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Crib
girls rented out rooms by the hour for the no-frills clientele.
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In
the early 1900s, Ernest J. Bellocq carried his 8 x 10-inch view camera
across Basin Street to photograph the women of New Orleans' notorious
district of legalized prostitution, Storyville. His private photographic
project remained unknown until after his death, but eventually found its
way to international acclaim. Yet virtually no prostitute portraits printed
by Bellocq himself have surfaced. He kept his Storyville project secret
from everyone except a few of his closest friends, and it remained secret
until his glass negative plates were discovered languishing in a junk
shop years after his death.
In 1967, Master photographer Lee Friedlander
acquired and began to make prints from Bellocq's glass negative plates,
and the Museum of Modern Art hung an exhibition of them in 1970. Bellocq
then took his place as the photography world's best-known photographer
of prostitutes.
Lee Friedlander's prints have always been
our only view of Bellocq's corpus, but in December and January, the Julie
Saul Gallery will exhibit a recently discovered collection of pre-Friedlander
Bellocq prints. These older prints were made before many of the
negatives sustained water damage during Hurricane Betsy, and many of the
images have never been exhibited. Along with its intrinsic artistic import,
the discovery of this cache of early Bellocq prints has spurred new research
on Bellocq that sheds some doubt on our current notions about him.
In the dearth of information after Bellocq's
Death, many almost mythic descriptions of him surfaced. Reports of Bellocq
described him as insane, hunchbacked, grotesque, dwarfish, or hydrocephalic,
leaving the world with not much choice but to consider him a virtual New
Orleanian counterpart to Toulouse Lautrec. (1)(2)
Legend also
held that Bellocq's brother, a Jesuit priest, was responsible for violently
scratching many of the women's faces from the emulsion. Yet new research
sheds some doubt on all of these ideas.
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Father
Leon Bellocq. Click on image to enlarge.
Photo
courtesy of Special Collections and Archives, Monroe Library, Loyola
New Orleans. |
Click
on image to enlarge. |
Late
September, 1949: a short, fat old man exits through the front door of
the Federal Reserve Bank in New Orleans' Central Business District. Perhaps
he has been considering opening another bank account there, even though
he already has eighteen forgotten ones, at various other banks, with balances
ranging from a dollar and change to over six hundred. (3)
But
the fair skinned, ruddy-faced old man feels under-the-weather today. (5)
(6) Maybe that is why he walked away from the teller without opening
another account this time.
He wears a piece of rope for a belt, and
seems disoriented at the top of the short flight of stone steps. Today,
for some reason, his usual walk around the city to every camera shop in
town has exhausted him, but he never takes the public transportation because
he does not trust it. Nearly every day, he hobbles all the way up to the
bus station on foot for his lunch and gets a bag of orange jelly slice
candies although he knows they are bad for his diabetes. Then he heads
for the Kodak store, where he falls asleep in a chair. When Manuel's boss
gets tired of his snoring, he wakes E.J. up and puts him out. (5)
But today E.J. Bellocq feels more than
his seventy-six years. (7)
His stoop
seems more severe; his tiny steps shorter and his little upper apartment
on Dumaine Street, in the French Quarter, seems farther away. At the top
of the stairs, Mr. E.J.'s face goes blank. He falls down the short flight
of steps, and his high forehead hits the pavement. (9)
The news circulates around the camera stores:
"Old Bellocq just dropped dead on Canal Street!" Joe Sanarens is standing
behind the counter at the Katz and Besthoff Camera center when he gets
the word. Sanarens may be the closest person in the world to Bellocq,
other than Bellocq's brother, but that is not necessarily very close.
E.J. was a pretty hard guy to get to know. He hardly warmed up to anybody.
But when Sanarens was sick in Hotel Dieu, a Catholic hospital, Bellocq
actually walked all the way up there to visit him. Joe could hear him
hollering "Where's Sazerac" at the nuns in the hall. Sanarens was so surprised
to see Bellocq there that he didn't care if he got his name wrong. On
one occasion, the old bachelor even brought Joe back to his apartment
at 619 Dumaine, and showed him a secret that shocked him even more than
had Bellocq's trip to Hotel Dieu to visit him. The old man had squirreled
away an old trunk full of 8 x 10-inch glass negative plates—pictures
of prostitutes from the old red light district, Storyville, which had
been closed by the Navy almost thirty years before. Lots of the women
in the pictures were nude. Bellocq flipped through a stack of pictures,
occasionally stopping at different photographs of one particular woman
and saying "…and this one is Adele." (1)
(5) (6) (10)
Bellocq probably spoke French, but when
Sanarens knew him, he spoke with a New Orleans accent, which sounds much
like a New York Irish
accent.
