Black & White Portrait Of a Young Man By Arthur L. Bundy, Early 1900s.
Black and White Portrait Of a Young Man, Photographed By Arthur L. Bundy 1876-1962, 722 Main St, Richmond, Indiana, Early 1900s.
Arthur L. Bundy Son Of John Elwood Bundy Who Was Head Of The Art Department at Earlham College Where He Taught Drawing and Painting. During That Time, a Book Of His Etchings, "Fond Recollections" Was Published and Reflected His Love Of The Scenery around Earlham. He Exhibited Widely across The United States Including The 1904 Louisiana Purchase Exposition, The Pennsylvania Academy In 1904, The National Academy Of Design In 1911 and 1916, The Chicago Art Institute In 1903 and 1907-1914, The Hoosier Salon In 1925, and The 1902 Society Of Western Artists. His Primary Dealer Was J.W. Young Of Chicago. In 1929, Bundy, Who Was Getting Quite Frail, Moved To Harlingen, Texas With His Son, But Died In a Sanatorium In Cincinnati On January 17, 1933.
An Added Tidbit
Though Photography was invented in the 1830s, it wasn’t until the 1920s that photography came into its own as an artistic medium. Photographers began to embrace its social, political and aesthetic potential, experimenting with light, perspective and developing, as well as new subjects and abstraction. Coupled with movements in painting, sculpture and architecture, these works became known as ‘modernist photography’.
Item Code - VIS12E57A10REA
Width: 4 7/8" Height: 7 1/8" Depth: 1/8" Weight: 45 g