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Tyler Shields - Butterfly Eyes, Photography 2017, Printed After
By Tyler Shields
Located in Greenwich, CT
Series: Provocateur Chromogenic Print on Kodak Endura Luster Paper All available sizes and editions: 22.5" x 30" 30" x 40" 45" x 60" 56" x 72" 63" x 84" Editions of 3 + 2 Artist Proo...
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21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Color Photography

Materials

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Tyler Shields - Commander and Chief, Photography 2020, Printed After
By Tyler Shields
Located in Greenwich, CT
Series: Historical Fiction Chromogenic Print on Kodak Endura Luster Paper All available sizes and editions: 22.5" x 30" 30" x 40" 45" x 60" 56" x 72" 63" x 84" Editions of 3 + 2 Arti...
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21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Color Photography

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Random Impression, Berlin Photograph 2016 by Claudia Fauth
By Claudia Fauth
Located in Berlin, DE
Photograph, 2016. Ultra HD, printed on Fuji Crystal DP I II. 1 of 30 prints behind acrylic glass. Signed, titled, dated and numbered on the back. Framed. It comes directly from the studio of the artist. Height: 37.32 in ( 94,8 cm ), Width: 28.74 in ( 73 cm ), Depth: 0.98 in ( 2,5 cm ) Claudia Fauth a true Berlin artist who is celebrating the spirit of a traveler. She has created something consistently unique in style and appreciation. She is an award winning artist, born in Berlin, Germany 1962. She is known for her abstract works, and installations. Her works are in public collections in Austria, Belgium, Canada, England, Germany, Italy, France, Japan, Mexico, Switzerland, Poland, Spain and the US. Selection of exhibitions: ° 2014 Von der Avantgarde zur Moderne, Berlin The Original Miami Beach Antique Show, Miami ° 2015 Biennale, Venice Expansion und Konzentration, Berlin It‘s Liquid international art show, Venice Future Memories - The Contemporary Sence Of Awarness, Venice ° 2016 Ein Sommertreffen, Berlin Berliner Liste, Berlin Galerie Zandi, Berlin ART EXPLOSION, Berlin ° 2017 Enter Art Foundation, Berlin Art Up ! Lille Friends space - Freunde von Freunden, Berlin DAILY RUSH, MOCAD, Detroit ° 2018 Art Collectors Are Talking About It, Berlin Random Impression, Berlin Women perspectives, Museum Barberini, Potsdam ° 2019 SILENT PERCEPTIONS, Kunsthalle Hamburg Von Improvisation zur Konstruktion, Berlin Amsterdam International Art Fair Platonicsolids in space, 'Labor C', ETH Zurich ° 2020 -2021 Combray Gallery...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Portrait Photography

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Atoms and Pearls, #2237, Homage to Horst P. Horst collage color photograph
By Natasha Zupan
Located in Miami Beach, FL
Atoms and Pearls, #2237 by Natasha Zupan Enlarged photographic print of the original photo collage by the artist 60 in. H x 53.5 in. W Edition of 5 2018 _____________________________...
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Rare Vintage Color C Print Photograph African Maasai Warrior Chromogenic Photo
By Carol Beckwith
Located in Surfside, FL
Carol Beckwith, (American, b. 1945), Maasai Portrait Chromogenic print on paper, from Beckwith's book "Maasai" (1980), Hand signed in pencil, dated and titled with name of sitter in margins, 19" x 16" Sheet. Carol Beckwith (1945-) is an American photographer, author, and artist known for her photojournalism documenting the indigenous tribal cultures of Africa, most notably in partnership with the Australian photographer Angela Fisher. Between them, Beckwith and Fisher have published 14 books, and have had their photos appear in National Geographic, Natural History, African Arts, The Observer Magazine, Time, Life, Vogue, Marie Claire and Elle. They continue to exhibit and lecture at galleries and museums worldwide, including The American Museum of Natural History and The Explorers Club in New York City, The Smithsonian Institution in Washington, DC, and the Royal Geographical Society in London. They have also collaborated on four films about African traditions. Together they have received numerous accolades, including the United Nations Award for Excellence, the Royal Geographical Society's Cherry Kearton Medal, two Anisfield-Wolf Book Awards, The Explorers Club Lowell Thomas Award, and the WINGS WorldQuest Lifetime Achievement Award. Carol Beckwith was born in Boston, Massachusetts, where she went on to attend both the School of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston and Goucher College in Maryland. After obtaining her degree in Painting and Photography she won a traveling fellowship from the Boston Museum, which let her travel to other countries for the first time. She spent seven months in Japan, living in a Zen temple and studying calligraphy painting. She continued to travel through Southeast Asia and New Guinea, where she witnessed a "sing-sing", a gathering of 90,000 Highland warriors, in Mount Hagen, and paddled up Chambri Lakes in a canoe, an experience she called "one of the most wonderful, and in a way formative, experiences in my life." Her first trip to Africa was in 1973, when she was invited to spend Christmas with a friend in Kenya. Beckwith bought a 45-day roundtrip ticket and ended up staying eight months. There she encountered the Maasai people who invited her to witness a female circumcision ceremony. Astonished by the ritual, she then determined to spend more time with the Maasai. Beckwith studied photography in college but had initially intended to become a painter. It was during her travels through New Guinea that she realized the advantages of photography, saying that "there was such a vast amount of exciting material that I began to photograph instead, approaching photography with the eye of a painter in terms of light, color, composition. I wanted the images to be multi layered experiences in a way that a painting is. . . [Photography] seemed to be a more suitable medium for the pace of travel." Beckwith's first major collaboration was with Tepilit Ole Saitoti, an anthropologist and former Maasai warrior...
Category