He also showed Joe some documentary-style pictures of New Orleans' China
Town, one of them of the inside of an opium den with lacquered bunks—pretty
remarkable pictures. Joe knew Bellocq as a man who could not even get
a good picture of the streetcar when it was decorated to sell war bonds.
While handling E.J.'s photo processing, Sanarens once got a look at a
whole batch of Bellocq's negatives of the back end of that streetcar,
it having invariably pulled away by the time Bellocq had gotten the exposure
and focus right. He always kept trying, though. He was a stubborn old
man. (5)
Joe will not miss the sound of old Bellocq
slamming his array of rubber-stamps down, much harder than necessary,
on the envelopes that contain his negatives and prints. But when Joe hears
of Bellocq's death, he probably feels a little sad that he can't return
the visit Bellocq had paid him when he was in the hospital, E.J. having
gone so suddenly like that on Canal Street. (5)
(10)
But
Bellocq had actually fallen on Barrone Street. He was not dead yet, either,
and lingered in the hospital for over a week. But details like these turned
out to be unimportant. Nobody cared much about Bellocq. He was a nobody—an
old photographer, slowly going senile while living off of a small annuity
income, who wandered around downtown, frequented camera stores, and kept
trying, well into his seventies, to talk to the pretty young women photographers
who frequented the camera stores. He died without issue, and nobody gave
him a second thought.
Twenty years later, the Museum of Modern
Art gave Ernest Bellocq a one-man show in New York after photographer
Lee Friedlander acquired his plates and began to print them on a period
paper. Friedlander immediately realized the importance of the images,
and Bellocq's private Storyville photographic project, for the first time,
was able to join the public artistic forum in the post-sexual-revolution
1970s. As of this writing, Lee Friedlander still prints from Bellocq's
negatives on gold-tone printing-out paper. Prints from Bellocq's own commercial
studio, however, were dry-mounted to dark gray mat board with an embossed
studio logo au recto on the lower right corner. Verso, he imprinted the
board with a circular ink stamp, and the prints themselves have a warm
tone. Their subject matter ranges from architecture, to class portraits,
to grave plots, to copy work for museums.
Though the international photographic community
now recognizes Bellocq the artist, his New Orleanian photographic contemporaries
had not the slightest idea that photography, itself, might one day win
the status of a fine art form, and neither did Bellocq. The idea that
Bellocq's photographs might one day hang in a major New York museum would
have been considered ridiculous. The photographs alone held interest for
Friedlander, but inevitably many questions surfaced about the man behind
them. Unfortunately, too many had answers, and an imaginitive, collective,
mythopoeic process went into action during which, on the strength of a
few descriptions of Bellocq's appearance and personality, he became a
full-blown, Paul Bunyanesque myth. His high forehead became the grotesque
head of a hydrocephalic. The senility of old age became insanity or mental
retardation. His short stature became dwarfism, and his stoop was even
described as a hunchback. (1) (2)
None of it seems to be true. Hydrocephalics
died soon after birth or suffered severe mental retardation in the eighteen
seventies, when Bellocq was born. The best picture of Bellocq shows him
wearing a hat, but (working under the assumption that it was hiding something)
any of the genetic syndromes that cause cranial defects also have corresponding
facial characteristics, which are absent in his portrait. He was also
described as senile by a doctor shortly before his death, and his life
as a successful commercial photographer makes obvious the impossibility
of Bellocq having been insane or retarded during his working life. This
"dwarf," by all accounts, even in his mid-seventies, after the age at
which most normal older people lose some of their height, and even with
the stooped posture he developed, was always described as standing between
five feet and five feet two inches tall. (1)
(5) (6)
He
could have stood five and a half feet tall in the heyday of Storyville,
and considering that the mean height in the nineteenth century was quite
a bit shorter than it is today, Bellocq was probably quite an average
man, if not a bit more handsome.
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Young
E.J. Bellocq.
Click on image to enlarge. Photo courtesy of Tulane Special
Collections.
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on image to enlarge. |
The
men in the ambulance take Bellocq, bleeding from a cut on his forehead,
to Charity Hospital where he is unable to give the doctors any information.
