Born
in Germany to a family of scholars, Genthe was a recent Ph.D. in classical
philology when he came to the United States in 1895 to work for two years as a
tutor. On his days off, he walked the streets of Chinatown in San Francisco,
where he began to photograph. After publishing some of these images in local
magazines, Genthe decided to open his own studio, specializing in portraits of
prominent locals and visiting celebrities. Genthe’s work and studio were
destroyed in the 1906 San Francisco earthquake and resulting fire–save for the
Chinatown images that had been stored in a bank vault. He published those early
images in the 1909 book Pictures of Old Chinatown. After the fire, Genthe
re-established his studio in San Francisco and in 1908 spent six months
photographing in Japan. In 1911 he moved to New York, where he continued to
work as a successful portrait and pioneering dance photographer. With New York
as his new home base, Genthe also traveled and photographed throughout Europe
and the United States
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