Hollywood Regency
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237,660
994,723
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417,760
346,499
244,983
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113,831
100,930
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75,403
59,732
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48,274
43,772
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33,690
33,546
29,296
28,077
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19,574
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10,841
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9,294
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4,752
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3,142
2,902
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850
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433
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34
12,519
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Christy Turlington, San Francisco
By Kurt Markus
Located in New York, NY
This photograph is signed by the photographer. Please see additional editions listed below. Larger sizes may be available upon request.
Category
1990s Hollywood Regency
Materials
Silver Gelatin
Halston with models, New York
By Harry Benson
Located in New York, NY
Halston with models Alva Chinn, Chris Royer, Karen Bjornsen, Nancy North, Carla Araque, Pat Cleveland, and Shirley Ferro, New York, 1977.
Signed by the...
Category
1970s Hollywood Regency
Materials
Archival Pigment
Deborah Dixon
By Bert Stern
Located in New York, NY
Deborah Dixon, 1962
Category
1960s Hollywood Regency
Materials
Archival Pigment
Butt Bite: Sarabeth Stroller
By Ellen von Unwerth
Located in New York, NY
All editions signed by the photographer.
Category
1990s Hollywood Regency
Giorgio Armani, Without A Face
By Erik Madigan Heck
Located in New York, NY
Signed by the photographer
Category
2010s Hollywood Regency
Materials
C Print
Elton John: Egg on His Face
By David LaChapelle
Located in New York, NY
Signed by the photographer
Please inquire about additional limited sizes and editions
Category
21st Century and Contemporary Hollywood Regency
Materials
Photographic Paper
Marilyn Monroe: From “The Last Sitting Ⓡ”
By Bert Stern
Located in New York, NY
Marilyn Monroe: From “The Last Sitting”, 1962
Category
1960s Hollywood Regency
Materials
Archival Pigment
Vicksburg, Mississippi
By Kurt Markus
Located in New York, NY
This photograph is signed by the photographer. Please see additional editions listed below. Larger sizes may be available upon request.
Category
1980s Hollywood Regency
Materials
Silver Gelatin
Twiggy, Vogue
By Bert Stern
Located in New York, NY
Twiggy, Vogue, 1967
Category
1960s Hollywood Regency
Materials
C Print
Halston and friends at Studio 54, New York
By Harry Benson
Located in New York, NY
Signed by the photographer.
Category
1970s Hollywood Regency
Materials
Archival Pigment
Club Tropicana 4
By Michael Dweck
Located in New York, NY
Havana, Cuba. All editions signed by the photographer.
Category
21st Century and Contemporary Hollywood Regency
Black Bodice, New York
By Horst P. Horst
Located in New York, NY
All editions signed by the photographer.
Category
1940s Hollywood Regency
Rooftops, VOGUE
By Bert Stern
Located in New York, NY
Rooftops, VOGUE, 1962
Category
1960s Hollywood Regency
Materials
Silver Gelatin
Princess Diana, London, British VOGUE, 1990
By Patrick Demarchelier
Located in New York, NY
Signed by the photographer on label
Category
21st Century and Contemporary Hollywood Regency
Materials
Silver Gelatin
Marilyn Monroe: From “The Last Sitting Ⓡ”
By Bert Stern
Located in New York, NY
Marilyn Monroe: From “The Last Sitting”, 1962
Category
1960s Hollywood Regency
Materials
Archival Pigment
President Kennedy and De Gaulle, Paris, 1961
By Harry Benson
Located in New York, NY
President Kennedy and De Gaulle, Paris, 1961
Category
1960s Hollywood Regency
BAM BOOM 20
By Torkil Gudnason
Located in New York, NY
Signed by the photographer
Category
2010s Hollywood Regency
Materials
Archival Pigment
Untitled
By Bert Stern
Located in New York, NY
Untitled, 1958
Category
1950s Hollywood Regency
Materials
Archival Pigment
Marilyn Monroe: From "The Last Sitting Ⓡ" (Orange Roses, wink)
By Bert Stern
Located in New York, NY
Signed by the photographer.
