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April 17, 2026

Extraordinary Photos of Clotilde von Derp, the Expressionist Dancer Who Performed Either Side of the Great War

Clotilde von Derp (born Clotilde Margarete Anna Edle von der Planitz, 1892–1974) was a pioneering German expressionist dancer and one of the early exponents of modern dance. She emerged in the 1910s as a solo performer and became internationally celebrated in the 1920s through her long-term artistic and personal partnership with Russian dancer, choreographer, and painter Alexander Sacharoff (whom she married in 1919).

Von Derp trained in ballet with teachers from the Munich Opera (Julie Bergmann and Anna Ornelli) after moving to Munich as a child. She made her professional debut on April 25, 1910, at age 18 at the Hotel Union in Munich, performing under the stage name Clotilde von Derp. Audiences were immediately drawn to her striking beauty, youthful grace, and expressive presence.

She quickly gained attention in avant-garde circles. She was associated with the Blaue Reiter group (linked to Wassily Kandinsky) and performed in Max Reinhardt’s pantomime SumurĂ»n, which toured successfully to London. Her style moved beyond classical ballet toward freer, more emotional expression, influenced by the wave of modern dance sparked by Isadora Duncan but noted for its elegance and modernity.

From 1913 onward, she began collaborating with Alexander Sacharoff. During World War I, as “enemy aliens,” they relocated to neutral Switzerland, where she continued refining her technique (including studies with Enrico Cecchetti in Lausanne). She performed solo works like Danseuse de Delphes (1916), often in ancient Greek-inspired costumes with draped fabrics.

Their joint career reached its height in the late 1910s and throughout the 1920s. They married on July 25, 1919, in Zurich (with painter Marianne von Werefkin as a witness) and performed as the duo “Les Sakharoff.” They created what they called “abstract pantomime,” dances that visualized the emotional and sensory impressions of music rather than strictly following its rhythm. Their works drew on symbolist aesthetics, ancient Greek themes, commedia dell’arte, Renaissance, Baroque, and Rococo references, with fluid, subtle, and theatrical movements. Alexander often designed the elaborate, sometimes androgynous or cross-dressing costumes (including metallic wigs, hats, flowers, and fruit), which accentuated Clotilde’s femininity even in male attire.

They toured extensively across Europe, performed at New York’s Metropolitan Opera in 1920 (supported by Edith Rockefeller McCormick, though with mixed success), and later visited China, Japan, the Americas, and beyond. A 1921 poster by illustrator George Barbier depicted them as a complementary androgynous couple “united in dance.” Critics and artists (including Rainer Maria Rilke, who called them “poets of dance”) praised their vibrant theatricality and innovative approach. Specific pieces from the era included The Little Shepherd, Negro Song (1924), May-Dance (1924), and Vision of the 15th Century (1924).

In the 1920s, photographs and illustrations show Clotilde in flowing, draped costumes, often barefoot or in minimalist attire that emphasized expressive body lines and dramatic poses.

Von Derp and Sacharoff were among the most famous dance couples of the era, helping bridge early modern dance (post-Duncan) with expressionist and avant-garde movements. Their work reflected broader cultural shifts: rejection of rigid classical forms, embrace of emotional authenticity, cross-disciplinary ties to painting and music, and a global touring circuit. Clotilde’s elegant, haunting presence and Sacharoff’s choreographic vision made them symbols of modernist experimentation in dance.

Their partnership continued for decades (they taught and performed into the 1950s), but the 1910s and 1920s marked their rise from Munich debutante to international icons of expressive, music-driven modern dance.






Carl Spitzweg: The Master of Biedermeier Satire and Charm

Carl Spitzweg (1808–1885) was a leading figure of the German Biedermeier era, a master painter and illustrator whose work captured the quirky, quiet, and profoundly human side of 19th-century life.

Originally trained as a pharmacist, Spitzweg brought a meticulous attention to detail to his canvases, creating "genre paintings" that were as much about storytelling as they were about art. He is best known for his humorous and gently satirical depictions of eccentric characters: the lonely bookworms, the daydreaming poets, and the small-town soldiers; all tucked away in cramped garrets or sun-dappled cobblestone alleys.

