Marjorie Toomer

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Marjorie Toomer (Content)

Birthdate:
Death: August 1984 (89)
Immediate Family:

Daughter of Harry Content and Adrienne (Ada) Content
Wife of Jean Toomer; Michael Carr and Leon Samuel Fleischman
Ex-wife of Harold Loeb
Mother of Harold Albert "James" Loeb, Jr. and Mary Ellen "Susan" Sandberg (Loeb)
Sister of Harold Content

Managed by: Kevin Lawrence Hanit
Last Updated:

About Marjorie Toomer

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marjorie_Content

Marjorie Content (1895–1984) was an American photographer active in modernist social and artistic circles. Her husbands included Harold Loeb, the editor of the avant-garde journal, Broom, and the writer Jean Toomer. Her photographs were rarely published and never exhibited in her lifetime, but have become of interest to collectors and art historians. Her work has been collected by the Metropolitan Museum of Art and the Chrysler Museum of Art and has been the subject of several solo exhibitions.

Early Years

Marjorie Content was born in 1895, the daughter of wealthy Manhattan stock-broker Harry Content and his wife, Ada Content. She was educated at Miss Finch's School. During these years, she began a lifelong friendship with Alfred Stieglitz, the uncle of a school friend.

In 1914, she left school at age 19 to marry Harry Loeb. Their two children, Jim and Susan Loeb, were born in 1915 and 1916. In 1919, Content became a manager of The Sunrise Turn bookshop, a female-run bookstore devoted to new writing. Loeb's founding of Broom in 1921 also helped deepen Content's connections to the literary and art world as Lola Ridge hosted artists in the Broom's office in the basement of Content's brownstone. Loeb was often away in Europe, and the two divorced in 1921.

Photographic Years 1926-1935

Content began serious photography while married to her second husband, the painter Michael Carr. She used a 3 1⁄4 × 4 1⁄4 inch Graflex, and, after 1932, a 5x7 inch Graflex, as well. Despite reports that Stieglitz taught her developing techniques, some scholars believe it was her friend Consuelo Kanaga, in whose darkroom she sometimes worked.

Her travels in the West and Southwest with painter Gordon Grant influenced her style toward a more formalist aesthetic, and she indulged ethnographic impulses while briefly working for the Bureau of Indian Affairs photographing rural Native American life. In the 1930s she was also close to Georgia O'Keeffe, traveling to the Bermuda with her in 1933 to nurse her through a depression, and driving to New Mexico with her in 1934. Other close friends of this period included Stieglitz, Ridge, Sherwood Anderson, Paul Rosenfeld, and Margaret Naumburg, at whose Walden School both of her children were educated.

Later life

In September, 1934, just one day after her divorce from Leon Fleischman was finalized, Content wed Jean Toomer in Taos. One scholar calls her marriage to Toomer "a doomed alliance" and blames it for the end of her years of serious art-making. The two remained married until Toomer's death in 1967. They continued to visit New Mexico together but settled on a farm in Doylestown, PA and were active in reviving the Quaker meeting there.

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Marjorie Toomer's Timeline

1895
February 17, 1895
1915
June 26, 1915
375 Park Avenue, New York, New York County, New York, United States
1916
November 27, 1916
New York, New York, United States
1984
August 1984
Age 89