Category
1960s Hollywood Regency
Materials
Archival Pigment
Sir Run Run Shaw surrounded by the stars of Hong Kong cinema
By Slim Aarons
Located in New York, NY
Estate embossed
Category
1970s Hollywood Regency
Materials
Photographic Paper
Bird Cage Pout, Paris
By Melvin Sokolsky
Located in New York, NY
Gelatin Silver or Archival Pigment Print. All editions signed by the photographer.
Category
1960s Hollywood Regency
Chico Hamilton Quintet
By Bert Stern
Located in New York, NY
Chico Hamilton Quintet, 1958
Category
1950s Hollywood Regency
Materials
Archival Pigment
Odalisque
By Sheila Metzner
Located in New York, NY
This photograph is signed by the photographer and is printed using the Fresson printing process. Size varies.
Category
1980s Hollywood Regency
Materials
Color
Playground
By Robert Vickrey
Located in New York, NY
Signed (lower right): Robert Vickrey
Category
Late 20th Century American Modern Hollywood Regency
Materials
Masonite, Tempera
The Stars Rise, the Moon Bends Her Arc
By Angela Fraleigh
Located in New York, NY
Signed and dated (on verso): Angela Fraleigh 2021
Category
2010s Contemporary Hollywood Regency
Materials
Linen, Oil
Untitled [Catch Me If You Can...]
Located in New York, NY
Ink, colored marker on paper
Category
2010s Hollywood Regency
Materials
Paper, Ink, Permanent Marker
Untitled [Abstraction]
By George L.K. Morris
Located in New York, NY
Gouache on paper, 18 7/8 x 14 3/4 in.
Signed (at lower right): Morris; (with monogram, on the back): GLKM [monogram] / 1932 [sic]
Executed circa late 1940s
A passionate advocate of abstract art during the 1930s and 1940s, George L. K. Morris was active as a painter, sculptor, editor, and critic. An erudite man with an internationalist point of view, Morris
eschewed the social, political, and figural concerns that preoccupied so many artists of Depression-era America, believing that painters should focus their attention on the beauty, refinement, and simplicity of pure form instead. His goal, he said, was “to wedge the expression further and further into the confines of the canvas until every shape takes on a spatial meaning” (as quoted in Ward Jackson, “George L. K. Morris: Forty Years of Abstract Art,” Art Journal 32 [Winter 1972–73], p. 150).
Born into an affluent family in New York City, Morris was a descendent of General Lewis Morris, a
signer of the Declaration of Independence. From 1918 until 1924, he attended the Groton School in
Connecticut, studying classics and art. He continued to focus on literature and art while attending
Yale University (1924–28), an experience that prepared him well for his future activity as an artist-critic. After graduating in 1928, Morris studied at the Art Students League of New York, working
under the realist painters John Sloan and Kenneth Hayes Miller, as well as Jan Matulka, the only
modernist on the faculty. In the spring of 1929, Morris traveled to Paris with Albert E. Gallatin, a
family friend and fellow painter who introduced him to leading members of the Parisian avant-garde, including Jean Arp, Pablo Picasso, Georges Braque, Jean Hélion, and Piet Mondrian. Morris also took classes at the Académie Moderne, studying under Fernand Léger and Amédée Ozenfant, important exponents of Synthetic Cubism who influenced his aesthetic development. Indeed, after experimenting with the simplified forms of Modernism for a few years, Morris moved on to abstraction by 1934, adopting a hard-edged, geometric approach inspired by Leger’s cubist style and the biomorphic shapes of Arp and Joan Miró.
Following his return to New York in 1930, Morris built a white-walled, open-spaced studio (inspired
by that of Ozenfant, which had been designed by Le Corbusier) on the grounds of Brockhurst, his
parents’ 46-acre estate in Lenox, Massachusetts. In 1935, he married the painter and collagist Estelle “Suzy...