What makes Spitzweg’s work enduring is his ability to balance irony with deep empathy. While he poked fun at the provincial narrow-mindedness of the middle class, he bathed his subjects in a warm, atmospheric light that rendered their solitude poetic rather than tragic.

His masterpiece, The Poor Poet, remains a definitive icon of German art, symbolizing the romantic ideal of the starving artist living in a world of imagination. Take a closer look at these masterpieces to discover why Carl Spitzweg remains one of Germany’s most beloved painters of the human spirit.

Maids on the Alpine Pastures

Bathing Nymphs

A Drunkard

Arrival in Seeshaupt

Arrival of the Stagecoach

The Baby in the Bucket, Lviv Ghetto, Ukraine, 1943

In the harrowing depths of winter 1943, within the barbed confines of the Lviv Ghetto in Nazi-occupied Ukraine, a young Jewish mother made a heart-wrenching choice. With starvation rampant, disease unchecked, and deportations to death camps accelerating, hope was vanishing. Desperate to save her infant son, she connected with a courageous group of Polish sewer workers who secretly aided Jewish families by smuggling children out through the city’s underground tunnels. On the chosen night, wrapped in despair and determination, she swaddled her baby in a thin shawl, kissed him goodbye, and placed him into a metal bucket, his lifeboat through the darkness.


Lowered into the sewers beneath the city, the baby descended into cold, filth, and silence. As the bucket disappeared into the blackness, the mother whispered, “Grow where I cannot!” She chose to stay behind, sacrificing herself so her child could live. Her name was never recorded, and her fate is unknown, likely lost in the mass exterminations that followed. Yet her act of profound love lived on in the fragile child she gave away, whose life she valued more than her own. The sewer worker carried the infant through the maze of tunnels and delivered him safely beyond the ghetto walls. Against all odds, the boy survived.

Decades later, the son returned to Lviv with the weight of memory in his heart. He found the spot where the sewer had once opened near the remnants of the ghetto and placed a single red rose on the rusted manhole cover. Whispering, “This was my beginning,” he honored the mother he never truly knew, the woman who vanished into history, nameless yet unforgettable. Her sacrifice, made in darkness and silence, became the light that guided him to a future. Her love endures as an eternal echo of resilience, faith, and a mother’s final gift.

30 Fascinating Photos of Teenage Selena Quintanilla in the 1980s

Selena Quintanilla (born Selena Quintanilla-PĂ©rez on April 16, 1971, in Lake Jackson, Texas) was a teenager throughout most of the 1980s, starting her professional music career as a young girl in her family’s band, Selena y Los Dinos. Her father, Abraham Quintanilla Jr., managed the group, which included her older brother A.B. on bass and sister Suzette on drums. They performed Tejano music, blending Mexican, country, and pop influences.

Selena began singing as a child. Around age 9 (around 1980), she performed at her family’s Tex-Mex restaurant, Papa Gayo’s, in Lake Jackson. The restaurant closed due to the 1980s oil glut recession, leading the family to move to Corpus Christi, Texas, declare bankruptcy, and hit the road with the band. They played at weddings, quinceañeras, fairs, nightclubs, and small venues across Texas.

In 1984 (age 13), the band recorded their first LP for Freddie Records (Selena y Los Dinos, later re-released as Mis Primeras Grabaciones). Selena initially sang English songs and learned Spanish lyrics phonetically before becoming fluent. Tejano music was male-dominated, so Selena often faced criticism and was refused bookings at some Texas venues.

Her popularity surged when she won Female Vocalist of the Year at the Tejano Music Awards in 1987 (at age 15), the first of nine consecutive wins. This helped legitimize her in the genre. In 1989, she signed with EMI Latin and released her self-titled debut album, with A.B. becoming her main producer and songwriter.

