Photographs
AAT scope note: Refers to still images produced from radiation-sensitive materials (sensitive to light, electron beams, or nuclear radiation), generally by means of the chemical action of light on a sensitive film, paper, glass, or metal. It does not include reproductive prints of documents and technical drawings, for which descriptors found under "
Found in 12856 Collections and/or Records:
Portrait of an Unidentified Woman Wearing a Fur Wrap
Portrait of an unidentified woman affiliated with the Central City Opera wearing a dark fur wrap.
Portrait of an Unidentified Woman Wearing a Plaid Blouse
Portrait of an unidentified woman affiliated with the Central City Opera wearing a plaid blouse.
Portrait of an Unidentified Woman Wearing a T-shirt
Portrait of an unidentified woman affiliated with the Central City Opera and wearing a T-shirt.
Portrait of an Unidentified Woman Wearing a White Apron
Portrait of an unidentified woman affiliated with the Central City Opera wearing a white apron and holding her glasses.
Portrait of an Unidentified Woman With a Single Rose
Portrait of an unidentified woman affiliated with the Central City Opera and holding a single rose.
Portrait of Angna Enters, a dance mime, 1937
Dance mime Angna Enters after she returned from a transcontinental European tour.
Portrait of Anna Ginsberg Hayutin, circa 1912
Anna Ginsberg Hayutin sits with her hands folded on her lap. She wears an elaborate hat and a long dress with lace at the collar and sleeves. Anna Ginsberg was born in Russia but came to New York City with her parents, D'vera and Max Ginsberg. They moved to Denver in 1910 when she was still a young girl. Anna married the son of Russian immigrants, businessman Morris Hayutin, who owned the Western Supply Company and later the Public Industrial Bank.
Portrait of Anna Naswitz of the Jewish Consumptives' Relief Society, 1939 June 6
Anna Naswitz, head nurse of the Jewish Consumptives' Relief Society (JCRS). The JCRS was a sanatorium for tuberculosis patients that was founded in 1904 by a group of immigrant Jewish workingmen along with the support of several leading physicians and rabbis in Denver, Colorado. It was located on West Colfax Avenue just outside Denver. Anna Naswitz was often considered the ''dynamic angel of mercy.''
Portrait of Anna Pavlova, Russian Ballerina, 1909
Portrait of Russian Ballerina Anna Pavlova, taken from the book ''Anna Pavlova: Her Life and Art,'' by Keith Money.
Portrait of Anna Schatz, 1904
Anna Schatz before her marriage to Max Rosenthal. She is wearing a hat trimmed with a large feather and a fur coat, while carrying a muff. Anna Schatz Rosenthal was the mother of Evelyn Stone.