Natalia Danesi | Visibilidad | ||
Natalia Pavlona Paley | Visibilidad | ||
Natalie Barney | 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 |
Noel Murphy | Visibilidad | ||
Oelze | Visibilidad | ||
Pablo Picasso | Visibilidad | ||
Paris Singer | Visibilidad | ||
Paul Bowles | Visibilidad | ||
Paul Éluard | Visibilidad | ||
Paul Klee | Visibilidad | ||
Paul Poiret | Visibilidad | ||
Paul Strand | Visibilidad | ||
Pavel Tchelitchew | Visibilidad | ||
Peggy Guggenheim | writer | Charles Henri Ford was the publisher of Blues and View. | Visibilidad |
Philip Johnson | Visibilidad | ||
Rachel Blau DuPlessis | 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 |
Ralph Steiner | Visibilidad | ||
Raphaël Collin | Visibilidad | ||
Raymond Chandler | Visibilidad | ||
Raymond Radiguet | Visibilidad | ||
Robert Delaunay | Visibilidad | ||
Robert Indiana | Visibilidad | ||
Robert Lowell | Visibilidad | ||
Robert Mapplethorpe | Visibilidad | ||
Robert McAlmon | writer | Avant-garde poet, editor of Contact Publishing Company; author of Being Geniuses Together (1934), his memoir of the Lost Generation. | Visibilidad |
Robert Motherwell | Visibilidad | ||
Roland Penrose | Visibilidad | ||
Romaine Brooks | Visibilidad | ||
Salvador Dali | Visibilidad | ||
Samuel Beckett | Visibilidad | ||
Sergei Diaghilev | Visibilidad | ||
Sergei Esenin | Visibilidad | ||
Solita Solano | Visibilidad | ||
Stella Bowen | Visibilidad | ||
Stella Simon | Visibilidad | ||
Susan Gevirtz | Visibilidad | ||
Susan Sontag | editor | Visibilidad | |
Sylvia Beach | 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 |
Ted Hughes | Visibilidad | ||
Thomas Merton | Visibilidad | ||
Tristan Tzara | Founder of Dada and contributer to many social and artistic movements in Paris | Visibilidad | |
T. S. Eliot | 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 |
Vaslav Nijinsky | Visibilidad | ||
Vincent Van Gogh | Visibilidad | ||
Violet Hunt | Visibilidad | ||
Virginia Woolf | Visibilidad | ||
Wallace Stevens | Visibilidad | ||
Walter Arensberg | 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 |
Walter Gropius | Visibilidad | ||
Walter Pach | Visibilidad | ||
Walter Shirlaw | Visibilidad | ||
Wassily Kandinsky | Visibilidad | ||
W. H. Auden | Visibilidad | ||
Willa Cather | Visibilidad | ||
William Carlos Williams | artist | Visibilidad | |
William Lane Rehm | Visibilidad | ||
Wyndham Lewis | Visibilidad | ||
Zora Neal Hurston | Visibilidad |
Origen | Relación | Destino | Fecha |
---|---|---|---|
Agnes Rindge | Friend | Julien Levy | |
Alberto Giacometti | Friend | Max Ernst | |
Aldous Huxley | Lover | Nancy Cunard | |
Alfred Barr Jr. | Friend | Julien Levy | |
Alfred Barr Jr. | Acquaintance | Oelze | |
Alfred Kreymborg | Friend | Walter Arensberg | |
Alfred Kreymborg | Collaborator | William Carlos Williams | |
Alfred Stieglitz | Acquaintance | Arthur Cravan | |
Alfred Stieglitz | Friend | Constantin Brancusi | |
Alfred Stieglitz | - | Francis Picabia | |
Alfred Stieglitz | Friend | Julien Levy | |
Alfred Stieglitz | Collaborator | Lee Miller | |
Allen Ginsberg | collaborator | William Carlos Williams | |
Allen Porter | Acquaintance | Julien Levy | |
Allen Tate | Friend | Ford Madox Ford | |
