Vanishing Jewish Societies Suite of 13 Photographs 1983 HS
Andy Katz
Photography : Photograph on Museum Board
Size : 16x20 in | 41x51 cm
Edition : From the Edition of 100
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🔥1983 Suite of 13 Limited Edition Hand Signed Photographs - Blue Chip - Inquire $$$$$$$
Year1983
Hand SignedLower Right in Pencil
Condition Mint
Not FramedMounted on Museum Board
Purchased fromOther 2008
Story / Additional InfoThis is a series of 13 prints all the same size in the original archival box. All prints were processed, printed and selenium toned by the artist (Andy Katz). The are enclosed in an archival box producing an acid fee environment which preserves the life of the photo indefinitely. The photos have never been framed and have remained in the original packaging. Each photograph is mounted on 22 X 28 museum board.
Certificate of AuthenticityArt Brokerage
LID169122
Andy Katz - United States
Art Brokerage: Andy Katz American Photographer: The photographs created by Andy Katz have taken him around the globe. From the Old Country in Eastern Europe to the California wine country, which he now calls home, his subjects are as diverse as his travels and adventures. The images in Katz's books, A Portrait of Napa and Sonoma; Concannon: The First One Hundred and Twenty-Five Years; New Zealand: Sea, Earth, Sky; Private Reserve; Robert Mondavi Winery; The Heart of Burgundy; Tuscany and Its Wines; and Vineyard have been described by vintners, photographers, critics and other readers as breathtaking. His evocative work is featured in museums and galleries worldwide including his own in Boulder, Colorado and Healdsburg, California. Katz discovered his love for photography at a young age. Admittedly, he had been chasing his classmates around the playground with his camera since as early as the third grade. But when he was 11, his father brought home a book of black and white portraits by the legendary Canadian photographer Yosuf Karsh. "It was as if a flash bulb went off in my soul. I was amazed. Karsh's work was all large-format and his prints were so vivid you felt you could actually touch the persons skin. The tonality, the technique, it was all truly exquisite. I was mesmerized," said Katz. How ironic that years later, Yosuf Karsh would count himself among the many proud collectors of Katz's photos. Listings wanted.