Horace_Bristol_Portrait_of_Migrant_Mother_Breastfeeding_1937_Silver_Gelatin_01_na

Horace Bristol -Portrait of Migrant Mother Breastfeeding-1937 Silver Gelatin

Horace Bristol -Portrait of Migrant Mother Breastfeeding-1937 Silver Gelatin
Horace Bristol -Portrait of Migrant Mother Breastfeeding-1937 Silver Gelatin
Horace Bristol -Portrait of Migrant Mother Breastfeeding-1937 Silver Gelatin
Horace Bristol -Portrait of Migrant Mother Breastfeeding-1937 Silver Gelatin
Horace Bristol -Portrait of Migrant Mother Breastfeeding-1937 Silver Gelatin
Horace Bristol -Portrait of Migrant Mother Breastfeeding-1937 Silver Gelatin
Horace Bristol -Portrait of Migrant Mother Breastfeeding-1937 Silver Gelatin

Horace Bristol -Portrait of Migrant Mother Breastfeeding-1937 Silver Gelatin
Primarily searching for the “Unique & Rare” by dealing with some of the finest acquisitions and consignments of Prominent California Estates, Large Collections and Celebrity homes from Santa Barbara, Beverly Hills, Bell Air, Hollywood Hills, Los Feliz, Malibu, Pasadena, San Marino, Newport Beach, La Jolla and most of the best locations of the fabulous West Coast. Offering here is a. Horace Bristol -Portrait of Migrant Mother Breastfeeding-1937 Silver Gelatin. Original 8×10″ Silver Gelatin Photograph – Rose of Sharon, from “The Grapes of Wrath Series. Signed in pencil on verso, inscribed and dated on mat. Horace Bristol (1908 – 1997) was among th first staff photographers for LIFE Magazine. He was a member of San Francisco’s fames Group f/64, which included Ansel Adams, Imogen Cunningham, Edward Weston, Willard Van Dyke and Dorthea Lange. In the late thirties, Bristol became aware of the migration of Okies from the dust bowl to California’s Central Valley, but the Great Depression was too depressing for his editiors at LIFE. Undaunted, Bristol employed John Steinbeck, a young, unkonwn journalist to accompany him to the campus to write a text for a photo book. Steinbeck was initially unenthusiastic but after energetic prodding by Bristol finally agreed. When Steinbeck arrived he apologized to Horace. “There’s too much here”, he told Bristol, “I have to write a novel”. John Ford did use Bristol’s images as the basis for his own 1940 masterpiece and both Bristol’s original images and stills from the film finally appeared as a photo spread in LIFE. These images are a major part of the exhibition at Frank Pictures as are his images taken as one of five photographers in an elite Navy unit formed by Deward Steichen during WWII. After the war, Bristol became the pre-eminent photographer of post war Asia. Bristol felt responsible and in his grief burned a lifetime of prints and negatives, vowing to give up photography forever. He ultimately remarried and began a new family. In 1985, Henri Bristol read The Grapes of Wrath and innocently asked his father if he knew this wonderfull book? Horace realized he was denying his children their incredible legacy. He then pieced back together what images he could find and from 1987 untill his death in 1997. Bristol reprinted his found negatived and restored to the world his historic collection. Horace Bristol died in August 1997, but not before seeing his photographs exhibited in galleries and museums throughout the United States and Europe, and a book of his work published in his name: Horace Bristol, An American View (Chronicle Books, 1996). His work has recently been on view at the Santa Barbara Museum of Art as part of Taking Root: A Century of Migrant Workers in California and was featured in the exhibition Ten: Gifts of SBMA PhotoFutures. In addition his work was featured in the Los Angeles County Museum of Art’s exhibtion, Made in California and was showcased along side Dorthea Lange in an exhibition of his photographs at the J. Paul Getty Museum chronicling the plight of migrant laborers in an exhibition entitled The Grapes of Wrath: Horace Bristol’s California Photographs. A beautiful piece that will add to your décor! Please check all the photos. Should you have any inquiries, please do not hesitate to ask a question or call 310 293 2442.
Horace Bristol -Portrait of Migrant Mother Breastfeeding-1937 Silver Gelatin
Antique_Old_Social_Realism_Twins_Portrait_Oil_Painting_Los_Angeles_1931_01_ejoo

Antique Old Social Realism Twins Portrait Oil Painting, Los Angeles 1931

Antique Old Social Realism Twins Portrait Oil Painting, Los Angeles 1931
Antique Old Social Realism Twins Portrait Oil Painting, Los Angeles 1931
Antique Old Social Realism Twins Portrait Oil Painting, Los Angeles 1931
Antique Old Social Realism Twins Portrait Oil Painting, Los Angeles 1931
Antique Old Social Realism Twins Portrait Oil Painting, Los Angeles 1931
Antique Old Social Realism Twins Portrait Oil Painting, Los Angeles 1931
Antique Old Social Realism Twins Portrait Oil Painting, Los Angeles 1931
Antique Old Social Realism Twins Portrait Oil Painting, Los Angeles 1931
Antique Old Social Realism Twins Portrait Oil Painting, Los Angeles 1931
Antique Old Social Realism Twins Portrait Oil Painting, Los Angeles 1931
Antique Old Social Realism Twins Portrait Oil Painting, Los Angeles 1931
Antique Old Social Realism Twins Portrait Oil Painting, Los Angeles 1931
Antique Old Social Realism Twins Portrait Oil Painting, Los Angeles 1931
Antique Old Social Realism Twins Portrait Oil Painting, Los Angeles 1931
Antique Old Social Realism Twins Portrait Oil Painting, Los Angeles 1931
Antique Old Social Realism Twins Portrait Oil Painting, Los Angeles 1931
Antique Old Social Realism Twins Portrait Oil Painting, Los Angeles 1931
Antique Old Social Realism Twins Portrait Oil Painting, Los Angeles 1931
Antique Old Social Realism Twins Portrait Oil Painting, Los Angeles 1931
Antique Old Social Realism Twins Portrait Oil Painting, Los Angeles 1931
Antique Old Social Realism Twins Portrait Oil Painting, Los Angeles 1931
Antique Old Social Realism Twins Portrait Oil Painting, Los Angeles 1931

Antique Old Social Realism Twins Portrait Oil Painting, Los Angeles 1931
This is a charming and very well done Antique Old Social Realism Twins Portrait Oil Painting on artist board, by early Los Angeles, California painter, Walter R. This work depicts two small children, a boy and a girl, who appear to be twins. They are sitting at the edge of a window, where the skyline of old Los Angeles can be seen. The subjects are painted with a mastery for near photorealism that is seldom seen by artists today. Signed and dated in the lower left corner: Walter R. ” Additionally, this piece is annotated on the top edge of the verso: “John Wallace & Joan [illegible] Richards. Approximately 20 1/4 x 22 3/4 inches including frame. Actual artwork is approximately 17 x 19 1/2 inches. Very good condition for nearly a century of age, with some light scuffing and edge wear to the original period gilded frame. There are also some spots of faint scuffing, and light craquelure to the painted surface please see photos. Acquired in Los Angeles County, California. If you like what you see, I encourage you to make an Offer. Please check out my other listings for more wonderful and unique artworks!
Antique Old Social Realism Twins Portrait Oil Painting, Los Angeles 1931