Talk:Rosika Schwimmer/GA1
Appearance
GA Review
[edit]GA toolbox |
---|
Reviewing |
Article (edit | visual edit | history) · Article talk (edit | history) · Watch
Reviewer: Fiamh (talk · contribs) 00:31, 6 November 2019 (UTC)
Good Article review progress box
|
- "signaled the beginning of a smear campaign against [Schwimmer] and the eventual termination of her public career"—I would attribute this quote
- Would link as so, "Béla Kun's communist government"
- File:Schwimmer, Rosika Bc.1910 (22475434393).jpg, File:International Congress of Women1915 (22785230005).jpg needs PD tag
- File:Rosika Schwimmer, seated on bench.jpg needs death date of photographer and details of first publication
- The carte-de-visite was created by the Atelier Lackner, VIII Lerchenfelderstraße 38, Vienna. I have done multiple searches, but am unable to locate anything at all on this photography studio. However, the original image is held in the archives of Atria and was stolen by the Nazis as part of the International Archives for the Women's Movement. They note they have the original image, it is in the public domain and was taken in 1890. As these records were returned to Amsterdam in 2003, it is very unlikely that the image was published before that time, except as a visiting card. I checked US newspapers and find no images of Schwimmer published before 1914 and none after that date that were derived from this image. I also checked multiple archives for Austria and Hungary and find no publication of this image for Schwimmer, but admittedly not speaking Hungarian or German, I could have missed an archive. That being said, as it is likely it was not published before Atria received the documents back, it is in the PD as having been created more than 120 years ago. SusunW (talk) 07:39, 6 November 2019 (UTC)
- In that case the correct tag is {{PD-US-unpublished}}. I went ahead and added it to the photograph. Fiamh (talk, contribs) 08:12, 6 November 2019 (UTC)
- The carte-de-visite was created by the Atelier Lackner, VIII Lerchenfelderstraße 38, Vienna. I have done multiple searches, but am unable to locate anything at all on this photography studio. However, the original image is held in the archives of Atria and was stolen by the Nazis as part of the International Archives for the Women's Movement. They note they have the original image, it is in the public domain and was taken in 1890. As these records were returned to Amsterdam in 2003, it is very unlikely that the image was published before that time, except as a visiting card. I checked US newspapers and find no images of Schwimmer published before 1914 and none after that date that were derived from this image. I also checked multiple archives for Austria and Hungary and find no publication of this image for Schwimmer, but admittedly not speaking Hungarian or German, I could have missed an archive. That being said, as it is likely it was not published before Atria received the documents back, it is in the PD as having been created more than 120 years ago. SusunW (talk) 07:39, 6 November 2019 (UTC)
- File:Rosika Schwimmer, 1914.png needs caption (or possibly should be removed as redundant)