Category
1940s American Modern Hollywood Regency
Materials
Paper, Gouache
Still Life with Peaches
By Lilly Martin Spencer
Located in New York, NY
Lilly Martin Spencer was a professional artist for over sixty years, painting portraits, still lifes, miniatures, and genre scenes. In the 1850s to mid-1860s her genre scenes depicti...
Category
19th Century American Realist Hollywood Regency
Materials
Canvas, Oil
Passage 5
By Elizabeth Turk
Located in New York, NY
Elegant and understated, the beauty of calligraphic scripts has resonated across cultures and time. Elizabeth Turk: Written in Stone marks the change caused by technological communic...
Category
2010s Contemporary Hollywood Regency
Materials
Marble, Gold Leaf
The Air We Breathe 10
By Elizabeth Turk
Located in New York, NY
Charcoal and Getty Fire Ash on paper
Category
2010s Contemporary Hollywood Regency
Materials
Charcoal
Peek-a-Boo
By Seymour Joseph Guy
Located in New York, NY
In the latter half of the nineteenth century and into the first decade of the twentieth, New York City art aficionados could count on finding recent work of Seymour Joseph Guy hanging on the walls of the city’s major galleries. Primarily a genre artist, but also a portraitist, between 1859 and 1908 Guy showed more than seventy works at the National Academy of Design. From 1871 to 1903 he contributed over seventy times to exhibitions at the Century Club. From 1864 to 1887, he sent about forty pictures to the Brooklyn Art Association. A good number of these works were already privately owned; they served as advertisements for other pictures that were available for sale. Some pictures were shown multiple times in the same or different venues. Guy was as easy to find as his canvases were omnipresent. Though he lived at first in Brooklyn with his family and then in New Jersey, from 1863 to his death in 1910 he maintained a studio at the Artist’s Studio Building at 55 West 10th Street, a location that was, for much of that period, the center of the New York City art world.
Guy’s path to a successful career as an artist was by no means smooth or even likely. Born in Greenwich, England, he was orphaned at the age of nine. His early interest in art was discouraged by his legal guardian, who wanted a more settled trade for the young man. Only after the guardian also died was Guy free to pursue his intention of becoming an artist. The details of Guy’s early training in art are unclear. His first teacher is believed to have been Thomas Buttersworth...
Category
19th Century American Realist Hollywood Regency
Materials
Canvas, Oil
Yours Truly
By Arthur Dove
Located in New York, NY
Yours Truly is a work of 1927, a fertile year for Dove, capped by a solo exhibit at Stieglitz’s “The Intimate Gallery,” which included this picture. From 1924 through 1930, Dove produced a notable series of collages, interspersed with drawings, pastels, and oil paintings on a variety of supports. In 1927, the same year that Dove painted Yours Truly, he found inspiration in American popular music, often referring in his titles to works by George Gershwin and Irving Berlin. Yours Truly was the title of a Broadway musical that opened at the Shubert Theater on January 25, 1927. Gene Buck, the producer, had collaborated with Raymond Hubbell, the composer, on the Ziegfield Follies shows of 1923, 1924, and 1925. The production, which contained the title song, “Yours Truly,” ran for 127 performances, closing on May 14, 1927. Given the context of Dove paintings...
Category
1920s American Modern Hollywood Regency
Materials
Oil, Canvas
View of Gravesend Bay
Located in New York, NY
Thomas Satterwhite Noble, who studied in France with Thomas Couture for three years, adapted his master’s genre style to American subjects. Born on his parents’ plantation in Kentucky in 1835, Noble was the son of a wealthy rope manufacturer. His early upbringing in Lexington, the center of that state’s slave trade in the antebellum South...
Category
Early 20th Century American Realist Hollywood Regency
Materials
Canvas, Oil
Untitled
By Charles Houghton Howard
Located in New York, NY
Charles Houghton Howard was born in Montclair, New Jersey, the third of five children in a cultured and educated family with roots going back to the Massachusetts Bay colony. His fat...