1970s Contemporary Color Photography

Materials

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Rare Vintage Color C Print Photograph African Maasai Warrior Chromogenic Photo
By Carol Beckwith
Located in Surfside, FL
Carol Beckwith, (American, b. 1945), Maasai Portrait Chromogenic print on paper, from Beckwith's book "Maasai" (1980), Hand signed in pencil, dated and titled with name of sitter in margins, 19" x 16" Sheet. Carol Beckwith (1945-) is an American photographer, author, and artist known for her photojournalism documenting the indigenous tribal cultures of Africa, most notably in partnership with the Australian photographer Angela Fisher. Between them, Beckwith and Fisher have published 14 books, and have had their photos appear in National Geographic, Natural History, African Arts, The Observer Magazine, Time, Life, Vogue, Marie Claire and Elle. They continue to exhibit and lecture at galleries and museums worldwide, including The American Museum of Natural History and The Explorers Club in New York City, The Smithsonian Institution in Washington, DC, and the Royal Geographical Society in London. They have also collaborated on four films about African traditions. Together they have received numerous accolades, including the United Nations Award for Excellence, the Royal Geographical Society's Cherry Kearton Medal, two Anisfield-Wolf Book Awards, The Explorers Club Lowell Thomas Award, and the WINGS WorldQuest Lifetime Achievement Award. Carol Beckwith was born in Boston, Massachusetts, where she went on to attend both the School of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston and Goucher College in Maryland. After obtaining her degree in Painting and Photography she won a traveling fellowship from the Boston Museum, which let her travel to other countries for the first time. She spent seven months in Japan, living in a Zen temple and studying calligraphy painting. She continued to travel through Southeast Asia and New Guinea, where she witnessed a "sing-sing", a gathering of 90,000 Highland warriors, in Mount Hagen, and paddled up Chambri Lakes in a canoe, an experience she called "one of the most wonderful, and in a way formative, experiences in my life." Her first trip to Africa was in 1973, when she was invited to spend Christmas with a friend in Kenya. Beckwith bought a 45-day roundtrip ticket and ended up staying eight months. There she encountered the Maasai people who invited her to witness a female circumcision ceremony. Astonished by the ritual, she then determined to spend more time with the Maasai. Beckwith studied photography in college but had initially intended to become a painter. It was during her travels through New Guinea that she realized the advantages of photography, saying that "there was such a vast amount of exciting material that I began to photograph instead, approaching photography with the eye of a painter in terms of light, color, composition. I wanted the images to be multi layered experiences in a way that a painting is. . . [Photography] seemed to be a more suitable medium for the pace of travel." Beckwith's first major collaboration was with Tepilit Ole Saitoti, an anthropologist and former Maasai warrior...
Category

1970s Contemporary Color Photography

Materials

C Print, Photographic Paper

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