Available Now: Charles Gates Sheldon - Art and Illustrations - 16 Trading Cards - NO Duplicates! Carole Lombard - Myrna Loy - Constance Bennett - Old Hollywood Condition: NEW! Includes Trading Card Size cards with blank white matte back - - Shipped to protect in collectible card sleeves - FREE! Featuring the Cover Art and Movie Legends Portrait Paintings of artist, Charles Gates Sheldon NO Duplicates. Complete Set. The cards are 2.5 x 3.5 in size to fit the card sleeves we send with purchase ~~~Notice about copyrights~~~ This item does not infringe any copyright, trade mark, or other rights or any of Etsy's listing policies or intellectual policies. Extensive research, modifications and restoration works to the original Public Domain material itself has ensured that we created a new work and own the intellectual property rights, license and the legality to market the products. We are the creators of this content or are authorized distributors; the seller holds all the legal rights to this specific collection as described in Title 17 of the United States Code 101. These images may be used for crafts and for personal use. This product is copyrighted 2016, All rights reserved and may not be reproduced, or copied to be resold.
Cartes illustrées vintage femmes - Charles Gates Sheldon (1889-1960) Cartes illustrées vintage femmes - Charles Gates Sheldon (1889-1960)
Charles Gates Sheldon [1889-1960] was a prolific and gifted early 1900's American Illustratorand studied under the Art Nouveau artist Alphonse Mucha in Paris. He returned to America and set up a studio at Carnegie Hall in New York City. In 1918 Sheldon received his first pin-up commission, a series of ads for La Vogue lingerie.
Charles Gates Sheldon (1889-1960) was a prolific and gifted early 1900's American Illustrator who specialized in three main subjects: Hollywood, fashion and hair - themed cover portraiture and adverti
Concise illustrated history of 1920s Women's Makeup styles and cosmetics. Find out how the flapper look of the Roaring 1920's evolved.
The Glorified American Girl Portrait Of Mary Wesson Miriam Hopkins Jean Harlow Joan Crawford Radio Magazine cover title unknown Portrait Of Peggy Hoyt In Art Nouveau Hat Ziegfeld Follies Girl With …
A rare surviving luminous pastel portrait of early talkie era legendary Hollywood film star Katherine Hepburn, created as the cover for the September 1933 issue of Screenland Magazine. An excellent example of cover portraiture by Charles Gates Sheldon who had a very prolific career creating stylized glamorous art deco Hollywood film star portraits for many of the leading jazz age movie magazine titles. Pastel is beautifully framed and silk matted behind glass.
Charles Gates Sheldon [1889-1960] was a prolific and gifted early 1900's American Illustratorand studied under the Art Nouveau artist Alphonse Mucha in Paris. He returned to America and set up a studio at Carnegie Hall in New York City. In 1918 Sheldon received his first pin-up commission, a series of ads for La Vogue lingerie.
Написано klassika Прочитать цитируемое сообщение Ты - женщина, и этим ты права..... (часть 5) klassika tdtd /td/tr Rod McKuen ALBERT DORNE (American, 1904-1965) " ALBERT DORNE (American, 1904-1965) ALBERT DORNE (American, 1904-1965) tdtd…
Artist Charles Gates Sheldon (1889-1960) is best known for his cover art for publications like Photoplay, the Saturday Evening Post and Collier’s Magazine. His work also included advertising and book illustration. But I like to think of Charles Sheldon Gates as the man who reinvented religious iconography for the twentieth century by replacing the portraits of angels and saints with pastel portraits of the silent movie stars and Hollywood legends of the 1920s and 1930s. Sheldon’s portraits of actresses deserve to be glorified. These women were all tough dames. Most came from blue collar backgrounds and made their own way to the top in Hollywood at a time of autocratic studio bosses and sex pest producers. Some like Clara Bow lived a life of excess and ultimately paid for it. Others like Katharine Hepburn were strong-willed and fiercely independent who relished their freedom and privacy. Many died far too young. But all had a talent to entertain, inspire and bring a little hope—the kind of thing people get from religious paintings. The original ‘It Girl’ Clara Bow. Clara Bow. The original ‘sex symbol’ and ‘Blonde Bombshell’ Jean Harlow. Jean Harlow. Katharine ...
Gorgeous 1920s Charles Gates Sheldon portrait
Archival print of an original sketch on collected hotel stationery. "Bar Snacks at Bemelmans" is part of the artists collection of travel sketches on collected hotel stationery. This sketch was created with marker and ink on jotter pad. Each print is signed by the artist. Total dimensions are 9x12"
Charles Gates Sheldon (1889-1960) was a prolific and gifted early 1900's American Illustrator who specialized in three main subjects: Hollywood, fashion and hair - themed cover portraiture and adverti
Charles Gates Sheldon (1889 - 1960)
Artist Charles Gates Sheldon (1889-1960) is best known for his cover art for publications like Photoplay, the Saturday Evening Post and Collier’s Magazine. His work also included advertising and book illustration. But I like to think of Charles Sheldon Gates as the man who reinvented religious iconography for the twentieth century by replacing the portraits of angels and saints with pastel portraits of the silent movie stars and Hollywood legends of the 1920s and 1930s. Sheldon’s portraits of actresses deserve to be glorified. These women were all tough dames. Most came from blue collar backgrounds and made their own way to the top in Hollywood at a time of autocratic studio bosses and sex pest producers. Some like Clara Bow lived a life of excess and ultimately paid for it. Others like Katharine Hepburn were strong-willed and fiercely independent who relished their freedom and privacy. Many died far too young. But all had a talent to entertain, inspire and bring a little hope—the kind of thing people get from religious paintings. The original ‘It Girl’ Clara Bow. Clara Bow. The original ‘sex symbol’ and ‘Blonde Bombshell’ Jean Harlow. Jean Harlow. Katharine ...
The Glorified American Girl Portrait Of Mary Wesson Miriam Hopkins Jean Harlow Joan Crawford Radio Magazine cover title unknown Portrait Of Peggy Hoyt In Art Nouveau Hat Ziegfeld Follies Girl With …
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gmgallery: Ballerina photographed by Charles Gates Sheldon, 1920s www.stores.eBay.com/GrapefruitMoonGallery
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Leopoldo Metlicovitz (Trieste, 17 luglio 1868 – Ponte Lambro, 19 ottobre 1944) è stato un pittore, illustratore, scenografo teatrale e pubblicitario italiano, esponente del Liberty.È considerato, assieme a Leonetto Cappiello, Adolf Hohenstein, Giovanni Maria Mataloni e Marcello Dudovich uno dei padri del moderno cartellonismo italiano. Figlio di un commerciante di origini dalmate (il cognome della famiglia era in origine Metlicovich), a quattordici anni lavora come apprendista in una tipografia di Udine, dove impara la tecnica della litografia. Qui viene notato da Giulio Ricordi, titolare delle omonime Officine Grafiche, che lo invita a Milano a lavorare come aiuto litografo. Nel 1892, dopo aver collaborato con la Tensi, azienda di prodotti fotografici, rientra in Ricordi come direttore tecnico. Nel contempo, si inserisce nell'ambiente teatrale e inizia la sua carriera come scenografo e costumista alla Scala. La sartoria Mele di Napoli gli affida l'incarico di pubblicizzare i suoi capi d'abbigliamento e nel 1906, in occasione della grande Esposizione Universale a Milano, vince il concorso per il manifesto della fiera, affermandosi anche come cartellonista e collaborando poi con diverse riviste come illustratore. www.marcellodudovich.it