The present work was printed later. Andreas Feininger's most recognizable portrait, The Photojournalist captures young Magnum photographer Dennis Stock. Feininger's interest in architecture and form ...
Andreas Feininger’s striking 1951 portrait of what, at first glance, might be a cowled cyborg—complete with mismatched lenses for eyes—is one of LIFE magazine’s most recognizable and frequently ...
A portfolio of 12 gelatin silver photographs in the original portfolio box and title page. Negative dates vary from 1946 - 1971. The title page includes the titles and negative dates of each image, ...
Design is a funny, marvelous, sometimes unsettling thing — especially when evolution itself is the designer. Take these six-decade-old pictures of skulls and bones. Seen in a certain light, and ...
Every summer, Bracken Cave near New Braunfels, Texas, becomes home to an estimated 20 million Mexican free-tailed bats, which might be the largest gathering of mammals on the planet. The bats travel ...
The iridescence of insect wings and the curious shapes formed by seashells are both extraordinary features of the ordinary world, and for centuries, artists, architects and engineers have attempted to ...
Ecological issues are of crucial importance in our era of climate upheaval, and it is only natural for contemporary artists to take up these topics in their practice and thinking. Presented at the ...
Tracks the change in total value of sales, as well as the total number of lots offered and sold annually in the art market. This chart shows whether Andreas Feininger’s total sales are going up, and ...
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