Life, 1894-02-08 · page 8 of 16
Life — February 8, 1894 — page 8: what you’re looking at
What you’re looking at
# Analysis This is a single-panel illustration signed by Lentendres showing a woman in an elegant dress with a long train, viewed from behind, standing at a doorway. She appears to be greeting or observing someone inside a mirror or room beyond the door—another figure with an exaggerated, somewhat grotesque expression is visible. The satire likely comments on **vanity, appearance, or self-perception**—a common theme in early 20th-century Life magazine. The contrast between the woman's fashionable exterior and the distorted or unflattering reflection/figure suggests mockery of either feminine preoccupation with beauty, deceptive appearances, or perhaps marital/romantic disillusionment. Without additional context or captions visible, the specific target remains somewhat unclear, though the illustration exemplifies Life's typical satirical approach to society and human nature.
📄 Transcribed text from this page (OCR, searchable)
Machine-transcribed from the original scan — historical spelling and the odd misread are preserved.
LENTEMINFES 1£ iS 4 QI iS iS x & iS