(The description of his head-wound on the medical record mentions nothing
abnormal about the form of his head or body.) He stays there until they
discover that his next of kin, his seventy-four-year-old little brother
Leo, is a Jesuit Priest, at which point the attending doctor transfers
him to Mercy Hospital. (9)
When Ernest speaks he doesn't make much
sense, and Leo realizes that this is just about the end. Brother Leo has
had to watch for years as his brother declined, so Ernest's fall is not
much of a surprise. Even though Ernest's taste in clothing and jewelry
in his younger years diverged from what a Jesuit would condone—like the
diamond horseshoe stick-pin with eleven diamonds, the gold lady's-head
cufflinks with the matching tie clasp, or the flashy, red scarves that
were much too ostentatious—it has been much harder for Leo to watch as
Ernest turned into a confused and disheveled old man. (3)
He would have
never entertained the thought of wearing a rope for a belt back when he
was the promising young scion of a good family.
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The
Church and College of the Immaculate Conception. Bellocq was Baptized
in one and educated in the other. Click on image to enlarge.
Photo
courtesy of Special Collections and Archives, Monroe Library, Loyola
New Orleans. |
Ernest
and Leo grew up in aristocratic, white Creole family. Marie, their mother,
was the daughter of a wealthy merchant from France, and their father,
Paul, supported the family in the French Quarter in a very nice style
with his job as a bookkeeper and later as secretary and treasurer for
a wholesale firm. They even employed a middle-aged nurse named Lucille
Mario.
The French Opera House acted as the cultural
nexus for the Creole community in New Orleans. Even school-age children
attended the spectacle as the building filled with thousands of people
in formal attire. The Bellocqs lived so close to the French Opera that
they may have left the carriage at home in favor of walking.
(12) (13) (14)
Ernest never made the honor rolls in school
like Leo, but he completed ten years of classical education at the College
of the Immaculate Conception (16),
at which point his father got him a job at the firm. But Ernest was restless
and moved between jobs frequently, working as a bookkeeper or clerk at
different businesses in or around the French Quarter.
(8) He had already become obsessed with photography, and by 1898
the city had recognized him as one of its most knowledgeable, popular
and talented amateur photographers. That was the year Storyville opened
for business, and a picture of Ernest Bellocq handsome and dapper at age
twenty-five, appears that year in a local publication. The publication
asserts that "Mr. Bellocq. . .is a descendant of one of our most aristocratic
Creole families, and has entree to the most exclusive of social functions."
(18)
In 1902, Bellocq's mother died. Around
this time, E.J., nearing the age of thirty, quit his job and concentrated
upon his real interest, photography. With his mother deceased, the family
house to himself, and his brother off studying for the priesthood at Spring
Hill, his new freedom allowed him to follow his eye. In constant proximity
to Storyville, Bellocq often ventured one block from his front door into
the legally sanctioned district of prostitution. Bellocq is reported to
have said to a friend "that he had always spent every cent he got." (Gehman,
page 34) Perhaps he started that habit in Storyville.
Bellocq often wore a flamboyant red neckerchief
or scarf (19) in
the old days, and he also owned many pieces of monogrammed jewelry. Perhaps
Bellocq fancied himself as a bit of a Storyville dandy. He eventually
became a professional photographer, and even for a time had his studio
downtown on Canal Street, the city's main commercial thoroughfare, before
reestablishing his studio in the furnished room he later moved into. For
a few years during WWI he opted for steady work as an industrial photographer
for a shipbuilding company, but he always stayed close to the church.
He often photographed its buildings and classes of school children.
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Two
of Bellocq's homes. At left, 1026 Conti had only two floors when
Bellocq was a child and stood in a row of three identical buildings.
In
1906, he moved to 840 Conti, shown at right. Click on images to
enlarge. |
A
few days after Ernest gets admitted to Mercy, he dies of just about everything:
cerebral arterio-schlerosis, diabetes, obesity, a concussion, senility,
and old age. Leo has him put in the little, house-like family tomb near
the park. Soon afterward, a notary and a witness, Augusta Bonnecaze, probably
the daughter of Paul Bellocq's partner, go to view the contents of Ernest's
safe deposit box. They find no will. They do find a locket—maybe the
same locket that appears around the necks of some of Bellocq's models.
Leo picks up the woman's diamond rings with Tiffany settings, which Marie
probably left to Ernest in futile hope of him one day marrying, and realizes
he hasn't seen them since they circled his mother's fingers. A rosary
lies among the old broken watches and jewelry.
