Julius Shulman
Case Study House #22 (two girls) (12 ⅛ x 15 ⅛ inch) by Julius Shulman
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- Artwork Info
- About the Artist
- About this Photograph
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1960
Gelatin silver print
Signed and annotated “Lum 12898”, in pencil, au verso
Printed circa 1995
Unframed -
Julius Shulman (October 10, 1910 – July 15, 2009) was an American architectural photographer best known for the photograph, “Case Study House #22, Los Angeles, 1960”, also known as the Stahl House. Shulman’s photography spread California Mid-century modern around the world. Through his many books, exhibits and personal appearances his work ushered in a new appreciation for the movement beginning in the 1990s.
Source: Wikipedia.com -
This listing offers collectors a rare chance to own a generously sized print, signed by the artist, of a photograph that Time Magazine counts among its selection of the 100 Most Influential Images of All Time:
For decades, the California Dream meant the chance to own a stucco home on a sliver of paradise. The point was the yard with the palm trees, not the contour of the walls. Julius Shulman helped change all that. In May 1960, the Brooklyn-born photographer headed to architect Pierre Koenig’s Stahl House, a glass-enclosed Hollywood Hills home with a breathtaking view of Los Angeles—one of 36 Case Study Houses that were part of an architectural experiment extolling the virtues of modernist theory and industrial materials. Shulman photographed most of the houses in the project, helping demystify modernism by highlighting its graceful simplicity and humanizing its angular edges. But none of his other pictures was more influential than the one he took of Case Study House No. 22. To show the essence of this air-breaking cantilevered building, Shulman set two glamorous women in cocktail dresses inside the house, where they appear to be floating above a mythic, twinkling city. The photo, which he called “one of my masterpieces,” is the most successful real estate image ever taken. It perfected the art of aspirational staging, turning a house into the embodiment of the Good Life, of stardusted Hollywood, of California as the Promised Land. And, thanks to Shulman, that dream now includes a glass box in the sky.