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maurice seymour found publicity still 406x500 Maurice Seymour publicity still

Found publicity still. Photo: Maurice Seymour

I love this portrait. I found it at Uncommon Objects in Austin, Texas. I’m very curious to know more about the woman pictured, but she’s not identified anywhere on the print. Seymour was a very prolific celebrity and entertainment photographer in Chicago, who died in 1993. More of his work can be seen herehere and here.

maurice seymour back print Maurice Seymour publicity still

back of print

august 1969 snapshot 493x500 Found snapshot #4

August, 1969

men and twins bow ties 500x488 Found snapshot #3

Man with twin boys in bow ties

Another photograph from Uncommon Objects in Austin, Texas.

january 1951 family snapshot 353x500 Found snapshot #2

Found snapshot from January, 1951

From tomorrow’s New York Times:

…this week the Indianapolis Museum of Art plans to announce that it has acquired a trove of work and correspondence by Weegee, the crepuscular, stogie-smoking New York photographer whose visceral pictures became a template not only for artists like Diane Arbus but also for much of the uncomfortably close tabloid imagery that exists today. The museum described the acquisition as a partial gift and partial purchase from the dealer.
The trunk is assumed to have once been the possession of Wilma Wilcox, a social worker who was Weegee’s companion and lived with him from 1957 until his death in 1968. Upon her death in 1993, she bequeathed the bulk of his work — thousands of prints and negatives — to the International Center of Photography in Manhattan. How the trunk full of prints and 62 letters to Ms. Wilcox from Weegee (born Usher Fellig in what is now Ukraine, and later known as Arthur Fellig) ended up in Kentucky is a mystery that neither the Indianapolis Museum nor the dealer, Steve H. Nowlin, has solved.

“People who work in the daytime are suckers,” he once said. Before the publication of his first book, “Naked City,” made him famous in 1945, he lived in a cheap room near police headquarters and was said to be so accustomed to working on the run that he once developed a picture of a prizefight in a subway motorman’s cab while rushing back to a newspaper office.

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