Selena’s 1980s look reflected the era’s trends with big hair, bold makeup, and flashy stage outfits—often sequined, sparkly tops or dresses with shoulder pads, mixed with Western/Texan elements like belts or boots. Off-stage, she wore casual 1980s fashion like high socks, sneakers, jeans, and colorful tops. Her stage presence was energetic even as a teen, performing with Los Dinos in matching or coordinated outfits that evolved into more glamorous, bedazzled looks by the late 1980s.






Up Close Photos of a Suburban Kitchen in 1967

In the 1960s, the suburban kitchen transformed into a colorful, high-tech hub designed for the modern housewife. Characterized by a bold palette of pastel turquoise, candy-apple red, or harvest gold, these kitchens featured sleek, “space-age” aesthetics with chrome accents and linoleum flooring.

Innovations like built-in wall ovens, double-door refrigerators, and Formica countertops made the space feel futuristic and efficient. It wasn’t just a place for cooking; with the addition of breakfast nooks and wall-mounted corded phones, it became the social heart of the home, reflecting the era's optimism and domestic comfort.

Step inside the vibrant heart of the mid-century home. These up close photos of a suburban kitchen in 1967 capture the textures, colors, and innovations that defined an era of domestic optimism.






April 16, 2026

32 Amazing Photos of Charles Chaplin on the Set of “City Lights” (1931)

Charles Chaplin’s production of City Lights (1931) was one of his most ambitious and painstaking projects. He wrote, directed, produced, composed the music for, and starred in this silent romantic comedy-drama (with a synchronized score and sound effects), even as “talkies” were taking over Hollywood.

Filming began in late 1928 and dragged on for over two years due to Chaplin’s legendary perfectionism. The movie tells the story of the Little Tramp who falls in love with a blind flower girl (played by Virginia Cherrill) and tries to raise money for her eye operation.

Chaplin was known for shooting scenes dozens or even hundreds of times to get them exactly right. A famous example is the opening flower-selling scene between the Tramp and the blind girl, it reportedly required 342 takes. He obsessed over tiny details of expression, gesture, and timing, even asking Cherrill to speak her lines aloud during filming (though the film is silent) to capture the right emotional nuance.

Production had its tensions. Chaplin clashed with leading lady Virginia Cherrill (he later called her an “amateur,” and she admitted mutual dislike). He fired his assistant Harry Crocker and actor Henry Clive during the shoot. There were interruptions, including construction work near the studio that forced sets to be moved.

City Lights was immediately successful upon release on March 7, 1931, with positive reviews and worldwide rentals of more than $4 million. Today, many critics consider it not only the highest accomplishment of Chaplin’s career, but one of the greatest films of all time. Chaplin biographer Jeffrey Vance believes “City Lights is not only Charles Chaplin’s masterpiece; it is an act of defiance” as it premiered four years into the era of sound films which began with the premiere of The Jazz Singer (1927).

In 1991, the Library of Congress selected City Lights for preservation in the United States National Film Registry as being “culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant.” In 2007, the American Film Institute ranked it 11th on its list of the best American films ever made.






Giulietta Masina: The Soulful Muse of Italian Cinema

Giulietta Masina was a singular force in world cinema, often described as the “female Charlie Chaplin” for her extraordinary ability to blend heart-wrenching pathos with whimsical comedy.

As the muse and wife of legendary director Federico Fellini, Masina became the emotional soul of some of his greatest masterpieces. Her performances as the wide-eyed, innocent Gelsomina in La Strada (1954) and the resilient, optimistic Cabiria in Nights of Cabiria (1957)–the latter of which earned her the Best Actress award at Cannes–are considered among the finest in film history.

What made Masina truly remarkable was her expressive, “clown-like” face, capable of conveying profound human suffering and indestructible hope without uttering a single word. She stood in stark contrast to the statuesque, bombshell archetypes of mid-century Italian cinema, offering instead a vulnerable, spiritual, and deeply human presence on screen.

Beyond her collaborations with Fellini, Masina was a highly respected actress in her own right, embodying the poetic realism of the post-war era. Take a look at these vintage photos to rediscover the radiant spirit and incomparable talent of Giulietta Masina, a true legend of the silver screen.









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