Archive for the yousuf Category
Authenticity Guarantee: You’ll receive a signed Authenticity Guarantee with each photo/print. We are buyers and sellers of fine art photography. All our photos/prints are 100% original, produced the year shown and NOT a current reproduction created for resale. Our 4 ply mounting board is t. He finest manufactured for today’s museum and fine art professionals. Made from 100% virgin cotton fibers. Karsh, was an Armenian-Canadian photographer known for his portraits of notable individuals. He has been described as one of the greatest portrait photographers of the 20th century. Title:Frank Lloyd Wright Architect Portrait. Size of photo about: 8.75″ Wide 11.5″ High. No border, full bleed. Photo Type: Sheet fed Photogravure, made from original negative. Overall size on white mounting board: 20″ X 16″ Print Origin: USA. Finish: Satin Gloss Finish Date of Negative: 1940s Date of Print: 1946 Yousuf Karsh photography. Powered by SixBit’s eCommerce Solution.
Frank Lloyd-Wright Portrait Engraving Art Print 14×12. Print Method: 6 Plate Lithograph (Multiple plates, multiple ink tones, photographic lithograph). Color / B&W: Black & White. Image Height: 7.28 ins. Image Width: 9.45 ins. (New) Mount & Mat Board: 100% Cotton, Acid Free, Museum Grade Mount Board. Mount Height: 12.0 ins. Mount Width: 14.0 ins. Standard Frame: 14 by 12. The mount and mat are brand new. Born: Ottowa, Canada, 1908. An Armenian genocide survivor, Karsh migrated to Canada as a refugee. By the 1930s he established himself as a significant photographer in Ottawa, where he lived most of his adult life, though he traveled extensively for work. His iconic 1941 photograph of Winston Churchill was a breakthrough point in his 60-year career, through which he took numerous photos of known political leaders, men and women of arts and sciences. Over 20 photos by Karsh appeared on the cover of Life magazine, until he retired in 1993. In 1943 he boarded a Norwegian freighter containing a cargo of explosives which was bound from Canada to Britain and stayed in London to photograph wartime leaders and intellectuals. Many of these photographs were published in the Illustrated London News and played their own part in raising the nation’s morale. Karsh’s ability to produce the’definitive’ portrait of so many of the great men and women, not only Churchill but Kennedy, Khrushchev, Castro, Hemingway and others, was not achieved lightly. In addition to the long sittings he often required, he researched his sitters thoroughly before meeting them, and his careful studio lighting, which he first learned with the Ottawa Little Theatre in the 1930s, is legendary. Courage, too, was required, for who else would have dared to pull the cigar from Churchill’s mouth or persuaded Khrushchev to dress up in a large fur coat? Audrey Hepburn:- When I photographed her in Hollywood and commented on her quality of sophisticated vulnerability, she told me of her harrowing experiences during the Second World War. Years later, in the Kremlin, Chairman Brezhnev agreed to sit for me only if I made him as beautiful as Audrey Hepburn. National Gallery of Canada. A great many personalities from the cultural, scientific and political milieus that shaped the twentieth century have been immortalized on film by internationally renowned photographer Yousuf Karsh. These portraits where shadows play with dramatic light bear witness to a century, but above all to the photographer’s humanistic vision. The human aspect, exchanges between the photographer and his subject, and the revelation of his or her personality via photography are at the core of his practice. With an online database of more than 17,000 photographers, Vintage Photo Prints has been serving art collectors around the globe since 1982. To browse our latest daily arrivals in the gallery. More items in the “Portrait” category. 6 Plate Lithograph Process. Principle of Lithography (Wikipedia). Lithography uses simple chemical processes to create an image. For instance, the positive part of an image is a water-repelling (“hydrophobic”) substance, while the negative image would be water-retaining (“hydrophilic”). Thus, when the plate is introduced to a compatible printing ink and water mixture, the ink will adhere to the positive image and the water will clean the negative image. This allows a flat print plate to be used, enabling much longer and more detailed print runs than the older physical methods of printing e. Intaglio printing, letterpress printing… Offset lithography involves printing the image onto an intermediate surface before the final sheet. The process is’offset’ because the plate does not come in direct contact with the paper, which preserves the quality of the plate. With offset lithography, the image is reversed twice, and appears on the final sheet the same way round as on the stone or plate… EXTRA FINE COLLECTOR CONDITION PRINT with BRAND NEW, professionally dry-mounted MOUNT AND MAT with archival, museum grade, 14.0 ins wide x 12.0 ins high mount board. Vintage Print: VP3F6129 is a GENUINE YOUSUF KARSH, 6 PLATE LITHOGRAPH. It is NOT a copy of any kind nor a digital reprint. It is an AUTHENTIC VINTAGE PRINT made in 1983, ready for a standard 14 by 12 frame, Image size: 9.45 ins wide x 7.28 ins high. GALLERY CERTIFIED with SECURITY ID. Vintage Print: VP3F6129 is a genuine 6 Plate Lithograph print. It is not a modern copy of any kind nor a digital reprint. It is an authentic vintage print made in 1983. The print mount comes with a label fixed to the reverse side of the archival mount-board. The label contains the information needed to confirm the authenticity of the print. There is a QR code on the label which you can scan to go directly to your database page without having to enter the vintage id. The label has a Gallery Security ID. The Security ID on the COA matches the Security ID on the label. Vintage Print: VP3F6129 comes with a signed letter certifying its authenticity. The letter also contains a copy of the label from the back of the print mount (see above) and a matching Security ID.