Then the trio goes to E.J.'s musty apartment.
Much of Ernest's furniture is broken, and many of the lamps and pieces
of photographic equipment are also in pieces or broken. They probably
find the 8 x 10-inch negative plates bearing the images of the women of
Storyville, but they don't list them in the succession. The images are
considered pornographic and illegal at the time. (3)
(9)
Leo is Ernest's sole heir, and the negatives
end up, at some point, in Sal Ruiz's antique shop. They may pass through
several hands before Lee Friedlander gets them from Larry Borenstein.
Borenstein has them stashed in the deteriorated bathroom in the old slave
quarters behind Preservation Hall, which was photographer Pops Whitesell's
studio at one time. Apparently the roof leaks back there, too, because
some of the plates get water-damaged in Hurricane Betsy.
But
somewhere along the line, an unknown hand had also scratched many of the
women's faces from the fragile emulsion. Everyone who gave it a thought
assumed that Leo had vandalized the plates as soon as he acquired them
in order to protect the identities of the women, many of whom went directly
to the society page after Storyville closed, but in many cases, Bellocq
photographed the same woman twice, and while one negative sustains damage,
the other remains untouched, thus her identity still remains obvious.
In all likelihood, Leo, being Ernest's sole heir, also had complete control
of his life's work directly after his death. If protecting identities
was his motive, why would Leo have randomly scratched out a face here
and there instead of taking a hammer to the whole collection? Leo was
active in the Sodality of the Immaculate Conception, a moralist organization,
back when he was in school, but that was in the 1880s, and, again, a fire-breathing
moralist would have destroyed the negatives rather than selectively scratching
the faces. (17) Recently, Lee
Friedlander has re-examined the plates and tried to duplicate the scratching
with a sample area, but the emulsion flaked off instead of scratching.
The emulsion around the original defacement in some areas is folded over
gently, and could only have done so when wet. Therefore, E.J. Bellocq
probably defaced the negatives wet, immediately after he developed them
in the early 1900s.
In one photograph, however, a woman wears
a carnival mask that has been incongruously positioned to hide her eyes,
possibly echoing some ambivalence that made Bellocq scratch the faces
from so many of the negatives. Yet the approach to the women's faces is
not the only curious aspect of Bellocq's Storyville work. In one pair
of photographs, a woman stands clothed in the first image in front of
heavy wooden doors, but in the second image, she is nude, her face has
been scratched from the negative, and a heavy couch has been pushed in
front of the door. A locket, another repeating motif in Bellocq's Storyville
work, also becomes visible in the second image. One of Bellocq's defaced
nudes is actually shown examining her locket. But the pair of images mentioned
above is not the only example of couches in front of doors in Bellocq's
Storyville nudes. One such image shows clearly that there is already a
lock on the door, and a cord from an electric light has further been wrapped
around the lock in what looks like a final obsessive attempt at privacy.
Why would Bellocq feel the need to use a couch, a lock, and a wire to
keep the door shut in an expensive brothel? Rugs used as hasty partial
backdrops and, in one case, sawhorses also suggest that Bellocq may have
intended to drop the backgrounds from his images, vignette, or otherwise
alter the images to imitate the saccharine romantic photographs and paintings
he hung on his walls. In fact, one of Bellocq's portraits is clearly shown
vignetted and framed in one of the two studies of his desk.
The style of the romanticized images of
women that surrounded his desk certainly informed his eye, yet his failures
to imitate it mark his work as reflexively modernist. This inability to
force his vision into the mold of his conscious influences has kept his
work alive, against all likelihood, though circumstances almost dictated
the dustbin as its final destination. One of his images presents a woman
visiting a sick colleague, probably at the isolation
hospital for victims of socailly transmitted
diseases.
When we consider that Bellocq followed these women to the hospital, carrying
a bulky 8" x 10" view camera, it suggests a strong documentary
dimension to his work as well and shows that he had much more than just
a prurient interest in his subject matter.
Regardless of the idiosyncrasies of Bellocq's
Storyville work, we see these women through the eyes of a man who grew
up a block and a half from their rooms, which were both living space and
workplace, in the most outrageous district of prostitution the country
has yet seen. Yet we should realize that from Storyville's over-done and
opulent Victorian pleasure palaces, to the blazing light of the saloons,
to the abject, by-the-hour cribs and resulting trips to the confessional
and/or isolation hospital—all of this was simply the normal way of the
world to Bellocq. It was his neighborhood. The qualities that may strike
us as paradoxical in his work may not have been paradoxes to him at all.