Amedeo Modigliani | Collaborator | Jean Cocteau | |
Amos Bronson Alcott | Acquaintance | Mary Baker Eddy | |
Anais Nin | Friend | Beatrice Wood | |
André Breton | Friend | Arthur Cravan | |
André Breton | Influenced by | Charles Henri Ford | |
André Breton | Friend | Lee Miller | |
André Breton | Enemy | Max Ernst | |
Andre Gide | Friend | Jean Cocteau | |
Andy Warhol | Friend | Charles Henri Ford | |
Andy Warhol | - | Joseph Cornell | |
Anne Brigman | Acquaintance | Julien Levy | |
Arnold Genthe | Collaborator | Lee Miller | |
Arthur Cravan | Friend | Beatrice Wood | |
Arthur Cravan | Enemy | Guillaume Apollinaire | |
Arthur Cravan | Friend | Marcel Duchamp | |
Arthur Cravan | friend | Walter Arensberg | |
Arthur Everett Austin Jr. | Friend | Julien Levy | |
Arthur Honegger | Friend | Jean Cocteau | |
Arthur McComb | Friend | Julien Levy | |
Arthur Pearson Marwood | Collaborator | Ford Madox Ford | |
Auguste Rodin | Collaborator | Alfred Stieglitz | |
Auguste Rodin | Friend | Constantin Brancusi | |
Augustin Daly | Collaborator | Isadora Duncan | |
Barbara Guest | Collaborator | Kathleen Fraser | |
Baroness Elsa von Freytag-Loringhoven | Friend | Walter Arensberg | |
Basil Bunting | Influenced by | Kathleen Fraser | |
Beatirce Wood | Friend | Walter Arensberg | |
Berenice Abbott | Collaborator | Djuna Barnes | |
Berenice Abbott | Influenced by | Eugene Atget | |
Berenice Abbott | Influenced by | Man Ray | |
Beverly Dahlen | Collaborator | Kathleen Fraser | |
Blaise Cendrars | Friend | Arthur Cravan | |
Blaise Cendrars | Acquaintance | Constantin Brancusi | |
Bryher | Spouse | Robert McAlmon | |
Carl Jung | Friend | Eugene Jolas | |
Carl Van Vechten | Acquaintance | Beatrice Wood | |
Carl Van Vechten | Friend | Charles Henri Ford | |
Carl Van Vechten | Acquaintance | Mabel Luhan Dodge | |
Caroline Gordon | Friend | Ford Madox Ford | |
Carolyn Burke | Collaborator | Kathleen Fraser | |
Cecil Beaton | Collaborator | Charles Henri Ford | |
Charles Demuth | Friend | Walter Arensberg | |
Charles Demuth | Collaborator | William Carlos Williams | |
Charles Henri Ford | Collaborator | Jean Cocteau | |
Charles Henri Ford | - | Joseph Cornell | |
Charles Henri Ford | Collaborator | William Carlos Williams | |
Charles Olson | Friend | Denise Levertov | |
Charles Olson | Influenced by | Kathleen Fraser | |
Charles Sheeler | Collaborator | Alfred Stieglitz | |
Charlie Chaplin | Lover | Lee Miller | |
Clara Tice | Friend | Walter Arensberg | |
Coco Chanel | Enemy | Elsa Schiaparelli | |
Coco Chanel | Friend | Jean Cocteau | |
Constantin Brancusi | Collaborator | Alfred Stieglitz | |
Constantin Brancusi | Acquaintance | Jane Heap | |
Constantin Brancusi | Acquaintance | Julien Levy | |
Constantin Brancusi | Influenced by | Nancy Cunard | |
Daisy Fellowes | Acquaintance | Elsa Schiaparelli | |
Darius Milhaud | Friend | Jean Cocteau | |
David Hare | Collaborator | Max Ernst | |
Denise Levertov | Collaborator | Kathleen Fraser | |
D. H. Lawrence | Enemy | T. S. Eliot | |
Djuna Barnes | Acquaintance | Berenice Abbott | |
Djuna Barnes | Lover | Charles Henri Ford | |
Djuna Barnes | Collaborator | James Joyce | |
Djuna Barnes | Lover | Jane Heap | |
Djuna Barnes | Friend | Janet Flanner | |
