Skip to main content
Want more images or videos?
Request additional images or videos from the seller
1 of 2

Unknown
San Marco Church, Venice - Vintage Photograph - Early 20th Century

Early 20th Century

About the Item

San Marco Church, Venice, is a vintage photograph taken in the San Marco church in Venice, realized by Osvaldo Böhm. Signed on the plate with the title on the lower. with the stamp of the artist on the rear. Very Good conditions.
  • Creation Year:
    Early 20th Century
  • Dimensions:
    Height: 10.04 in (25.5 cm)Width: 7.88 in (20 cm)Depth: 0.04 in (1 mm)
  • Medium:
  • Movement & Style:
  • Period:
  • Framing:
    Framing Options Available
  • Condition:
    Insurance may be requested by customers as additional service, contact us for more information.
  • Gallery Location:
    Roma, IT
  • Reference Number:
    Seller: T-1209311stDibs: LU65038374152
More From This SellerView All
  • John Fitzgerald Kennedy at the meeting of the UN - Vintage Photo - 1960s
    Located in Roma, IT
    John Fitzgerald Kennedy at the meeting of the UN is a b/w photograph picturing President Kennedy at the United Nations Conference during the 1960s. Transworld Press. Print made on p...
    Category

    1960s Modern Black and White Photography

    Materials

    Photographic Paper

  • Venice San Marco Church, Vintage Photo Detail by O. Böhm - Early 20th Century
    Located in Roma, IT
    Venice San Marco Church, Vintage Photo Detail, Photograph is an original black and white photograph taken in the San Marco church in Venice, realized by Osvaldo Böhm. Titled on the l...
    Category

    Early 20th Century Modern Figurative Photography

    Materials

    Photographic Paper

  • Vintage Photo Detail of St Mark's Cathedral by Osvaldo Bohm - Early 20th Century
    Located in Roma, IT
    Vintage Photo Detail of St Mark's Cathedral - Venice is a b/w photographic print on Cardboard. The artwork represents part of the Cathedral of s.Marco of Venice. The stamp Osvaldo ...
    Category

    Early 20th Century Modern Black and White Photography

    Materials

    Photographic Paper

  • Tug of War - Vintage B/W photo - 1930s
    Located in Roma, IT
    Tug of war is an original black and white photograph realized by an Anonymous photographer. With the stamp of "Combattimento" on the rear, and Hand-notes on the rear. Good conditions...
    Category

    1930s Modern Black and White Photography

    Materials

    Photographic Paper

  • External view of the FOS fibre optic plant - Vintage B/W photo - 1980s
    Located in Roma, IT
    External view of the FOS fibre optic plant is " Sud S.P.A. di Battipaglia" an original photograph realized by an Anonymous photographer. Typed notes on th...
    Category

    1980s Modern Black and White Photography

    Materials

    Photographic Paper

  • Swimmer Girls - Vintage B/W photo - 1930s
    Located in Roma, IT
    Swimmer Girls in lines of Practice is an original black and white photograph realized by an Anonymous photographer in 1930s. With the stamp of "Colonia Prof. Artisti Varazze" on the ...
    Category

    1930s Modern Black and White Photography

    Materials

    Photographic Paper

You May Also Like
  • Tyrfing
    Located in New York, NY
    Black and white photography.
    Category

    2010s Modern Black and White Photography

    Materials

    Photographic Film, Archival Ink, Archival Paper, Photographic Paper, Pho...