Authenticity Guarantee: You’ll receive a signed Authenticity Guarantee with each photo/print. We are buyers and sellers of fine art photography. All our photos/prints are 100% original, produced the year shown and NOT a current reproduction created for resale. Our 4 ply mounting board is t. He finest manufactured for today’s museum and fine art professionals. Made from 100% virgin cotton fibers. Karsh, was an Armenian-Canadian photographer known for his portraits of notable individuals. He has been described as one of the greatest portrait photographers of the 20th century. Title:Frank Lloyd Wright Architect Portrait. Size of photo about: 8.75″ Wide 11.5″ High. No border, full bleed. Photo Type: Sheet fed Photogravure, made from original negative. Overall size on white mounting board: 20″ X 16″ Print Origin: USA. Finish: Satin Gloss Finish Date of Negative: 1940s Date of Print: 1946 Yousuf Karsh photography. Powered by SixBit’s eCommerce Solution. This item is in the category “Art\Art Photographs”. The seller is “gdawg” and is located in this country: US. This item can be shipped worldwide.
- Original/Reproduction: Original Print
Authenticity Guarantee: You’ll receive a signed Authenticity Guarantee with each photo/print. From a recently acquired large collection of quality, original photos. All our photos/prints are 100% original, produced the year shown and NOT a current reproduction created for resale. Our 4 ply mounting board is t. He finest manufactured for todays museum and fine art professionals. Made from 100% virgin cotton fibers. Yousuf Karsh, was an Armenian-Canadian photographer known for his portraits of notable individuals. He has been described as one of the greatest portrait photographers of the 20th century. Title: Frank Lloyd Wright ORIGINAL Portrait Art Photo Size of photo in Inches: 9.25″ Wide 7.8″ High. Photo Type: Vintage photogravure made from original negative, authorized by artist. Overall size on white mounting board: 16″ X 20″ Print Origin: Netherlands Date of Negative: 1954 Date of Print: 1959 Subject: Yousuf Karsh Portrait Photos. The item “1954 1959 Yousuf Karsh Frank Lloyd Wright ORIGINAL Portrait Art Photo 16X20″ is in sale since Saturday, March 23, 2019. This item is in the category “Art\Art Prints”. The seller is “gdawg” and is located in Wooster, Ohio. This item can be shipped worldwide.
Authenticity Guarantee: You’ll receive a signed Authenticity Guarantee with each photo/print. We are buyers and sellers of fine art photography. All our photos/prints are 100% original, produced the year shown and NOT a current reproduction created for resale. Our 4 ply mounting board is t. He finest manufactured for todays museum and fine art professionals. Made from 100% virgin cotton fibers. Ousuf Karsh, was an Armenian-Canadian photographer known for his portraits of notable individuals. He has been described as one of the greatest portrait photographers of the 20th century. Title:Frank Lloyd Wright Architect Portrait. Size of photo about: 8.75″ Wide 11.5″ High. No border, full bleed. Photo Type: Sheet fed Photogravure, made from original negative. Overall size on white mounting board: 20″ X 16″ Print Origin: USA. Finish: Satin Gloss Finish Date of Negative: 1940s Date of Print: 1946 Yousuf Karsh photography. Powered by SixBit’s eCommerce Solution. The item “1946 Yousuf Karsh Original Frank Lloyd Wright Architect Portrait Photo Gravure” is in sale since Monday, February 24, 2020. This item is in the category “Art\Art Prints”. The seller is “gdawg” and is located in Wooster, Ohio. This item can be shipped worldwide.
