Archivist • Photographer • Educator
Elias Goldensky
Gary Saretzky Collection
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Anna Tolochko, 1896 (back of cabinet card inscribed from Anna to Bertha [Tolochko], Sept. 22, 1896). Anna Tolochko married Isaac E. Kirkel on May 23, 1902. She was born in 1876 (Russia), died May 7, 1966 (Pittsburgh). Possibly born in Grodno, which is now in Belarus near the Polish border. Not to be confused with another Anna Tolochko, born January 16, 1872 (Russia), died December 19, 1935 (Pittsburgh), who emigrated to the U.S. in 1903 and was unmarried in 1920.
Group of six cabinet cards, including several dated 1896, that derive from the family of Dr. Charles Spivak (1861-1927) from Kremenchug, who after emigrating to the U.S. lived in Philadelphia and later Denver. Subjects include Anna Tolochko, Bertha Tolochko, Grigori Goldinski, Rebecca M. Goldsmidth, I. Sion (man), and an unidentified boy. Inscriptions on verso in Russian on three, English on two, and none on the back of the one of the boy. These photographs formerly were in an album of Dr. and Mrs. Spivak owned by Mrs. Allen Lewis Feinstein, Phoenix, Arizona. Grigori Goldinski was likely a cousin of Elias Goldensky.
Margaret Harrington, 1897
Girl with flower, cabinet card, ca. 1898. Verso.
Woman with large sleeves, late 1890s cabinet card.
Young man with bow tie, cabinet card, high gloss finish, late 1890s.
Young man with chain on vest, cabinet card, high gloss finish, late 1890s.
Wedding Couple, ca. 1900, mounted on card with 270 S. 2nd Street, Philadelphia, address.
Woman in white, ca. 1900, retouched area lower left next to a wheel, table sticking out behind woman, 270 S. 2nd Street, Philadelphia address. The wheel at the edge of the frame and the table extending out from behind the woman's hip are very uncharacteristic for Goldensky's work, which normally doesn't include such distracting elements.
Couple with baby, ca. 1900
Cabinet card of four children, ca. 1900 (note Civil War kepi)
Four boys in uniform, ca. 1900, 270 S. 2nd Street, Philadelphia, address.
Cabinet card of infant, ca. 1900 (note stop action)
Child with tricycle, ca. 1900
Cabinet card of girl looking at photo, ca. 1900
Cabinet card of two girls, one with flowers, ca. 1900. Verso.
Couple with three sons, ca. 1900.
Couple, ca. 1900.
Unidentified well -dressed woman, ca. 1900, mounted on thin card blind stamped, "Goldensky Portraits Philadelphia," negative number 14476 on verso in pencil.
Archie Rosenbaum, son of Morris Rosenbaum, early 1900s Verso of Archie Rosenbaum photo
Eli Rosenbaum, son of Morris Rosenbaum, Philadelphia banker , 1906
Rev. John Watson, D.D., the Scottish divine who wrote under the name Ian Maclaren, 1907. Platinum print. Maclaren was a member of the literary movement called the Kailyard School (1888-1896). His first books, Beside the Bonnie Brier Bush (1894), which sold more than 750,000 copies, and The Days of Auld Lang Syne (1895), led to his being invited for a whirlwind lecture tour to the United States in the 1890s. He returned in 1907, where Goldensky made this portrait in early February (he mentioned having his portrait taken in a letter to his son on Feb. 14, reproduced in his posthumous biography by W. Robertson Nicoll in 1908). Farther along his tour, Watson became ill and died in Mount Pleasant, Iowa, in May of that year. Not visible in the scan is Maclaren's signature and Goldensky's blind stamp. The image also has a copyright blind stamp, C. Houston Goudiss, 1907. The connection among Goudiss, Maclaren, and Goldensky is unknown but this Goudiss is probably the Charles Houston Goudiss (b. 1880) who later wrote articles about vitamins; perhaps he was Maclaren's tour manager.
Woman with pearls, platinum print, ca. 1910.
Young girl, ca. 1911
Finely dressed young woman, 1911
Mother and two photographs of her son, 1911 and 1912.
Reginald Wright Kauffman, August 27, 1912, journalist who wrote The House of Bondage, a book about prostitution highly praised by Emma Goldman in her essay, "The Traffic in Women." This photo apparently was sent on Nov. 13, 1912 by Kauffman to a Miss Marshall, in thanks for her interview with him that had been published. Goldensky's monogram, damaged by a fingerprint, may be seen faintly near the right edge a little below the middle of the photo. The photo is stamped on the back, "Please credit Elias Goldensky, 1705 Chestnut St., Phila., Pa." and notations suggest it was used for a publication, as does the glossy paper the photo is printed on, quite unlike Goldensky's art photographs.
