Self Portrait of William Mortensen and Courtney Crawford, 1926
It is an honor to share with you the following works by the great William Mortensen. Many of the following images have not been shown publicly before and were taken from the original prints exclusively for Monster Brains by
Stephen Romano. Also included here are original masks designed by Mortensen that were photographed by Stephen from his personal collection. He has provided a wealth of incredibly high resolution and beautiful copies of many of William Mortensen's greatest works that I share with you below, enjoy.

Ho Ho Off To The Sabboth, 1926

A Tantric Priest, 1930

L'amour, 1930

The Incubus, 1924 - 26

Belphegor, 1930

The Vampire's Retribution, 1928

Preperation For The Sabbot, 1930

The Old Hag, 1928

The Worship of Isis, The Moon Goddess, 1924

The Spanish Main, 1932

A Spider Torture

Beelzebub, 1926

Jezebel, 1924

The Old Hag With Incubus, 1928

The Old Hag With Skull, 1926

Fear

The Initiation Of A Young Witch, 1928

Human Relations, 1932

In Missa Interfectionis, 1928

Salome, 1926

Sappho, 1926

Masked Nude with Skull, 1926

The Shrapnel, 1928

Caprice Vanois, 1926

Witch On Broom, 1928

Untitled, 1924

Masked Woman, 1926

Female Crucifixion

Male Female

Nude With Small Demon

Courtney with Masks, 1926

Courtney Crawford with Masks, 1924

Courtney Crawford with Masks, 1926

Ghoul Mask

Face Mask

Gorilla Mask

Demon Mask

Imp Mask

Faye Wray Mask

Skull Mask
"Mortensen began his photographic career taking portraits of Hollywood actors and film stills. In 1931 he moved to the artist community of Laguna Beach, California, where he opened a studio and the William Mortensen School of Photography.
He preferred the pictorialism style of manipulating photographs to produce romanticist painting-like effects. The style brought him criticism from straight photographers of the modern realist movement and, in particular, he carried on a prolonged written debate with Ansel Adams.
His arguments defending romanticist photography led him to be "ostracized from most authoritative canons of photographic history." In an essay, Larry Lytle wrote, "Due to his approach—both technically and philosophically in opposition to straight or purist adherents — he is amongst the most problematic figures in photography in the twentieth-century... historians and critics have described his images as "...anecdotal, highly sentimental, mildly erotic hand-colored prints...", "...bowdlerized versions of garage calendar pin-ups and sadomasochist entertainments...", "...contrived set-ups and sappy facial expressions...", and Ansel Adams variously referred to Mortensen as the "Devil", and "the anti-Christ." In addition, the more realistic photojournalism emerging from World War II correspondents, and carried in national news magazines, caused Mortensen's more posed and contrived photos to fade from the public mind. He was largely forgotten by the time of his death in 1965." -
quote source
"Mortensen’s methods often made it hard to distinguish whether the
results were photographs or not. He used traditional printmaking
techniques, such as bromoiling, and developed many of his own. He would
create composite images, scratch, scrape and draw on his prints, then
apply a texture that made them look like etchings, thereby disguising
his manipulations. Consequently, every print was unique. Ultimately,
Mortensen’s aim was to create something that, for all intents and
purposes, appeared to be a photograph, yet portrayed scenes so fantastic
they caused wonder and astonishment in the viewer." -
quote source
Several masks seen in Mortensen's photographs were used in the Todd Browning directed silent film "West of Zanzibar" starring Lon Chaney from 1928. The film can be viewed in its entirety at
archive.org

Portrait of Fay Wray, 1921-22
"In the 1920s, Mortensen was living in Utah when he met Fay and her
older sister, Willow. When the girls moved to Los Angeles, he
accompanied them as Fay’s chaperon and Willow’s fiance. However, on the
train ride to Califo
rnia, he
spoke of his romantic feelings toward Fay, saying he was more interested
in her than Willow. Fay later admitted, ” I felt odd, as old as a
fourteen-year-old could feel. I felt happy that he admired me; I felt
guilty that he did. The train rushed on and my face felt hot. I stared
at the pattern in the combing jacket. To hear that he had not cared for
my sister, as my mother had said, made me feel awful, even though I
liked hearing what he had to say about me. I was feeling an appreciation
of myself beyond what I had ever felt; at the same time, it was
terribly uncomfortable to feel so old.”
While in Hollywood,
Mortensen rented the Wetzel studio on a Sunday, where he spent a couple
of hours taking photos of Fay in various dresses. On a separate
occasion, he took her to the beach where he shot risque photos of her
barely wearing any clothing at all.
As one might expect,
Mortensen and Willow’s “relationship” didn’t last. Fay’s mother, Elvina,
became convinced that Mortensen had sexually abused Fay. After settling
in Los Angeles, Elvina demanded to see all of the glass plates he had
taken of her daughter. Mortensen complied and Elvina began shattering
all of them (except this one which was somehow overlooked). Years later,
Faye claimed that there was no sexual abuse at all, though she admitted
that on one occasion, he “ran his hand over my dress, feeling the shape
of my breasts.”" - quote and image taken from the Bizarre Los Angeles tumblr.
A documentary on Mortensen titled "Monsters and Madonnas" was shared by Stephen Romano on Vimeo below..
monstersandmadonnas from
stephen romano on
Vimeo.
Stephen Romano has collected and curated a fantastic collection of William Mortensen's works in recent years, you can find them at
www.whmortensen.com
I end this post with a quote from Stephen Romano that perfectly summarizes the artist..
"
Mortensen was a master, master at lighting, master at printing, master at posing the model. Most of all he was a visionary who understood that the camera has it's limits, and not to be enslaved by those limits but rather to invent one's own technique to perpetuate the artist's vision."
Feral House recently published a book on William Mortensen titled "AMERICAN GROTESQUE The Life and Art of William Mortensen" available directly from Feral House here.
You can also find a book on William Mortensen titled "The Command To Look, A Master Photographer’s Method for Controlling the Human Gaze" from Feral House.