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Henry Rox "Homeward on a New Boat" Series XIII c. 1940

$ 2,200
  • Description
    Henry Rox (Heinz Rosenberg) (1899–1966)

    Homeward on a New Boat — Series XIII
    Estate photographic print
    Verso inscribed in pencil by Henry Rox with estate stamp

    Homeward on a New Boat belongs to Rox’s mature constructed photographic series and is identified in pencil on the verso as “Series XIII.” The reverse bears the printed designation “The Estate of Henry Rox.” No archive of original negatives is known to survive, making estate prints primary documentation of his photographic practice.

    The image presents a childlike figure rowing across stylized waters in a vessel formed from a slice of watermelon beneath a crescent moon rendered with a human profile. The composition synthesizes whimsy and existential reflection. The watermelon boat recalls Rox’s Berlin conception of “photo-sculpture,” in which organic materials become allegorical structures. The theatrical lighting and volumetric modeling reveal an artist thinking as a sculptor before thinking as a photographer.

    Read against the arc of exile and reinvention — from Berlin studio to London collaboration with James Laver to American academic career — the title “Homeward” acquires layered resonance.

    Henry Rox was born Heinz Rosenberg in Berlin in 1899 into a prosperous Jewish family whose department store operated in one of the city’s principal upscale commercial districts. This background afforded him elite academic training and with his family support the opportunity to pursue. advanced artistic study at the University of Berlin Art History (1919–1923), the Charlottenburger Kunstgewerbeschule Specializes Wood Culture(1921–1925), and in Paris at the Académie Julian for Sculpture (1925–1927) and Académie Colarossi Multi Courses in Drawing and Sketching (1925–1928) .
    He had a studio at 14 Rue Brea, Montparnasse, Paris

    Formally trained as a sculptor, Rox established a modern studio in Berlin and exhibited widely, including the Salon d’Automne (Paris), Juryfreie Kunstschau Berlin (1926), Freie Kunstschau Berlin (1929), Preussische Akademie der Künste (1930), the Berliner Secession (1929–1932), and galleries including Paul Cassirer and Alfred Flechtheim, as well as the Royal Academy of Arts (London) and the Royal Institute, Glasgow.

    A documented 1930 photograph of Rox’s Berlin studio on Nürnberger Strasse confirms the scale and seriousness of his sculptural practice: a substantial modernist workspace with installed lighting, drafting tables, and large works in progress. Rox was not an experimental hobbyist; he was an established European sculptor operating within the late Weimar avant-garde.

    Working in Berlin’s experimental climate, Rox absorbed Dadaist strategies of constructed object juxtaposition and formal irony. In 1933 he attended the Berliner Fotoschule, refining his technical mastery of photography. I

    With the rise of National Socialism, Rox and his wife Lotte fled Germany in 1934, abandoning his studio, sculptures, and career infrastructure. His parents and other family members remained and were later murdered in concentration camps. When Rox left Berlin, the only professional instrument he carried with him — beyond clothing and a few personal effects — was his camera. That instrument became the foundation of his reinvention.

    In London, financial necessity redirected Rox from independent sculpture toward the development of photo-sculptures as both creative and commercial output. These works introduced his constructed photographic language into British publishing culture. Their originality led to commercial commissions for Guinness, vineyards, tobacco companies, and Helene of London, translating his sculptural construction into sophisticated advertising imagery.

    During this period, Rox collaborated with James Laver, one of Britain’s prominent authors, critics, an art historian. Laver, widely recognized for his pioneering work in the history of fashion, served as Keeper of Prints, Drawings, and Paintings at the Victoria and Albert Museum from 1938 to 1959. Together they produced Tommy Apple and His Adventures in Banana-Land (Jonathan Cape, 1935) and Tommy Apple and Peggy Pear (Jonathan Cape, 1936). These publications were not casual children’s novelties but structurally sophisticated photographic constructions created in dialogue with one of England’s leading museum intellectuals. The collaboration firmly situates Rox within British cultural and institutional circles.
    .
    Henry and Lotte Rox departed London for New York in May 1938.

    In 1939 he joined Mount Holyoke College in South Hadley, Massachusetts as a Lecturer in Sculpture. During his first year he commuted from New York before relocating permanently in 1940. This transitional period coincided with intense experimentation across media..

    In 1940 Rox created an animated short incorporated into MGM’s Strike Up the Band, demonstrating continued engagement with narrative construction and material animation. His unsuccessful 1941 Guggenheim Fellowship application proposed further development of animation and film. A second application in 1949 again focused on sculpture. In 1954 he was awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship for sculpture and later became Mary Lyon Professor of Art at Mount Holyoke College.

    Rox’s imagery gained broader visibility through American publishing networks under Henry Luce and Condé Nast, with circulation in major magazines including Life, Vogue, Mademoiselle, Seventeen, Harper’s Bazaar, and McCall’s.
    The 9 x 7.5" format corresponds to many prints of his from this period and may be either British or American prints to the standard size of American editorial and advertising submission scale of the 1930s on.

    Following Rox’s death in July of 1967 and his wife Lotte 's death in April 1971 a substantial portion — approximately 300–500 lifetime prints — was salvaged and preserved. No known negatives are extant. These prints therefore constitute the primary surviving material evidence of his photo-sculptural practice.

    Rox’s work has recently undergone renewed European institutional reassessment due to the efforts and research of Wolfgang Vollmer of Cologne, Germany, including a 2021 exhibition at Fotohof, Salzburg; the inclusion of material from the “Banana Circus” series at the Bonartes Photo Institute in Vienna (December 2025 – February 2026); and participation in Berlin’s European Month of Photography.i
  • More Information
    Documentation: Ample Provenance
    Origin: United States, Massachusetts
    Period: 1920-1949
    Materials: silver gelatin print
    Condition: Good.
    Creation Date: c. 1940
    Styles / Movements: Modernism, Black & White
    Incollect Reference #: 848171
  • Dimensions
    W. 7.5 in; H. 9 in;
    W. 19.05 cm; H. 22.86 cm;
Shipping Information:

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Message from Seller:

Established in 1984, Appleton offers a curated selection of 20th Century furniture, tables, chairs, and décor, featuring works by iconic designers like Frank Lloyd Wright and Edward Wormley. For inquiries, contact us at appletonarts@gmail.com.

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