Ray Batchelor writes: “This is not an old still image, but a screenshot I made from the short clip on YouTube of the 1930 film recording. It shows De Navas (left) and Gardel (right) chatting to each other just before Gradel sings one of de Navas\’ songs, \"El Carretero\" recoded
Ray Batchelor writes: ” I offer this poster because in the film, there is short sequence – the film is set in the past, the 1900s, perhaps – which shows an ‘organito’ (street organ) being played in the street, and two men then dancing, or practicing steps with each other
Gonzalo Collazo writes: “Immigrants dancing on the deck of the ship on the trip to Buenos Aires 1920 ” What do you belive the copyright status of this image to be? Gonzalo Collazo believes: “The image is out of copyright.” The image url: http://www.taringa.net/posts/imagenes/17927522/Grandes-fotos-historicas-Argentinas.html
Gonzalo Collazo writes: “Antonio Perea 1950s with two friends practising tango. 1950s Antonio Perea con dos amigos practicando tango.” 27 March 2020, Ray Batchelor adds: the Google translation of the French caption to the photo: “Antonio Perea (au centre) et des amis pratiquent le tango au coin d’une rue du
Gonzalo Collazo writes: “I found two sources, the second is: Baile en un barrio popular de Buenos Aires, ca. 1935. AGN http://www.revistatodavia.com.ar/todavia16/notas/pujol/txtpujol.html ” What do you belive the copyright status of this image to be? Gonzalo Collazo believes: “The image is out of copyright.” The image url: http://migueldiel.pagesperso-orange.fr/eltango.htm
Gonzalo Collazo writes: “I couldn’t find the source where I took the photo for the first time, which it said “1926 Instantánea. Hombres caminando mientras dan pasos de baile. Tango de arrabal mistongo”, “1926 Snapshot. Men walking while giving dance steps. Tango at poor suburbs”; but I found two others.
Ray Batchelor re-edited this on 22 November 2018: “This comes originally from the Archivo General de la Nación Argentina. It was posted on its Facebook page but, sadly, without an inventory number. The same image and caption are given on the website of Miguel Diel, based in Orange in France. The
Ray Batchelor revised this on 23 November 2018: This detail of the magazine page (the text is chopped off) was downloaded in 2016 from the website of Tangology 101, where this caption accompanies it: “1903 – El Tango Criollo In 1903, the Buenos Aires publication Caras y Caretas published the
Ray Batchelor writes [and adds, 15 01 2020 – see below]: “Downloaded from Wikimedia Commons. Beyond believing what most sources indicate – that these are men, that they are dancing (or practicing, or posing) with each other in a street in Buenos Aires at some time in the 20th century,