  • Vintage Silver Gelatin Print Photo Israel Museum Sculpture Jerusalem Photograph
    Located in Surfside, FL
    Susan Hacker -Israel Museum, Sculpture Garden, Jerusalem, Israel, 1979 Silver Gelatin black/white photograph, printed in 1983, hand signed, titled (Jerusalem) and noted. There is no edition size stated Location (Jerusalem), shoot date (1979) and photo print date (1983) and signature in pencil on the bottom back of the photograph. This is of the sculpture Woman skipping rope by Luciano Minguzzi located in the Isamu Noguchi designed sculpture garden at the Israel Museum Image size: 22 x 33 cm Paper size: 28 x 35.5 cm Susan Hacker (1949) is an American photographer and author. She developed and expanded the photography department at Webster University in St. Louis. Her work is in the possession of at least 25 major museums and libraries around the world. There are also many books and publications about her. Has always experimented with many photographic techniques. Hacker is recognized as an innovator of the modern photography art. Susan Hacker Stang (born Susan Hacker, October 19, 1949) is an American photographer, author, and educator. Stang served on the faculty of communications at Webster University in St. Louis from 1974 through 2015 and now holds the title Professor Emeritus. She helped found and build the respected photography program there, heading it for most of her tenure at the university. Her work has been collected by more than 25 major museums and libraries around the world and appears in half a dozen books and numerous magazines. Much of her photography involves the innovative use of alternative cameras, formats, techniques, and media, as evidenced by her two books Encountering Florence (featuring subtly surreal black and white prints of the Italian city using 8 x 10 Polaroid emulsion transfers) and Kodachrome – End of the Run: Photographs from the Final Batches (which chronicles a six-month university photography project in which students and staff would shoot more than 100 roles of rare Kodachrome film for processing on the last day of operations by the world's last remaining Kodachrome processing lab.) In 2016, she published a book of photographs, reAPPEARANCES, which is a sequence of fifty-two photographs made with a digital toy camera (the JOCO VX5). The volume purports to take the viewer on a visual journey through the uncanny coherence of the look of the world, according to Stang's introductory essay. Stang majored in photography at the Rhode Island School of Design, where she earned both a BFA (1971) and MFA (1974), and studied under photographers Harry Callahan and Aaron Siskind. In 1971 she moved to London where she worked as a photographer for the British fashion magazine NOVA (published 1965–1975). She joined the faculty of Webster University in St. Louis in 1974, where she helped found and build the photographic studies program in the School of Communications. In Jerusalem in 1979 she was Artist-In-Residence at the Bezalel Academy of Arts and Design. In recent years, in addition to her work as head of the Webster University photography program and professor of communications, she has taught summer photography workshops in Florence, Italy, both at the Santa Reparata International School of Art (SRISA) and The Darkroom. She taught at Webster for 41 years and earned the Kemper Award for Excellence in Teaching. Stang's photography characteristically employs alternative cameras (such as the Olympus Pen-FT half-frame camera, the Kodak Brownie, and the Holga), or alternative formats (such as Polaroid emulsion transfers) and techniques. Her book of Polaroid emulsion transfers, Encountering Florence was published simultaneously in the U.S. and in Italy (under the title Firenze un Incontro) in 2007. Stang's use of the emulsion transfer process involves transferring the fragile, fabric-like emulsion layer of the photograph (bearing the image) to another surface, subtly transforming the original image in a variety of ways. The results were described in Photo Review as giving Stang's portraits of Florence's buildings, streets, statuary, and gardens "a delicate, draping quality ... reminiscent of the fabrics draped on the ancient statues within the images". An Italian reviewer observed that the photographic process presents "a city not previously seen and perhaps a little disquieting". The book's bi-lingual text in English and Italian was selected and edited by Stang and by Andrea Burzi and Susanna Sarti, both of Florence, to present accompanying word-portraits from authors in their own encounters with the city. A portfolio of Stang's work for the book is held by the Rare Books Collection of the Biblioteca Nazionale Centrale Firenze. In 2010–11, Stang led the Webster University photography program in a six-month-long focus on the color reproduction qualities of Kodachrome film (long revered by professional and amateur photographer for its true, lush color rendition qualities) to mark the permanent discontinuing of the film's production by Kodak. The project ultimately turned into a book documenting the final demise of the medium, and the last day of Kodachrome production anywhere in the world (at Dwayne's Photo in Parsons, Kansas, on January 18, 2011). The last days of processing were covered by The New York Times, National Geographic, and network television. Edited by Stang and fellow photographer Bill Barrett, Kodachrome: End of the Run presents a selection of four-score Kodachrome images shot on more than 100 roles of the film by Webster University students, faculty, and staff over a five-month period and processed by Dwayne's in the final hours as the last processing chemicals ran out. The book includes essays by Stang, Time Magazine worldwide pictures editor Arnold Drapkin, and Dwayne's Photo vice president Grant...
    Category

    1970s American Modern Black and White Photography

    Materials

    Silver Gelatin, Photographic Paper

  • Man Walking Past Parking Lot - Classic car, Cadillac, Street photography
    By Michael Ormerod
    Located in Brighton, GB
    Edition of 10. Black & White print on Hahnemuehle Paper. The body of work, States of America, is the photographic legacy of one of the UK’s leading photographic talents whose untimely death in 1991 ended prematurely the highly promising career of a distinctive and powerful photographic voice. Michael Ormerod was born in Cheshire in 1947. He lived in Newcastle, but spent many years travelling America. Fascinated by the American image, and following in the footsteps of Robert Frank, Ormerod took to the American West to find a washed out dream of capitalism. His images capture a strange juxtaposition of an American beauty tainted by a hidden sense of menace and corruption. The photographs are understated, but show an unseen America, where the industrial heartland is decaying, highways stand empty and towns are deserted. The subjects of Ormerod’s work are the disenfranchised. A teenager cycles through her neighbourhood wearing a Halloween-style hockey mask, a Native American man stands in a graveyard, their expressions are unreadable. The work subverts traditional American icons. A white picket fence is staved in, a huge billboard for Miss Teen Dakota USA stands next to an empty highway. Inverting the famous Hollywood sign, Ormerod photographs a Texaco sign...
    Category

    1980s Modern Black and White Photography

    Materials

    Black and White, Photographic Paper

  • Tour De France End - Getty Archive, 20th Century Photography, Sports
    Located in Brighton, GB
    Taken from the world’s largest photographic archive, (Hulton Archive and Getty Images), the Getty Images Gallery collection features an extraordinary time capsule of the last century...
    Category

    20th Century Modern Black and White Photography

    Materials

    Photographic Paper, Black and White

  • Signed limited edition nude photography, Contemporary black white - Sandrine
    By Ian Sanderson
    Located in Barcelona, Barcelona
    Sandrine 2 - Signed limited edition archival pigment print - Edition of 5 Naked woman from behind at a window of an old flat in Brittany, France. Sensual view of her swaying hips ...
    Category

    1990s Modern Black and White Photography

    Materials

    Photographic Film, Archival Paper, Photographic Paper, Black and White, ...

  • Phillipe Halsman Portrait Photography Lauren Bacall Black and White Framed 1944
    By Philippe Halsman
    Located in Buffalo, NY
    The work offered for sale here is an original vintage silver gelatin print hand created by Halsman in 1944 and exhibited at the International Center for Photography. Philippe Halsman was at one point considered the best photo-portraitist in France. He had an incessant interest in faces: “Every face I see seems to hide—and sometimes fleetingly reveal—the mystery of another human being.” Halsman’s photographs of politicians, celebrities, and intellectuals were featured widely in magazines like LIFE and Vogue. His more famous subjects included the likes of Marc Chagall, Le Corbusier, Audrey Hepburn, and Albert Einstein. He also had a 37-year collaboration with Salvador Dalí, which resulted in several famous surrealist series including the “Dalí’s Mustache” portraits...
    Category

    1940s Modern Figurative Photography

    Materials

    Silver Gelatin, Photographic Paper, Wood

Recently Viewed

View All