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Suchergebnisse

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  1. Catalogue Raisonné. Title: Coney Island Beach. Artist: Reginald Marsh (American, Paris 1898–1954 Dorset, Vermont) Date: 1935. Medium: Etching and engraving. Dimensions: plate: 9 x 11 15/16 in. (22.9 x 30.4 cm) sheet: 10 5/8 x 14 7/16 in. (27 x 36.7 cm) Classification: Prints. Credit Line: Gift of The Honorable William Benton, 1959.

  2. Tattoo and Haircut. 1932. Reginald Marsh (American, 1898–1954) One of the foremost realists of the 1930s, Reginald Marsh was fascinated by public behavior and excited by the commotion of New York City. Tattoo and Haircut portrays a busy scene of people talking, walking, and loitering below the massive structure of the elevated train that ran ...

  3. Reginald Albert Marsh (born "Reginald Albert Saltmarsh" on 17th September 1926 in Greenwich, London; died 9th February 2001 in Ryde, Isle of Wight) appeared on Coronation Street in two roles: firstly in March 1961 as football talent scout Mr Lawther; and he returned to the programme in irregular appearances between September 1962 and January 1976 as cockney betting shop owner Dave Smith. In ...

  4. America Seen: Between The Wars. Apr 25–Aug 7, 1961. 3 other works identified

  5. Reginald Marsh was an important urban-realist painter of Depression-era New York who made vibrant images of the seedier sides of big-city life. Coney Island, New York’s beach refuge for the masses, appealed to Marsh for its energy and eccentricities and for the opportunities it gave him to study the human body in all its variations.

  6. 22. Dez. 2012 · API. artworks/1560. In Why Not Use the “L”? the individual expressions of the three Depression-era passengers on the “L”—or “el”, an elevated train that rose above the city streets—range from distraction and exhaustion to apprehension. The walls of the car are papered with advertisements, which Reginald Marsh had meticulously ...

  7. Reginald Marsh – Zweigroschen-Kino 1936. 1000 Meisterwerke aus den großen Museen der Welt – YouTube . WIKIPEDIA