Category
20th Century American Modern Hollywood Regency
Materials
Paper, Watercolor, Gouache, Graphite
Still Life with Green Cabbages
By Amy Weiskopf
Located in New York, NY
Signed (at lower right: A. Weiskopf
Category
2010s Hollywood Regency
Materials
Linen, Oil
Offering: Apples & Wheat
By David Ligare
Located in New York, NY
David Ligare (b. 1945)
Contemporary American Painter
'Offering: Apples & Wheat,' 2023
Oil on canvas, 20 x 24 in.
Signed (at lower right): L; (on back): D. Ligare/ 2023.
Category
21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Hollywood Regency
Materials
Canvas, Oil
John F. Kennedy International Airport
By Marc Trujillo
Located in New York, NY
Every detail in Trujillo’s fast-paced, consumer-driven environments is the result of slow painting, of careful and keen observation, both analytic and synthetic. Trujillo depicts his...
Category
2010s Contemporary Hollywood Regency
Materials
Oil, Panel
Carolina Parakeet
By Elizabeth Turk
Located in New York, NY
Anodized aluminum (black)
Category
2010s Contemporary Hollywood Regency
Materials
Metal
Bilboquet
By Gregory Amenoff
Located in New York, NY
Gregory Amenoff’s work has been the subject of numerous solo and group exhibitions throughout the country, including the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; Cleveland Museum of...
Category
20th Century Abstract Hollywood Regency
Materials
Canvas, Oil
The Writer
By Edmund Quincy
Located in New York, NY
Signed (lower right): Quincy
Category
20th Century American Realist Hollywood Regency
Materials
Canvas, Oil
Script: Column 9
By Elizabeth Turk
Located in New York, NY
Born in Pasadena and raised in Orange County, Elizabeth Turk earned her M.F.A. at the Rinehart School of Sculpture, Maryland Institute College of Art in Baltimore.
In Turk’s work, the shape of the line is created by extreme loss. That is, the reductive process of carving creates a positive, fragile form in which the absence of the original material is a focus. Turk encourages us to consider how nature has shaped these organic materials long before the artist’s manipulation of them into new forms. When viewed as components in a complex natural system, their singular beauty and inherent mystery is revealed. Turk compels us to view works of art not only as objects to be coveted and collected, but also as expressions of the natural world and our evolving relation to it.
A recipient of numerous awards, including a MacArthur Foundation Fellowship (2010), a Barnett and Annalee Newman Foundation Fellowship (2010), and a Smithsonian Artist Research Fellowship (2011), Turk is internationally recognized for transforming her signature medium of marble into strikingly intricate objects that defy convention and challenge our preconceptions of what marble can do. Through the use of electric grinders, dental tools...
Category
2010s Contemporary Hollywood Regency
Materials
Marble
Passage 20
By Elizabeth Turk
Located in New York, NY
Elegant and understated, the beauty of calligraphic scripts has resonated across cultures and time. Elizabeth Turk: Written in Stone marks the change caused by technological communic...
Category
2010s Contemporary Hollywood Regency
Materials
Marble, Gold Leaf
Separated Spear Woman in Snake Headress
By Winold Reiss
Located in New York, NY
Mixed media on Whatman board. Signed (at lower right): WINOLD/REISS
Category
20th Century American Modern Hollywood Regency
Materials
Mixed Media
Magnolia Branch and Asian Pears
By Amy Weiskopf
Located in New York, NY
Amy Weiskopf was born in Chicago in 1957, and received her M.F.A. from the Tyler School of Art, Temple University, PA. Though Weiskopf is a master of the still life genre, her painti...
Category
1990s Contemporary Hollywood Regency
Materials
Linen, Oil
Hemlock--Selden's Neck, Lyme, Connecticut
By Charles De Wolf Brownell
Located in New York, NY
Framed, 5.25 x 8.5 x 1.5 in.
Category
19th Century American Realist Hollywood Regency
Materials
Watercolor
Wristie
By Lily Cox-Richard
Located in New York, NY
Wristie, a small assemblage atop a block of sandstone, is comprised of a sweater sleeve, a fragment of woven basket and a piece of blasted tree bark all cast in concrete or plaster. ...