Djuna Barnes | Friend | Natalie Barney | |
Dorothea Tanning | - | Joseph Cornell | |
Dorothea Tanning | Spouse | Max Ernst | |
Douglas Goldring | Friend | Ford Madox Ford | |
Dudley Murphy | Acquaintance | Julien Levy | |
Duncan Isadora | Acquaintance | Fernand Léger | |
Edith Piaf | Friend | Jean Cocteau | |
Edith Sitwell | Collaborator | Charles Henri Ford | |
Eduard Steichen | Collaborator | Alfred Stieglitz | |
Edward Steichen | Collaborator | Lee Miller | |
Edward Warbury | Friend | Julien Levy | |
E.E. Cummings | Friend | Charles Henri Ford | |
Elsa von Freytag-Loringhoven | Acquaintance | Berenice Abbott | |
Elsa von Freytag-Loringhoven | Collaborator | Djuna Barnes | |
Elsa von Freytag-Loringhoven | Acquaintance | Mabel Luhan Dodge | |
Emma Goldman | Acquaintance | Djuna Barnes | |
Emma Goldman | Acquaintance | Emma Goldman | |
Erik Satie | Friend | Constantin Brancusi | |
Ernest Hemingway | Enemy | Ford Madox Ford | |
Ernest Hemingway | Acquaintance | James Joyce | |
Ernest Hemingway | Acquaintance | Jane Heap | |
Ernest Hemingway | Friend | Janet Flanner | |
Ernest Hemingway | Acquaintance | Lee Miller | |
Ernest Hemingway | Influenced by | Nancy Cunard | |
Ernest Hemingway | Influenced by | William Carlos Williams | |
Eugene Atget | Acquaintance | Julien Levy | |
Eugene O'Neill | Friend | Dorothy Day | |
Ezra Pound | Friend | Charles Henri Ford | |
Ezra Pound | Friend | Constantin Brancusi | |
Ezra Pound | Collaborator | James Joyce | |
Ezra Pound | Collaborator | Jane Heap | |
Ezra Pound | Lover | Nancy Cunard | |
Ezra Pound | Friend | Natalie Barney | |
Ezra Pound | Friend | T. S. Eliot | |
Ezra Pound | Influenced by | William Carlos Williams | |
Fernand Léger | Acquaintance | Katherine Dreier | |
Fernand Léger | Acquaintance | Max Ernst | |
Floyd Dell | Friend | Dorothy Day | |
Ford Madox Ford | Acquaintance | James Joyce | |
Ford Madox Ford | Acquaintance | Janet Flanner | |
Ford Madox Ford | Acquaintance | T. S. Eliot | |
Frances Jaffer | Collaborator | Kathleen Fraser | |
Francis Picabia | Friend | Alfred Stieglitz | |
Francis Picabia | Friend | Arthur Cravan | |
Francis Picabia | Friend | Beatrice Wood | |
Francis Picabia | Friend | Constantin Brancusi | |
Francis Picabia | Friend | Elsa Schiaparelli | |
Francis Picabia | Spouse | Gabrielle Buffet-Picabia | |
Francis Picabia | Collaborator | Jane Heap | |
Francis Picabia | Friend | Walter Arensberg | |
Francis Poulenc | Friend | Jean Cocteau | |
Francis Simpson Stevens | Influenced by | Mary Baker Eddy | |
Frank O'Hara | Influenced by | Kathleen Fraser | |
Frederick Kiesler | Collaborator | Jane Heap | |
F. Scott Fitzgerald | Friend | Janet Flanner | |
F. Scott Fitzgerald | Acquaintance | Robert McAlmon | |
Gabriella Buffet-Picabia | Friend | Elsa Schiaparelli | |
Gabriella Buffet-Picabia | Friend | Walter Arensberg | |
George Antheil | Acquaintance | Eugene Jolas | |
George Auric | Friend | Jean Cocteau | |
George Balanchine | Friend | Charles Henri Ford | |
George "Ivanovich" Gurdjieff | Influenced by | Jane Heap | |
George Platt Lynes | Friend | Charles Henri Ford | |
Georgia O'Keefe | Acquaintance | Julien Levy | |
Georgia O'Keeffe | Spouse | Alfred Stieglitz | |