Reproductions of eight photographs by Goldensky in Wilson's Photographic Magazine, June 1912: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
Young man in uniform, 1914.
Mother and daughter, 1914.
Caroline Rosenberger (wife of Judge Emil Rosenberger), 1915
Bearded man with raised eyebrows, 1916.
Henry H. Donaldson, 1918. Born in 1857, Donaldson, according to the APA Historical web site, was "a prominent neurologist whose thorough studies of the brain were published as a book, The Brain, in 1895. At the Wistar Institute, Donaldson introduced the albino rat as an experimental subject and developed the Wistar rat strain later used in many psychological studies." His journal articles included, "On the Relation of Neurology to Psychology," American Journal of Psychology, Volume 1, No. 2 (Feb. 1888). He died in 1938.
Man in uniform, 1918, two portraits, one holding cap, one wearing cap. These photographs were found in a dumpster by Mike Forst of St. Louis and auctioned by Ivey-Selkirk in 2011.
Man in uniform, 1918, holding hat.
Portrait of Jules Falk, violinist, with his Stradivarius, 1919, signed 1920 by Falk.
Portrait of Jules Falk, violinist, signed in 1919 by Falk (note Goldensky monogram)
Elderly gentleman with beard, 1919 (possibly Sydney George Fisher (1856-1927)
Young woman, verso imprint Goldensky, 1705 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia, early 1920s.
In the Summer of 1923, Erla Calame performed on Broadway in the Ziegfeld Follies featuring Eddie Cantor. This photo was made by Goldensky about that time. Erla, born November 12, 1903, grew up in South Orange, Essex County, New Jersey. Her father Charles was an accountant for Electric Power & Light. Young Erla participated in the Asbury Park Baby Parade and won at least three major prizes, the Mayors' Trophy in 1912 and the Grand Prize in 1913 and 1915. As Erla C. Birmingham, she died on October 12, 1993, at the age of 89. Her last residence was in South Orange.
Leopold Stokowski, Conductor, Philadelphia Orchestra (1882-1977), two 8x10 silver gelatin portraits with dramatic lighting, one frontal and one in profile, ca. 1923. Stokowski was very pleased with these photographs and there is an order for them in the Goldensky Papers at the George Eastman Museum. With copyright notice and Goldensky blind stamp, lower right corner. On the verso are two Goldensky rubber stamps regarding credit and copyright and a rubber stamp reading "Leopold Stokowski Conductor of the Philadelphia Orchestra." The frontal view is discussed and reproduced in my article about Goldensky in Pennsylvania History, Spring 1977, page 249, courtesy of the George Eastman Museum, which owns a print from the same negative.
Matt Francis, 1927, signed "Goldensky Studio."
On October 17,1935, Goldensky was honored at a dinner in Harrisburg, PA, given by the Professional Photographer's Association of Pennsylvania, which gave him a certificate signed by the officers that is now in the collection of Ellen Golden, Goldensky's granddaughter. Before the certificate was signed, a photographic copy was made of it and retained by the Association's President, J.B. Schriever. This photographic copy was obtained indirectly from Schriever's estate.
Max Pom (or Pon?), 1938. Inscribed to Virginia MacWalters, opera singer.
Peggy Thayer, Philadelphia socialite, 1921, later Mrs. Harold E. Talbott. Peggy's parents and brother were on the Titanic; her mother and brother survived. This photo was published when she opened a "French shop" in Philadelphia. The reproduction is from a news agency copy print circulated by Keystone View Co.
Unidentified couple, man seated, woman standing with flower, 270 S. 2nd Street Studio, circa 1900.
Unidentified woman in silk with pearls, 1516 Chestnut Street Studio, 1931.
Unidentified infant standing on chair, cabinet card, 270 S. 2nd Street studio, circa 1900.
Five women taken outdoors, cabinet card, 270 S. 2nd Street studio, circa 1900.
Marie D'Arcy Todd, young woman with long hair seen in profile, 1914.
Bald man holding book, circa 1915.
Woman with fur covered shoulder, circa 1920.
Bertha E. Jones, circa 1900, cabinet gem (3 1/2 x 5 1/4)
A Study, frontispiece from Camera Craft, July 1909.