Category
2010s Contemporary Hollywood Regency
Materials
Concrete, Sandstone
Untitled (Small Drawing #3)
By Lily Cox-Richard
Located in New York, NY
Lily Cox-Richard received her BFA in 2001 from the California College of the Arts, San Francisco, and an MFA from Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, in 2008. She was a resid...
Category
2010s Contemporary Hollywood Regency
Materials
Metal
Henry Whitford
By Winold Reiss
Located in New York, NY
Mixed media on Whatman board. Signed (at lower left): WINOLD/REISS
Category
20th Century American Modern Hollywood Regency
Materials
Mixed Media
The Old Monastery Wall
By William S. Schwartz
Located in New York, NY
Signed (at lower left): WILLIAM S. SCHWARTZ
Category
Early 20th Century American Modern Hollywood Regency
Materials
Canvas, Oil
Bedtime Story
Located in New York, NY
Colored marker on heavy paper
Category
2010s Hollywood Regency
Materials
Paper, Permanent Marker
Spill (Seed Pod)
By Julie Heffernan
Located in New York, NY
Oil on canvas
Category
2010s Abstract Hollywood Regency
Materials
Canvas, Oil
Still Life - Niccone
Located in New York, NY
William Bailey’s still life paintings present seemingly everyday objects, including bowls, pitchers, and cups, in groupings that conjure the familiar world while offering a metaphysi...
Category
20th Century Contemporary Hollywood Regency
Materials
Paper, Casein
Untitled
By Lily Cox-Richard
Located in New York, NY
Hammered lead on gray paper
Signed and dated (on verso): LCR 2014
Category
2010s Contemporary Hollywood Regency
Materials
Metal
Boathouse
By Randall Exon
Located in New York, NY
Oil on panel
Category
2010s Contemporary Hollywood Regency
Materials
Panel, Oil
Untitled (Large Drawing #4)
By Lily Cox-Richard
Located in New York, NY
Hammered lead on paper
Signed and dated (on verso): LCR 2014
Category
2010s Contemporary Hollywood Regency
Materials
Metal
Red Earth and Spotted Cows
By Zama Vanessa Helder
Located in New York, NY
Watercolor on paper
Category
1940s Hollywood Regency
Materials
Paper, Watercolor
One Afternoon in Tuscany
By Alan Feltus
Located in New York, NY
A contemporary figurative painter whose art is rooted in both the past and the present, Alan Feltus specializes in enigmatic depictions of women. Notable for their purity and simplic...
Category
20th Century Contemporary Hollywood Regency
Materials
Canvas, Alkyd
n Memory of the Great Fire at Chicago (Cartoon for the Mural Lunette in the Chic
Located in New York, NY
On October 8, 1871, one of the greatest fires of modern times broke out in Chicago. Engulfing the entire city within hours, it left over 90,000 people homeless and destroyed thousands of buildings, causing many people to flee into the water to escape the flames. Among the property destroyed were the proudest cultural and civic institutions of the city. While the financial center was rebuilt within a year and trade was greater in 1872 than it had been in 1870, it took over a decade for the city’s cultural resources to recover from the disaster. Many of the city’s best artists did not even return to Chicago for several years. Foreign aid poured in from around the world, with half coming from England alone. It is not surprising therefore, that in 1872 it was an English artist that should have designed the mural for City Hall commemorating the Great Fire...
Category
Late 19th Century Realist Hollywood Regency
Materials
Paper, Charcoal
Still Life of Peonies, Roses, Honeysuckle, Poppies, and other Flowers
Located in New York, NY
Oil on canvas
Category
18th Century Hollywood Regency
Materials
Oil
Passage 11
By Elizabeth Turk
Located in New York, NY
Elegant and understated, the beauty of calligraphic scripts has resonated across cultures and time. Elizabeth Turk: Written in Stone marks the change caused by technological communic...
Category
2010s Contemporary Hollywood Regency
Materials
Marble, Gold Leaf