Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Gab_SorèreGab Sorère - Wikipedia

    Gabrielle Bloch (17 February 1870 [better source needed] – 14 July 1961), known professionally as Gab Sorère, was a French art promoter, set designer, mechanical innovator, filmmaker and choreographer of the Belle Époque.

  2. www.elisarolle.com › queerplaces › fghijqueerplaces - Gab Sorère

    Gabrielle Bloch (February 17, 1870 – July 14, 1961), known professionally as Gab Sorère, was a French art promoter, set designer, mechanical innovator, filmmaker and choreographer of the Belle Époque.

  3. www.wikiwand.com › en › Gab_SorèreGab Sorère - Wikiwand

    Gabrielle Bloch, known professionally as Gab Sorère, was a French art promoter, set designer, mechanical innovator, filmmaker and choreographer of the Belle Époque.

  4. A queer artist, Fuller freed the female body from heteronormative representation and expression. She shared her life with a woman, Gabrielle Bloch, known as Gab Sorère, and both were regulars in Parisian lesbian art circles.

  5. Gab Sorère, née Gabrielle Bloch le 29 novembre 1877 à Paris 8 e et morte le 28 décembre 1962 à Rambouillet [1], est une artiste, chorégraphe et réalisatrice française de la Belle Époque. Elle est notamment connue pour les mises en scène des spectacles de sa compagne Loïe Fuller, jouant notamment sur les ombres et lumières.

  6. Sep 24, 2020 · One of Gray’s most serious same-sex relationships was with a theatrical manager known professionally as Gab Sorère, the lover of Loïe Fuller, the American-born modern dancer whose celebrated Serpentine Dance—a choreographic tornado of billowing silk—inspired fin-de-siècle artists as varied as Toulouse-Lautrec, Rodin, and the Lumière ...

  7. People also ask

  8. Nov 6, 2019 · Left: Loie Fuller and her mother; right: Gabrielle Bloch (also known as Gab Sorère); from the 1913 English translation of Fuller’s Fifteen Years of a Dancer’s Life (1913) — Source.

  1. People also search for