Harlip
Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. Harlip was a photographic studio specialising in celebrity portraits, based at 161 New Bond Street, Mayfair, London, England and run by Dr Gregory Harlip, and later his widow Madame Monte Harlip, both of Eastern European origin. Up until 1937, the "Atelier Harlip", as it was called in German, had been based at Kurfürstendamm, Berlin. In 1937, the Harlips left Berlin because of growing Nazi repressions against Jewish companies.
After Dr Harlip's death on April 7, 1945, Madame Harlip continued the business as one of the great society photographers of the 1950s. Known for catchphrases to the sitter such as "Give me Rembrandt", her ingredients for a good portrait were "life, honesty of expression, simplicity". She lived at Stanmore, Middlesex, and died in 1982.
References
- The Times, Saturday, May 23, 1981; pg. 23
- Display advert, The Times, Friday, September 8, 1939; pg. 11
- Deaths, The Times, Friday, April 20, 1945; pg. 1
- "£5000 theft from home of actress", The Times, Monday, October 12, 1953; pg. 4
- Television: Snowdon on Camera, The Times, Monday, May 25, 1981; pg. 7;
- Harlip National Portrait Gallery
- National Portrait Gallery Photographers
- Madame Harlip The Philip Townsend Archive
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