Prints of this image, in this size, rarely come on the market. Don’t miss this opportunity. Canadian, 1908 – 2002. Frank Lloyd Wright, 1954. Image: 49.1 x 39 cm (19 5/16 x 15 3/8 inches). Certainly amongst devotees and Architects who love the work of Frank Lloyd Wright, this is the preferred portrait of Wright by renowned portrait photographer Yousuf Karsh. This print can be found in the RISD collection at this page. In his compassionate, elegant portraits of the leading figures of the 20th centuryamong them. Photographer Yousuf Karsh captured both the private personality and public persona of his sitters. By carefully posing and sensitively lighting his subjects, Karsh strived to highlight distinctive features that would convey a sense of their individuality and inner life. The decisive moment for himand the moment when he would release the cameras shutterwas when his subjects public mask was lifted, if only fleetingly. As he wrote: The endless fascination of these people for me lies in what I call their inward power. It is part of the elusive secret that hides in everyone, and it has been my lifes work to try to capture it on film. Yousuf Karsh, who died in Boston in July 2002 aged 93, is popularly known as the great camera portraitist of the most esteemed world figures and celebrities of the mid to late 20th century. His subjects included politicians, religious leaders, royalty, artists, writers, dancers, actors, singers, musicians, explorers, scientists and physicians. Born in 1908 to Armenian parents in Mardin, Turkey, Yousuf Karsh had first-hand experience of political strife when the Turks persecuted his family. Travelling alone across the world in 1924 at the age of sixteen, Karsh was able to immigrate to Canada where his uncle, George Nakash, had a portrait photography studio in Quebec. Karsh first trained with his uncle and then in Boston in the portrait studio of fellow Armenian John H. Karsh moved back to Ottawa in 1932, where he established his own studio. From the 1970s until he retired in 1994, Karsh had his studio in the lavish Chateau Laurier, a landmark building in the best street in Ottawa. Karshs mentor, John Garo, had made rather soft, idealised romantic portraits in the prevailing style of art photography, but Karsh developed his own modern look with dramatic, sharp and strongly lit close-ups. Karshs experience with stage lighting as a member of the Ottawa Little Theatre was a factor in his technique, and through this theatrical circle he made political and social contacts that led to clients for his business. From as early as 1936 Karsh was becoming known for his modern portraits of visiting statesmen and dignitaries, who were often set against a darkened background, spot-lit like actors on a stage, and shown close-up revealing every detail of hair, skin and clothes. He used large format cameras with up to 8 x 10 plates and huge banks of lights to transform his subjects. Karshs international reputation was made when his portrait of British prime minister Winston Churchill then in Ottawa for a political meeting during World War II was used on the cover of Life magazine in December 1941. According to legend, Karsh whipped Churchills beloved cigar out of his mouth a moment before making his exposure. By contrast Karsh would later persuade the formidable USSR leader Nikita S. Khrushchev to don his native headgear of a Siberian fur hood and smile like a jolly Santa Claus. The portrait of Churchill became the iconic image of the wartime leader and was even the model for his portrait in Madame Tussauds wax museum in London. Churchill is not scowling, as the image is so often described, and its success surely had more to do with making the not very photogenic Churchill exude the right mix of concern, bullying strength and vision. These were the qualities then needed to reassure the public across the Commonwealth as they faced their enemies in Europe. Although Karsh credited his beloved mother with being an inspiration to his work, he did not return to Armenia until late in life. From the time of his success with the Churchill portrait, Karsh did, however, spend much of his life travelling across the world to photograph the good, the great and the gifted among world figures, or people of consequence as he called them. He produced numerous publications, beginning with Faces of Destiny in 1946. Signing himself Karsh of Ottawa, the photographer became a celebrity in his own right and world leaders felt slighted if not selected to be Karshed. In many cases Karshs camera portrait became the best known image of the subject. Karsh, a devout Catholic, had a belief in individual greatness and in role models in society. This was perhaps fuelled by his knowledge, gained early in life, of how cruel human beings could be to each other. Although his sitters were mostly commissioned portraits, there is a sense in which Karsh put his own imprimatur on a pantheon of well-known people whom he saw as deserving of their fame through merit, not birthright. He did not do glamour per se and his female subjects are handsome rather than fair ladies. Stories abound about how Karsh managed to get his subjects to co-operate, regardless of the location or how short a session he might have been allocated. As one critic commented, Clearly Karsh used a lot more than lighting on his subjects. His conversational foreplay was as spontaneous as his portraits were staged. Karsh also developed a distinctive style of dark, dramatic, large exhibition prints up to a metre in width or height (as shown in this exhibition) with startling depth and detail. Karshs photographs were the equivalent in the portrait field to the monumental landscape photographs of his American contemporary Ansel Adams. Yousuf Karsh was at the height of his career in the 1960s and 1970s when he was the star of the Canadian pavilion at the World Expo 67 in Osaka. Several large exhibitions of his work toured internationally in these years. By the time he died in 2002, Karsh had been awarded an Honorary Fellowship of the Royal Photographic Society and almost every possible form of recognition from his photographic peers across the world. He received national and international honours including an award as Officer of the Order of Canada and a number of honorary degrees from Canadian and American universities. The Canadian Government then sent Karsh to London to photograph the other leaders of wartime Britain and Life magazine commissioned portraits of American military leaders. Sarah Boxer, An Understanding of How to Picture Fame, The New York Times, 11 August 2002, p. 31 (a review of Karsh works at Yancey Richardson Gallery, New York). The item “Yousuf Karsh Original 16×20 Silver Gelatin Print, Frank Lloyd Wright, Rare Size” is in sale since Sunday, January 01, 2017. This item is in the category “Art\Art from Dealers & Resellers\Photographs”. The seller is “killerfumes” and is located in Menifee, California. This item can be shipped to United States.
- Original/Reprint: Original Print
- Listed By: Dealer or Reseller
- Signed?: Signed
- Date of Creation: 1950-Now
- Photo Type: Gelatin Silver
- Subject: American Architect Frank lloyd Wright
- Color Type: Black & White
- Size Type/Largest Dimension: 49.1 x 39 cm (19 5/16 x 15 3/8 inches)
- Artist: Yousuf Karsh
- Framed/Unframed: Matted