He showed a stark yet compassionate frankness, and refused to glamorize
or objectify the women. Yet he makes no moralistic plea for the "fallen
woman." On the contrary, these portraits sharply capture a raw chaotic
space of humanity, necessity, and sexuality, pushing Bellocq's work beyond
his half-hearted attempts at pictorialism to the cusp of modernity. He
reached into outrageous situations, and from them he pulled existential
gems of clarity.
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A
woman sits on a couch that has been pushed in front of her door, while
a light cord has been wrapped around the lock. Click on image to enlarge. |
Click
on image to enlarge. |
Bellocq's
portrait of his own desk and wall. Photo courtesy of Tulane Special
Collections. Click on image to enlarge. |
Ernest
Bellocq's body now lies in the family tomb across the Bayou from the New
Orleans Museum of Art, where he never dreamed his private photographic
project would one day hang.
(20)
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Bellocq
and McCarthy Family Tomb in Saint Louis Cemetary #3. Click on image
to enlarge. |
Julie
Saul Gallery Exhibition
535 W. 22nd Street
New York, NY
10011
E.J. Bellocq- Storyville Portraits, c.
1912
December 6- January 12, 2002
An exhibition of a large group of early
prints from the infamous Storyville Portrait series by New Orleans photographer
E.J. Bellocq. The selection includes the girl reclining on the wicker
chaise lounge, which inspired the Louis Malle film Pretty Baby,
and nudes with their faces mysteriously scratched out. These prints precede
the well-known Lee Friedlander prints, which were made after he acquired
the original glass negatives in 1967, and exhibited in 1970 at the Museum
of Modern Art. Several of the images have never been exhibited.
Special thanks
to Art Carpenter, Dr. Terrence Fitzmorris, Lee Friedlander, Steven Maklansky,
Dr. Wilbur Minere, and Dr. Jesse Poesch.
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Signature
from Bellocq's Compact Pocket Encyclopedia of Photography,
Al Rose collection. |
Notes
1. Friedlander,
Lee. Storyville Portraits. New York: Museum of Modern Art, 1970.
2. Rose,
Al. Storyville New Orleans. Tuscalusa: UAP, 1974.
3. Succession
of Ernest Bellocq, record annex of Civil District Court, record #293-156.
4. Bellocq's
medical records, Mercy Hospital, New Orleans, Oct. 3, 1949.
5. Gehman,
Mary. “In Defense of E.J. Bellocq.” New Orleans. July, 1979: 31-4.
6. Pope,
John. “Finding a Bellocq Treasure.” States Item. [New Orleans] Jan. 8,
1979.
7. Ernest
Bellocq's 1872 baptismal record from Church of the Immaculate Conception,
Archdiocean Archives, New Orleans. Note: There are two places in the baptismal
record stating Bellocq’s full name. One entry gives his name as John Joseph
Ernest Bellocq. The other entry gives his name as Joseph John Ernest Bellocq.
8. Hand written
short biography of Ernest Bellocq by William Russell, Tulane Hogan Jazz
Archive, Bellocq file.
9. Bellocq's
medical records, Mercy Hospital, New Orleans, Oct. 3, 1949.
10. Phone
interview with Mona McMurray, Summer, 1993, and Claude Fleurischamp, phone
interview, July 17, 1993.
11. Orleans
Parish, La., Coroner's report, Oct. 1949, p. 198.
12. Act of
donation for 1026 Conti, New Orleans Office of Conveyances, entry #1651.
13. Grima
notarial record #U,16,L CS-A3 Jan. 28, 1891.
14. Square
97, French Quarter survey, Historic New Orleans Collection.
15. 1880
census, vol.#9, sheet #4, e.d. #29, line #11.
16. Catalogs
of the College of the Immaculate Conception, 1883-84 through 1890-91,
Loyola University Archives.
17. Catalogus
personarum primus: Leo Bellocq, Loyola University Archives, New Orleans.
18. The Owl,
New Orleans, 1898.
19. Interview
with David Richman, New Orleans photographer and friend of Richard Relf,
an older photographer who was said to have known Bellocq and printed for
him.
20. Bellocq's
burial record, Saint Louis Cemetery no. 3, New Orleans. Oct. 4, 1949.
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