Georgia O'Keeffe | Friend | Georgia O'Keeffe | |
Germaine Tailleferre | Friend | Jean Cocteau | |
Gertrude Stein | Friend | Alfred Stieglitz | |
Gertrude Stein | Friend | Charles Henri Ford | |
Gertrude Stein | Friend | Constantin Brancusi | |
Gertrude Stein | Collaborator | Djuna Barnes | |
Gertrude Stein | Collaborator | Ford Madox Ford | |
Gertrude Stein | - | Francis Picabia | |
Gertrude Stein | Friend | Georgia O'Keeffe | |
Gertrude Stein | Friend | Isadora Duncan | |
Gertrude Stein | Acquaintance | Jane Heap | |
Gertrude Stein | Friend | Janet Flanner | |
Gertrude Stein | Friend | Jean Cocteau | |
Gertrude Stein | Friend | Katherine Dreier | |
Gertrude Stein | Friend | Mabel Luhan Dodge | |
Gertrude Stein | Influenced by | Mary Baker Eddy | |
Gertrude Stein | Friend | Natalie Barney | |
Giovanni Papini | Enemy | Arthur Cravan | |
Glenway Wescott | Friend | Charles Henri Ford | |
Gordon Craig | Lover | Isadora Duncan | |
Graham Green | Influenced by | Ford Madox Ford | |
Guillaume Apollinaire | Friend | Jean Cocteau | |
Gustav Britsch | Friend | Katherine Dreier | |
Hans Arp | Friend | Max Ernst | |
Harold Ross | Influenced by | Janet Flanner | |
Hart Crane | Influenced by | Mary Baker Eddy | |
Heinrich Campendonk | Friend | Katherine Dreier | |
Henri Bergson | Acquaintance | Constantin Brancusi | |
Henri Matisse | Friend | Alfred Stieglitz | |
Henri Pierre Roche | Friend | Constantin Brancusi | |
Henri-Pierre Roche | Lover | Beatrice Wood | |
Henry-Russell Hitchcock | Collaborator | Berenice Abbott | |
Henry-Russell Hitchcock | Friend | Julien Levy | |
Herbert Gorman | Friend | James Joyce | |
Hilda Doolittle | Collaborator | Robert McAlmon | |
Hilda Doolittle | Friend | William Carlos Williams | |
Hugo Ball | Friend | Eugene Jolas | |
Igor Stravinsky | Collaborator | Jean Cocteau | |
Isadora Duncan | Friend | Auguste Rodin | |
Isadora Duncan | Acquaintance | Beatrice Wood | |
Isadora Duncan | Lover | Francis Picabia | |
Isadora Duncan | Acquaintance | Mabel Luhan Dodge | |
Isadora Duncan | Acquaintance | Natalie Barney | |
Jacques Lipchitz | Collaborator | Jean Cocteau | |
James Joyce | Acquaintance | Berenice Abbott | |
James Joyce | Friend | Constantin Brancusi | |
James Joyce | Collaborator | Djuna Barnes | |
James Joyce | Friend | Eugene Jolas | |
James Joyce | Friend | Ford Madox Ford | |
James Joyce | Acquaintance | Julien Levy | |
James Joyce | Friend | T. S. Eliot | |
James Joyce | Influenced by | William Carlos Williams | |
Jane Heap | Acquaintance | Constantin Brancusi | |
Jane Heap | Acquaintance | Jean Cocteau | |
Janet Flanner | Acquaintance | Berenice Abbott | |
Janet Flanner | Acquaintance | Jane Heap | |
Janice Biala | Lover | Ford Madox Ford | |
Jean Cocteau | Acquaintance | Berenice Abbott | |
Jean Cocteau | Collaborator | Charles Henri Ford | |
Jean Cocteau | Friend | Constantin Brancusi | |
Jean Cocteau | Collaborator | Elsa Schiaparelli | |
Jean Cocteau | Collaborator | Lee Miller | |
Jean Desbordes | Lover | Jean Cocteau | |
Jean Genet | Friend | Jean Cocteau | |
Jean Marais | Lover | Jean Cocteau | |
Jere Abbott | Friend | Julien Levy | |
Joan Miro | Collaborator | Max Ernst | |
John Becker | Friend | Julien Levy | |
John Crowe Ransom | Acquaintance | Ford Madox Ford | |
