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Alexander Calder
Derriere le Miroir #221

1975

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  • Frontispiece from Chagall Lithographe Volume III
    By Marc Chagall
    Located in Washington, DC
    Artist: Marc Chagall Title: Frontispiece Portfolio: Chagall Lithographe Volume III Medium: Lithograph Year: 1969 Edition Size: Unnumbered Frame Size: 20 3/4" x 17 3/4" Sheet Size: 12...
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    1960s Modern Figurative Prints

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  • Marine, from Poesies Antillaises
    By Henri Matisse
    Located in Washington, DC
    Artist: Henri Matisse Title: Marine Portfolio: Poesies Antillaises Medium: Lithograph Year: 1972 Edition: 250 Frame Size: 24" x 20 1/4" Sheet Size: 14 7/8" x 11 1/8" Image Size: 14 3...
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    1970s Portrait Prints

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  • Paraphrase d'un Chant d'Enfant dans le Soir, from Poesies Antillaises
    By Henri Matisse
    Located in Washington, DC
    Artist: Henri Matisse Title: Paraphrase d'un Chant d'Enfant dans le Soir Portfolio: Poesies Antillaises Medium: Lithograph Year: 1972 Edition: 250 Frame Size: 24" x 20 1/4" Sheet Siz...
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    1970s Portrait Prints

    Materials

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  • Marc Chagall David and Bathsheba
    By Marc Chagall
    Located in Washington, DC
    Artist: Marc Chagall Medium: Lithograph Title: David and Bathsheba Portfolio: The Bible Lithographs Year: 1956 Signed: No Reference: Cramer 25 Mour...
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    1950s Portrait Prints

    Materials

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  • Untitled from Les Lettres Portugaises
    By Henri Matisse
    Located in Washington, DC
    Artist: Henri Matisse Medium: lithograph Portfolio: Untitled from Les Lettres Portugaises Year: 1946 Edition: 250 Framed Size: 16 3/4" x 14 1/2" Reference: Duthuit 15 Signed: Unsigned
    Category

    1940s Fauvist Portrait Prints

    Materials

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  • The Connor Brothers There's Nothing So Seductive As A Dangerous Idea
    By The Connor Brothers
    Located in Washington, DC
    Artist: The Connor Brothers Title: There's Nothing So Seductive As A Dangerous Idea Medium: Giclee print with silkscreen varnish Year: 2020 Edition: 50 Framed Size: 21 1/2" x 16 1/2"...
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    2010s Pop Art Figurative Prints

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  • Vintage Chinese Lithograph Print, c. 1920s
    Located in Chicago, IL
    This advertising poster from the 1930s melds the meticulous detail of traditional Chinese painting with the craft of color lithography. These advertisements, influenced by the Art De...
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  • Barbra Stresiand "Belle of 14th Street" 1973 CBS TV Special 20th Century Litho
    By Albert Al Hirschfeld
    Located in New York, NY
    Barbra Stresiand "Belle of 14th Street" 1973 CBS TV Special 20th Century Litho Signed and numbered 10/150 in pencil, lower margin. Etching, 13.5” x 9.75”. Framed 21.25” x 17.25”. Pulled in 1975. Belle of 14th Street After two successful television shows on CBS, Barbra's manager, Marty Erlichman told the press, “We don't intend to go to the well once too often. The next special will have other performers. However, Barbra will never become just another hostess for just another musical variety show. Whatever we decide to do in the future shows, she will dominate in a unique fashion.” Barbra’s third television special for CBS and her sponsor, Monsanto, was titled The Belle of 14th Street . In February 1966, shortly after finishing up Color Me Barbra , Streisand and husband Elliott Gould took a second honeymoon in Paris. The trip was financed by her television corporate sponsor, Chemstrand. Barbra told the press, “I’m here to purchase the wardrobe for my next TV special. Cost is no object because my sponsor is picking up the tab.” At that point the theme of her third TV show would be fashion, and Paris offered many couture choices. Barbra was seen at a Dior fashion show wearing not the designer’s clothes, but a jaguar suit and hat she had designed herself. In all, it is said Barbra chose nine Dior outfits at a cost of $150,000. However, Barbra Streisand's third television special for CBS was postponed. In March 1966, Barbra flew to London to appear at the Prince of Wales Theatre in Funny Girl . Shortly after beginning her run in London, Barbra announced her pregnancy. Not only did that cause her concert tour to be abbreviated, but Barbra’s television special was postponed as well. Barbra told the BBC in July 1966: “I also can’t do my third television show, which I was supposed to do here [London].” Returning to the States, Barbra performed four concert dates, and then retired to enjoy the rest of her pregnancy and give birth to her son, Jason, in December 1966. CBS and Chemstrand wanted a new special by the end of 1967, therefore production on the show picked up momentum in March 1967. (Barbra was due in Hollywood in May to begin shooting the Funny Girl film.) The format and theme of the television show had changed, too. Instead of centering on fashion, Barbra’s next special would be situated in a 1900’s Vaudeville theater. “We were all determined that the show not be just a variety format,” director Joe Layton said. “We wanted something different. So we hit upon the idea of restaging a vaudeville performance. All the acts, songs, skits and specialties had to be derivative of the period between 1895-1912.” Barbra’s creative collaborators did meticulous research on Vaudeville — “We even called George Burns in Hollywood and Jack Pearl,” said Barbra’s manager, Marty Erlichman. Entitled The Belle of 14th Street , the new special would allow Barbra to play several different characters but not have to shoulder the burden of carrying another one-woman show—this time Streisand would be accompanied by guest stars: Broadway actor Jason Robards; Vaudeville veteran John Bubbles; and Lee Allen...
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