Skip to main content
Want more images or videos?
Request additional images or videos from the seller
1 of 9

Rebecca Skinner
"Wheel", abandoned, silk mill, black and white, industrial, vintage, photograph

2016

$500
£382.28
€440.31
CA$700.65
A$782.21
CHF 409.87
MX$9,575.06
NOK 5,205.33
SEK 4,907.96
DKK 3,286.04

About the Item

Rebecca Skinner’s “Wheel” was photographed at an abandoned silk mill and is part of a series documenting the loss of industry in America. The 12 x 18 inch black and white photo with satin finish is infused directly into metal making it waterproof and easy to clean. This frameless black and white metal print is wired and ready to hang. The artist’s signature and edition number is located on the back. With breathtaking depth and amazing detail “Wheel” makes an excellent addition to your home or office. Edition 1 of 5.  This image is also available upon request as an acid-free, archival, paper print. Traditional prints are done on Hahnemuhle Photo Rag Baryta Paper featuring a 100% cotton base with a very finely textured gloss surface finish. Abandoned buildings serve as the focus of Boston-based Rebecca Skinner’s most recent series of photographs. Skinner studied at the Rhode Island School of Design, RI. Artscope, BostonVoyager and Upworthy are just a few publications that have featured her widely shown work. Skinner is represented by Fountain Street Gallery in Boston, MA.
  • Creator:
    Rebecca Skinner (1974, American)
  • Creation Year:
    2016
  • Dimensions:
    Height: 12 in (30.48 cm)Width: 18 in (45.72 cm)Depth: 0.5 in (1.27 cm)
  • Medium:
  • Movement & Style:
  • Period:
  • Condition:
  • Gallery Location:
    Natick, MA
  • Reference Number:
    Seller: Skinner_Wheel1stDibs: LU50037757772

More From This Seller

View All
"Wheels", black and white, abandoned, silk mill, industrial, vintage, photograph
By Rebecca Skinner
Located in Natick, MA
Rebecca Skinner’s “Wheels” was photographed at an abandoned silk mill and is part of a series documenting the loss of industry in America. The 12 x 18 black and white photo with sati...
Category

2010s Contemporary Black and White Photography

Materials

Metal

"Thread", Contemporary, Black, White, Abandoned, Industrial, Vintage, Photograph
By Rebecca Skinner
Located in Natick, MA
Rebecca Skinner’s “Thread” was photographed at an abandoned silk mill and is part of a series documenting the loss of industry in America. The 18 x 12 inch black and white photo with...
Category

2010s Contemporary Black and White Photography

Materials

Metal

"Scale", industrial, black and white, abandoned, silk mill, vintage, photograph
By Rebecca Skinner
Located in Natick, MA
Rebecca Skinner’s “Scale” was photographed at an abandoned silk mill and is part of a series documenting the loss of industry in America. The 18 x 12 inch black and white photo with ...
Category

2010s Contemporary Black and White Photography

Materials

Metal

"Collection #3", contemporary, black, white, abandoned, industrial, photograph
By Rebecca Skinner
Located in Natick, MA
Rebecca Skinner’s “Collection #3” was photographed at an abandoned silk mill and is part of a series documenting the loss of industry in America. The 12 x 18 inch photo with satin fi...
Category

2010s Contemporary Black and White Photography

Materials

Metal

"Spools #2", contemporary, black, white, silk mill, industrial, photograph
By Rebecca Skinner
Located in Natick, MA
Rebecca Skinner’s “Spool #2” is a black and white photo taken at an abandoned silk mill and is part of a series documenting the loss of industry in America. The 12 x 18 inch photo wi...
Category

2010s Contemporary Black and White Photography

Materials

Metal

"Rest", contemporary, black, white, silk mill, industrial, chair, photograph
By Rebecca Skinner
Located in Natick, MA
Rebecca Skinner’s “Rest” was photographed at an abandoned silk mill and is part of a series documenting the loss of industry in America. The 18 x 12 inch black and white photo is of ...
Category

2010s Contemporary Black and White Photography

Materials

Metal

You May Also Like

Wagon Wheel- Various sizes and prices are available upon request
By Greg Lotus
Located in New York, NY
Fashion photograph. Other sizes available. About the Artist: Greg Lotus is an American fashion photographer based between Miami and New York. His work can be found regularly in the pages of Italian Vogue, Vanity Fair, GQ, L'Uomo Vogue...
Category

2010s Contemporary Black and White Photography

Materials

Archival Pigment

Past Furnace, Photograph, Archival Ink Jet
By John Flatz
Located in Yardley, PA
"Misdirection" is a perfect example of Hunter's highly fluid, expressionistic style -- which so often results in arresting images with a sense of depth and sculptural form. Black and...
Category

2010s Abstract Black and White Photography

Materials

Acrylic

French Factory Industrial Wheel
Located in Chapel Hill, NC
A monumental Industrial Wheel from a French factory. An incredible architectural statement piece that can simply be viewed or used as an intriguing display for interesting objects an...
Category

Antique Mid-19th Century French Victorian Architectural Elements

Materials

Metal

French Factory Industrial Wheel
$1,750 Sale Price
20% Off
Industrial Steel Mill Black and White Photograph
Located in San Francisco, CA
One of a kind, never published, black and white photograph of an Industrial steel mill scene, unsigned. Professionally matted and framed, American, early to...
Category

Mid-20th Century American Mid-Century Modern Photography

Materials

Paper

Architectural Industrial Black and White Photograph
Located in San Francisco, CA
One of a kind, never published, black and white photo of Industrial architectural construction site scaffolding, unsigned. Professionally matted and framed, American, early to mid-20...
Category

Mid-20th Century American Mid-Century Modern Photography

Materials

Paper

"Drive Chain", 2007
By Ian Gittler
Located in Hudson, NY
Ian Gittler’s Motor Art series-photographs of century-old engine parts, gears, sparkplugs, and brand tags-offers respite from the digital fetishism, overexposure and one-hundred-forty-character bursts of communication that seem to define our era. Gittler is no luddite, he loves his iPhone. But these images, often obscuring the objects beyond identification, take unsentimental pleasure in elements of weight, ground, volume and permanence that are more closely associated with a bygone heyday of industrialization. These photographs are about a tangible physical experience, about moving parts. Gittler’s expert printing-his ability to see the potential in a frame and employ the techniques necessary to articulate that vision on paper-brings the work to life. There’s wit in the brand iconography and a documentary component, but Gittler resists prescribing interpretations, saying subtext isn’t the point. His use of extremely shallow depth of field, intense contrast and exploded grain is muscular and poetic. But subtext is relevant. Although Robin Rice first approached Ian Gittler about his vector-based art on photo paper, the gallerist challenged him to create a series of photographs with that kind of machismo. As a native New Yorker who was marched through the halls of MOMA as a toddler, Gittler’s inspiration-his idea of macho-has less to do with cowboys and racecar drivers than with Franz Kline brushstrokes and modernist design. For Gittler, macho means the maximum amount of black ink that can lie across a sheet of photo paper. That kind of force. He narrowed his field of view for this series-often to a centimeter or two-in order to achieve a purely visual, visceral response. Gittler titled the work Motor Art in tribute to the 1934 Museum of Modern Art exhibit, Machine Art. Upon its sixtieth anniversary, Phillip Johnson wrote of the show (and of his own essay for its original opening), “The thrust was clear: anti-handicraft, industrial methods alone satisfied our age; Platonic dreams of perfection were the ideal.” Ian Gittler photographs, draws, writes, and makes music. He has created album covers for Willie Nelson, Roy Hargrove...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Black and White Photography

Materials

Archival Paper, Pigment