"Kiss 1956 (Elvis)" by Alfred Wertheimer -
Kiss 1956 (Elvis) Limited Edition Print by Alfred Wertheimer
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Kiss 1956 (Elvis) Limited Edition Print by Alfred Wertheimer - 0
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Kiss 1956 (Elvis)

Alfred Wertheimer

Limited Edition Print : Photograph Print
Size : 10x15 in  |  25x38 cm
Framed : 19x24 in  |  48x61 cm
Edition :

Listing Info
Artist Bio

Year1956

Hand SignedLower Right in Pen 

Condition Excellent 

Framed with GlassMetal, With Off White Backing 

Certificate of AuthenticityArt Brokerage 

LID127159

Alfred Wertheimer - Germany

Art Brokerage: Alfred Wertheimer German Artist: b. 1929-2014. In 1956 freelance photographer Alfred Wertheimer was assigned to photograph a 21-year-old singer whom RCA was promoting. It was Elvis Presley, a name the 26-year-old Wertheimer did not recognize when he trekked down to New York City's Studio 50 (later to be named the Ed Sullivan Theater) to photograph Presley's appearance on Tommy Dorsey and Jimmy Dorsey's Stage Show. At the time, Elvis had already recorded "Heartbreak Hotel" and was beginning to gain some notoriety, but he was nowhere close to becoming a cultural icon. He could still walk the streets unrecognized, without entourage and bodyguards, so Alfred Wertheimer was able to shoot reams of film of Elvis, up close and personal, both on stage and off, in the last remaining months before Elvis's life would change forever. A series of extraordinary photographs document this brief moment in time when the 21-year-old Elvis Presley was on the cusp of national stardom. It is a city that love it or hate it tows you in: and this is reflected in the work of generations of artists, from those like Charles Sheeler and Berenice Abbott, who celebrated its architectural feats as symbolic of progress, to those who recorded the price of modernity as reflected in the activities of its underworld, like Edward Hopper and Weegee. Almost everyone comes to New York to try their hand at success. Listings wanted.

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