John McAndrew | Friend | Julien Levy | |
John Quinn | Friend | Constantin Brancusi | |
Joseph Conrad | Collaborator | Ford Madox Ford | |
Joseph Cornell | Acquaintance | Julien Levy | |
Joseph Cornell | Influenced by | Mary Baker Eddy | |
Jules Pascin | Friend | Mina Loy | |
Julien Levy | Collaborator | Berenice Abbott | |
Julien Levy | Friend | Joseph Cornell | |
Julien Levy | Lover | Lee Miller | |
Julien Levy | Collaborator | Luis Bunuel | |
Julien Levy | Friend | Max Ernst | |
Julien Levy | Acquaintance | Oelze | |
Katherine Dreier | Acquaintance | Jane Heap | |
Kay Boyle | Friend | Robert McAlmon | |
Kenneth Burke | Friend | Dorothy Day | |
Kenneth Burke | Friend | William Carlos Williams | |
Kirk Askew | Friend | Julien Levy | |
Konstantin Stanislavsky | Friend | Isadora Duncan | |
Ladislas Medgyes | Collaborator | Lee Miller | |
Langston Hughes | Collaborator | Nancy Cunard | |
Laszlo Moholy-Nagy | Influenced by | Oelze | |
Laurence Vail | Collaborator | Djuna Barnes | |
Lee Miller | Acquaintance | Elsa Schiaparelli | |
Leonce Rosenberg | Acquaintance | Julien Levy | |
Leonor Fini | Collaborator | Charles Henri Ford | |
Leo Stein | Influenced by | Mary Baker Eddy | |
Lincoln Kirstein | Friend | Charles Henri Ford | |
Lincoln Kirstein | Friend | Julien Levy | |
Louis Aragon | Lover | Nancy Cunard | |
Louis Durey | Friend | Jean Cocteau | |
Louise Arensberg | Spouse | Walter Arensberg | |
Louis Zukofsky | Collaborator | Charles Henri Ford | |
Louis Zukofsky | Collaborator | William Carlos Williams | |
Lucien Daudet | Friend | Jean Cocteau | |
Luis Bunuel | Collaborator | Max Ernst | |
Mabel Luhan Dodge | Friend | Walter Arensberg | |
Malcolm Cowley | Friend | Dorothy Day | |
Man Ray | Friend | Beatrice Wood | |
Man Ray | Friend | Constantin Brancusi | |
Man Ray | Acquaintance | Djuna Barnes | |
Man Ray | Friend | Elsa Schiaparelli | |
Man Ray | - | Francis Picabia | |
Man Ray | Collaborator | Jean Cocteau | |
Man Ray | Acquaintance | Julien Levy | |
Man Ray | Collaborator | Katherine Dreier | |
Man Ray | Collaborator | Lee Miller | |
Man Ray | Collaborator | Max Ernst | |
Man Ray | Friend | Walter Arensberg | |
Man Ray | Collaborator | William Carlos Williams | |
Marcel Duchamp | Collaborator | Beatrice Wood | |
Marcel Duchamp | Influenced by | Charles Henri Ford | |
Marcel Duchamp | Friend | Constantin Brancusi | |
Marcel Duchamp | Friend | Elsa Schiaparelli | |
Marcel Duchamp | Acquaintance | Eugene Jolas | |
Marcel Duchamp | Friend | Francis Picabia | |
Marcel Duchamp | Friend | Georgia O'Keeffe | |
Marcel Duchamp | - | Joseph Cornell | |
Marcel Duchamp | Acquaintance | Julien Levy | |
Marcel Duchamp | Friend | Katherine Dreier | |
Marcel Duchamp | Collaborator | Max Ernst | |
Marcel Duchamp | Collaborator | Walter Arensberg | |
Marcel Duchamp | Collaborator | William Carlos Williams | |
Marcel Khill | Lover | Jean Cocteau | |
Marcel Proust | Friend | Jean Cocteau | |
Margaret Anderson | Friend | Constantin Brancusi | |
Margaret Anderson | Lover | Jane Heap | |
Margaret Anderson | Friend | Janet Flanner | |
Margaret Bourke-White | Acquaintance | Lee Miller | |
Marianne Moore | Collaborator | Robert McAlmon | |
Marianne Moore | Acquaintance | T. S. Eliot | |
