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  1. Author Carl Van Vechten (1880–1964) began making portraits in 1932. Over the next three decades, he asked writers, musicians, athletes, politicians, and others to sit for him—many of them central figures in the Harlem Renaissance.

  2. 10 de jun. de 2013 · Carl Van Vechten is best-known today not for who he knew or what he wrote but for the title of his most famous novel: Nigger Heaven. For a white man to use that phrase—derogatory slang for the upper galleries of theaters where black people were once segregated—as the title of a novel about Harlem horrified many people, even in 1926.

  3. 21 de may. de 2018 · Carl Van Vechten >American author and photographer Carl Van Vechten (1880-1964) was a champion >of modern music and dance in the early years of the twentieth century, and >went on to enjoy critical acclaim for his witty novels that chronicled a >charmed set in 1920s New York [1] and Paris.

  4. Over 9,000 portraits of the most famous and influential figures of his day. During his career as a photographer, Carl Van Vechten’s subjects, many of whom were his friends and social acquaintances, included dancers, actors, writers, artists, activists, singers, costumiers, photographers, social critics, educators, journalists, and aesthetes.

  5. Carl Van Vechten, né le 17 juin 1880 à Cedar Rapids et mort le 21 décembre 1964 à New York, est un romancier, critique d'art et photographe américain. Il a été le mécène du mouvement culturel afro-américain dit de la Renaissance de Harlem et l' exécuteur testamentaire de Gertrude Stein .

  6. Carl Van Vechten. A novelist, critic, and promoter of the arts, Carl Van Vechten was also an avid portrait photographer, beginning when he first acquired a Leica camera in 1932. By 1939, he had made it his mission to photograph every notable African American working in the arts.

  7. Biography Carl Van Vechten was born on June 17, 1880 in Cedar Rapids, Iowa. At an early age, he developed an interest in music and theater, which he found hard to satisfy in his hometown. He left Iowa in 1899 to attend the University of Chicago. In Chicago he was able to explore art, music, and opera. He became interested in writing and contributed to the University of Chicago Weekly.