February 20, 1932: Donald Angus, Prentiss Taylor, and Carl Van Vechten. February 22, 1932: Artwork, Antonio Salemme, Ethel Waters, 1928, sculpture. Still lifes including African American male busts, each holding cigarette and matches, and an African American male head cast iron coin bank; an African drum; a Porcelain cat and two porcelain birds, and a porcelain figure of Pan and ivy plant.
October 10, 1956: Margaret Bonds as well as Earle Hyman as Dunois, The Bastard of Orleans, in Saint Joan, play by George Bernard Shaw. Roll included images of Karel Weiss, October 10, 1956. Negatives not extant except for a single half-negative.
March 5, 1932: Prentiss Taylor at Central Park, Manhattan, New York City, and a cityscape from the Carl Van Vechten apartment on the seventh floor at 150 West 55th Street, New York City. Sites in Harlem, New York City, including men in front of Connie's Inn at 2221 Seventh Avenue at 131st Street, the funeral home of Walton Fredericks at 26 West 135th Street, the home of an "ofay" (derogatory for a white person) at Fifth Avenue and West 130th Street, a sign for "hot pig feet," and a horse drawn coal wagon, African American boys sitting on a stoop on Fifth Avenue, and rabbits and pots at a market.
September 9, 1939: Philadelphia, Pennsylvania as well as copy photographs of artwork owned by Mark Lutz including The Happy Farmer, undated, painting by Bruce Crane, and Winter in Vermont, circa 1935, painting by Hazel Knapp, and others. ALso interior views of Lutz's home. September 13, 1939: New York World's Fair, Flushing Meadows-Corona Park, New York City.
May 3, 1932: Romney Brent as well as portraits in front of the Museum of Modern Art, New York City, including Joella Synara Haweis Levy Bayer, Charles Demuth, Lincoln Kirstein, and Georgia O'Keeffe.
May 8, 1932: Mark Lutz and Annapolis, Maryland, including a statue of Johann De Kalb sculpted by Ephraim Keyser, the Maryland State House, and the United States Naval Academy. May 15, 1932: Fania Marinoff and Catholic Boys Brigade Parade commemorating the bicentennial of George Washington on Fifth Avenue in New York City; these negatives filed as Roll number M and refiled by Carl Van Vechten as Roll number L.