Marianne Moore | Friend | William Carlos Williams | |
Mark Twain | Enemy | Mary Baker Eddy | |
Marsden Hartley | Collaborator | Djuna Barnes | |
Marsden Hartley | Collaborator | Robert McAlmon | |
Matta | - | Joseph Cornell | |
Maurice Rostand | Friend | Jean Cocteau | |
Max Ernst | Friend | Lee Miller | |
Max Ernst | Collaborator | Luis Bunuel | |
Max Ernst | Friend | Man Ray | |
Maxwell Bodenheim | Friend | William Carlos Williams | |
Mike Gold | Acquaintance | Dorothy Day | |
Mina Loy | Collaborator | Alfred Stieglitz | |
Mina Loy | Friend | Constantin Brancusi | |
Mina Loy | Influenced by | Denise Levertov | |
Mina Loy | Acquaintance | Dorothy Day | |
Mina Loy | Acquaintance | Eugene Jolas | |
Mina Loy | Acquaintance | Ezra Pound | |
Mina Loy | Collaborator | Francis Picabia | |
Mina Loy | Acquaintance | Gabrielle Buffet-Picabia | |
Mina Loy | Acquaintance | James Joyce | |
Mina Loy | Acquaintance | Janet Flanner | |
Mina Loy | Acquaintance | Jean Cocteau | |
Mina Loy | - | Joseph Cornell | |
Mina Loy | Collaborator | Kathleen Fraser | |
Mina Loy | Friend | Lee Miller | |
Mina Loy | Acquaintance | Luis Bunuel | |
Mina Loy | Friend | Mabel Luhan Dodge | |
Mina Loy | Acquaintance | Max Ernst | |
Mina Loy | Lover | Oelze | |
Mina Loy | Influenced by | Rachel Blau DuPlessis | |
Mina Loy | Acquaintance | Thomas Merton | |
Mina Loy | Acquaintance | T. S. Eliot | |
Mina Loy | Friend | Walter Arensberg | |
Mitchell Goodman | Spouse | Denise Levertov | |
Myung Mi Kim | Collaborator | Kathleen Fraser | |
Nancy Cunard | Acquaintance | Elsa Schiaparelli | |
Natalia Danesi | Lover | Janet Flanner | |
Natalia Pavlona Paley | Friend | Jean Cocteau | |
Natalie Barney | Acquaintance | Djuna Barnes | |
Natalie Barney | Acquaintance | Ford Madox Ford | |
Natalie Barney | Acquaintance | Isadora Duncan | |
Noel Murphy | Lover | Janet Flanner | |
Oelze | Lover | Mabel Luhan Dodge | |
Pablo Picasso | Influenced by | Alfred Stieglitz | |
Pablo Picasso | Friend | Jean Cocteau | |
Pablo Picasso | Friend | Katherine Dreier | |
Pablo Picasso | Friend | Lee Miller | |
Paris Singer | Lover | Isadora Duncan | |
Paul Bowles | Friend | Charles Henri Ford | |
Paul Éluard | Friend | Jean Cocteau | |
Paul Éluard | Friend | Lee Miller | |
Paul Éluard | Friend | Max Ernst | |
Paul Klee | Friend | Eugene Jolas | |
Paul Klee | Influenced by | Oelze | |
Paul Poiret | Influenced by | Elsa Schiaparelli | |
Paul Strand | Friend | Alfred Stieglitz | |
Pavel Tchelitchew | Lover | Charles Henri Ford | |
Peggy Guggenheim | Collaborator | Berenice Abbott | |
Peggy Guggenheim | Friend | Constantin Brancusi | |
Peggy Guggenheim | Collaborator | Djuna Barnes | |
Peggy Guggenheim | - | Joseph Cornell | |
Peggy Guggenheim | Acquaintance | Katherine Dreier | |
Peggy Guggenheim | Spouse | Max Ernst | |
Philip Johnson | Friend | Julien Levy | |
Rachel Blau DuPlessis | Influenced by | Kathleen Fraser | |
Ralph Steiner | Acquaintance | Julien Levy | |
Raphaël Collin | Acquaintance | Katherine Dreier | |
Raymond Chandler | Acquaintance | Julien Levy | |
Raymond Radiguet | Lover | Jean Cocteau | |
Robert Delaunay | Friend | Arthur Cravan | |
Robert Indiana | - | Joseph Cornell | |
