WEEGEE Fashion Woman at a Bar 1940s
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Description
WEEGEE, Woman at a Bar, 1940s, 12.75x10.375" Gelatin silver print, Printed 1940s, Arthur Fellig Photo stamp on print verso.
A glamorous and sexy fashion shot made in a bar by Weegee. Illus: Weegee's People (Duell, Sloan and Pearce, New York, 1946).
Arthur Fellig (1899-1968) was born in the town of Lemburg (now in Ukraine) and first worked as a photographer at age fourteen, three years after his family immigrated to the United States. Self-taught, he held many photography-related jobs before gaining regular employment at a photography studio in lower Manhattan in 1918. By 1935 he was working as a freelance news photographer, centering his activity around police headquarters. In 1938, he obtained permission to install a police radio in his car, which enabled him to take the first and most sensational photographs of news events and offer them for sale to publications such as the Herald-Tribune, The Daily News, The Post, The Sun, and PM Weekly, among others. It was at this time that he earned the name Weegee (appropriated from the Ouija board) for his uncanny ability to make such early appearances at scenes of violence and catastrophe.
During the 1940s, Weegee's photographs appeared outside the mainstream press and met success there as well. New York's Photo League held an exhibition of his work in 1941, and the Museum of Modern Art began collecting his work and exhibited it in 1943. Weegee published his photographs in several books, including Naked City (1945), Weegee's People (1946), and Naked Hollywood (1953). After moving to Hollywood in 1947, he devoted most of his energy to making 16-millimeter films and photographs for his "Distortions" series, a project that resulted in experimental portraits of celebrities and political figures. He returned to New York in 1952 and lectured and wrote about photography until his death.
CREDIT: Howard Greenberg Gallery
http://www.howardgreenberg.com/artists/weegee
A glamorous and sexy fashion shot made in a bar by Weegee. Illus: Weegee's People (Duell, Sloan and Pearce, New York, 1946).
Arthur Fellig (1899-1968) was born in the town of Lemburg (now in Ukraine) and first worked as a photographer at age fourteen, three years after his family immigrated to the United States. Self-taught, he held many photography-related jobs before gaining regular employment at a photography studio in lower Manhattan in 1918. By 1935 he was working as a freelance news photographer, centering his activity around police headquarters. In 1938, he obtained permission to install a police radio in his car, which enabled him to take the first and most sensational photographs of news events and offer them for sale to publications such as the Herald-Tribune, The Daily News, The Post, The Sun, and PM Weekly, among others. It was at this time that he earned the name Weegee (appropriated from the Ouija board) for his uncanny ability to make such early appearances at scenes of violence and catastrophe.
During the 1940s, Weegee's photographs appeared outside the mainstream press and met success there as well. New York's Photo League held an exhibition of his work in 1941, and the Museum of Modern Art began collecting his work and exhibited it in 1943. Weegee published his photographs in several books, including Naked City (1945), Weegee's People (1946), and Naked Hollywood (1953). After moving to Hollywood in 1947, he devoted most of his energy to making 16-millimeter films and photographs for his "Distortions" series, a project that resulted in experimental portraits of celebrities and political figures. He returned to New York in 1952 and lectured and wrote about photography until his death.
CREDIT: Howard Greenberg Gallery
http://www.howardgreenberg.com/artists/weegee
Condition
Good to Fair. Moderate wear, edge wers, crackling emulsion, glue residue on print verso.
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WEEGEE Fashion Woman at a Bar 1940s
Estimate $2,000 - $3,000
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