Born in Canada, Beals was devoted to documenting New York City |
In the first two decades of the 20th century, Greenwich Village became
known as a rather eccentric enclave. Artists and writers, Arnarchists and liberated women, inhabited the neighborhood. "Greenwich Village is the American parallel of the
Latin Quarter," The Dial observed in 1914, pointing out that "a member of Greenwich Village is a person of a sort and not too
closely of a place: he is a Bohemian."
Curiosity about the neighborhood filled with restaurants, theater, art, radical politics, and nightlife was high; and the Bohemian crowd itself was willing to instruct the outsider. Anna Alice Chapin's 1920 Greenwich Village was a perfect guide to all things Greenwich Village.
Beals photographed Alice Palmer, owner and operator of The Village Store, on Washington Square. Villagers loved the array of goods Palmer made available in her store.
The office of the local newspaper, "Ink Pot", pictured above, as Beals photographed it in 1917. Beals also photographed one of the Village's most famous eateries: Polly's Restaurant, (aka The Village Inn), pictured below. Polly's was mentioned in numerous publications as "the" Bohemian spot.
By 1919, Guido Bruno, a Greenwich Village resident and writer whose local paper, "Bruno's Weekly," offered an account of Village goings-on, declared: "The fad of false Bohemia in Greenwich Village has
passed. The purple and orange brand of tearooms and of so-called gift
shops where art lovers and artistic people from the Bronx and Flatbush
assembled, have gone out of existence. The designers and manufacturers
of astounding atrocities who called themselves "modern artists" have
disappeared. True there are a few short-haired women left, who parade
the streets in their unusual clothes, but they, too, will soon move to
other parts of the city with the return of the soldiers, and will
reassume their real calling in life." (From: 'Way Down in Greenwich Village )
Beals would continue to live and photograph in the Village before she too moved on. In 1928 she moved to California. She later moved to Chicago, before returning to New York in 1935. The 1910s' "scene" had most certainly passed by the time Beals was back in the city; although Greenwich Village would prove to be re-born as a counter-cultural enclave, Beals' images captured a specific historical moment in the city, and in the life and habits of the Bohemian crowd.
-Jenny Thompson
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