Robert Lowell | Friend | Ford Madox Ford | |
Robert Mapplethorpe | Collaborator | Charles Henri Ford | |
Robert McAlmon | Collaborator | Djuna Barnes | |
Robert McAlmon | Collaborator | James Joyce | |
Robert McAlmon | Friend | Julien Levy | |
Robert Motherwell | - | Joseph Cornell | |
Roland Penrose | Spouse | Lee Miller | |
Romaine Brooks | Collaborator | Jean Cocteau | |
Salvador Dali | Collaborator | Charles Henri Ford | |
Salvador Dali | Collaborator | Elsa Schiaparelli | |
Salvador Dali | Acquaintance | Julien Levy | |
Salvador Dali | Friend | Lee Miller | |
Salvador Dali | Friend | Luis Bunuel | |
Salvador Dali | Friend | Man Ray | |
Salvador Dali | Collaborator | Max Ernst | |
Salvador Dali | Acquaintance | Oelze | |
Samuel Beckett | Collaborator | Eugene Jolas | |
Samuel Beckett | Influenced by | Nancy Cunard | |
Sergei Diaghilev | Acquaintance | Isadora Duncan | |
Sergei Diaghilev | Friend | Jean Cocteau | |
Sergei Esenin | Spouse | Isadora Duncan | |
Solita Solano | Lover | Janet Flanner | |
Stella Bowen | Lover | Ford Madox Ford | |
Stella Simon | Acquaintance | Julien Levy | |
Susan Gevirtz | Collaborator | Kathleen Fraser | |
Susan Sontag | Friend | Joseph Cornell | |
Sylvia Beach | Acquaintance | Ford Madox Ford | |
Sylvia Beach | Collaborator | James Joyce | |
Sylvia Beach | Friend | Janet Flanner | |
Sylvia Beach | Friend | Natalie Barney | |
Ted Hughes | Acquaintance | T. S. Eliot | |
Tristan Tzara | Friend | Constantin Brancusi | |
Tristan Tzara | Friend | Elsa Schiaparelli | |
Tristan Tzara | Acquaintance | Eugene Jolas | |
Tristan Tzara | Acquaintance | Jane Heap | |
Tristan Tzara | Acquaintance | Jean Cocteau | |
Tristan Tzara | Friend | Max Ernst | |
Tristan Tzara | Lover | Nancy Cunard | |
T. S. Eliot | Collaborator | Denise Levertov | |
T. S. Eliot | Acquaintance | James Joyce | |
Vaslav Nijinsky | Friend | Jean Cocteau | |
Vincent Van Gogh | Friend | Katherine Dreier | |
Violet Hunt | Lover | Ford Madox Ford | |
Virginia Woolf | Friend | T. S. Eliot | |
Wallace Stevens | Collaborator | Robert McAlmon | |
Wallace Stevens | Friend | Walter Arensberg | |
Wallace Stevens | Friend | William Carlos Williams | |
Walter Arensberg | Friend | Beatrice Wood | |
Walter Arensberg | Friend | Georgia O'Keeffe | |
Walter Arensberg | Friend | Katherine Dreier | |
Walter Arensberg | Collaborator | William Carlos Williams | |
Walter Gropius | Influenced by | Oelze | |
Walter Pach | Friend | Constantin Brancusi | |
Walter Shirlaw | Collaborator | Katherine Dreier | |
Wassily Kandinsky | Acquaintance | Katherine Dreier | |
W. H. Auden | Acquaintance | T. S. Eliot | |
Willa Cather | Influenced by | Mary Baker Eddy | |
William Carlos Williams | Collaborator | Charles Henri Ford | |
William Carlos Williams | Influenced by | Denise Levertov | |
William Carlos Williams | Friend | Ford Madox Ford | |
William Carlos Williams | Collaborator | Robert McAlmon | |
William Carlos Williams | Enemy | T. S. Eliot | |
William Carlos Williams | Friend | Walter Arensberg | |
William Lane Rehm | Spouse | Janet Flanner | |
Wyndham Lewis | Acquaintance | James Joyce | |
Wyndham Lewis | Lover | Nancy Cunard | |
Wyndham Lewis | Friend | T. S. Eliot | |
Zora Neal Hurston | Collaborator | Nancy Cunard |