Classic Corvettes Display Vintage Snapshot Photo
Great photo of 3 Classic Corvettes. on display. Dated 1972. or plan to buy more than one „Buy It Now“ item.
Great photo of 3 Classic Corvettes. on display. Dated 1972. or plan to buy more than one „Buy It Now“ item.
3 pounds of random junk found photographs. Great for scrapbooking, art projects, junk journaling, etc. Some have damage, photo errors, captions or handwriting on them, etc. some photos may be stuck to album paper still. There are many subjects possible in each lot from the 1910s up to the 1990s, black and white and color photos. Some packs have cabinet cards, cdvs and 8x10s All sizes Also great for reselling I don’t sell photos that are dirty or have an offensive smell but these will have a familiar smell of vintage ephemera
Photo was acquired through an estate and is likely one of a kind. Photo Overview. view from Washingtons.
Black & White and Sepia. Photographs are various sizes.
Set in a majestic panorama of evening sunlight, a battle-weary bomber force approaches the coast of Belgium. This print is signed by Six distinguished pilots who flew Bombers with the Mighty Eighth.
Anthony Saunders brings to life the tense few hours before departure in his dramatic painting Final Roster. FINAL ROSTER. This powerful print is the perfect acquisition for Aviation Art collectors and US Airb orne enthusiasts alike.
Date: circa 1890s (Belle Époque period). This design captures the flowing linework and decorative optimism of the fin-de-siècle period. The composition remains crisp and visually striking more than a century after its creation.
As the ever watchful rear gunner scans the sky behind for enemy fighters, the artist treats us to a fantastic pilot’s-eye view that few of us will ever experience! MIDWAY – STRIKE AGAINST THE AKAGI. Rear Admiral LEW HOPKINS – SBD Pilot / dive bombed the Akagi.
„Weather be Damned“ Amazing large lithograph 38 inches x 26 inches, pencil signed and numbered by famed nautical artist Charles Vickery Printed on heavyweight archival paper 30-day returns Numbered Limited Edition Please see my other fine art listings Charles Vickery awed us with his dramatic paintings and charmed us with his humble demeanor. Although he died in September of 1998 at the age of 85, we can look back with pride at the extraordinary career of an extraordinary man.What Vickery is best known for and will be most remembered for is his ability to paint the infinite moods of water. But what initially stumps everyone is how this talent and passion for the sea could come from a man who lived so far from it.Born in Hinsdale, Illinois in 1913, his talent was obvious at an early age. He studied at the Art Institute of Chicago and the American Academy of Fine Art, but he often credited Lake Michigan as being his greatest instructor. The inspiration it provided and the lessons it taught him were far more meaningful to him than the study of tiresome fundamentalsHe believed constant observation of the subject is as essential for the experienced artist as it is for the beginner. “Going to the source” was absolutely critical. Capturing the elusive essence of the sea is not something you can do by looking at photographs.When he opened his first art studio in Western Springs, IL in 1937, his work was highly experimental and paintings sold for as little as five dollars or, in some cases, a dish of ice cream. Early on, he supported himself as a surveyor’s assistant, a silkscreen operator, a mail clerk and a woodworker.The early days found him “along the shores of Lake Michigan living in a tent and eating peanut butter sandwiches,” the artist once said. “Many hours and many years were spent in all kinds of weather studying wave actions and the color of sky and water.”In 1951 Eleanor Jewitt, a respected art critic for the Chicago Tribune, first discovered his ability. He was greatly encouraged by her reviews. Similar praise would follow, and before long, he was regarded as one of the finest seascape artists of our time.