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Film Noir Pulp Magazines Late 1940's-early 1950's Store Window Tucson Arizona Wood Print featuring the photograph Film noir pulp magazines late 1940's-early 1950's store window Tucson Arizona by David Lee Guss

Frame

Top Mat

Top Mat

Bottom Mat

Bottom Mat

Dimensions

Image:

10.00" x 6.50"

Overall:

10.00" x 6.50"

 

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Film noir pulp magazines late 1940's-early 1950's store window Tucson Arizona Wood Print

David Lee Guss

by David Lee Guss

$59.00

Product Details

Film noir pulp magazines late 1940's-early 1950's store window Tucson Arizona wood print by David Lee Guss.   Bring your artwork to life with the texture and added depth of a wood print. Your image gets printed directly onto a sheet of 3/4" thick maple wood. There are D-clips on the back of the print for mounting it to your wall using mounting hooks and nails (included).

Design Details

Pulp fiction magazines, with their hard-boiled detective stories, are the literary source for film noir.... more

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3 - 4 business days

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Artist's Description

Pulp fiction magazines, with their hard-boiled detective stories, are the literary source for film noir.

"Black Mask" (1920-1951) is the most prestigious. Raymond Chandler (1888-1959) and Dashiell Hammett (1898-1961) both published in it.

Other writers who worked for the pulps include Leigh Brackett (1915-1978), Robert Bloch (1917-1994), Philip K. Dick (1928-1982), Horace McCoy (1897-1955), Jim Thompson (1906-1977) and Cornell Woolrich (1903-1968). All had their short stories or novels made into films.

By far Woolrich had the most works adapted for the screen. Leigh Brackett co-wrote the screenplays for several Howard Hawks films, including "Big Sleep" (1946), "Rio Bravo" (1959) "Hatari" (1962) "El Dorado" (1966) and "Rio Lobo" (1970).

The most hard bitten writer of them all, Jim Thompson, worked with Stanley Kubrick on "The Killing" (1956) and "Paths of Glory" (1957). He even acted in "Farewell, My Lovely" (1975), an adaptation of the Raymond Chandl...

About David Lee Guss

David Lee Guss

I first became obsessed with photography and motion pictures while growing up in post WW2 Manila in the Philippine Islands in the late 1940's/early 1950's. Film noirs were a particular influence. But my first love remains the theater. I acted in numerous amateur productions from 1958 to 1978. In 1979 I earned a MA in drama from the University of Arizona; earlier getting a BA in English from the University of Minnesota, where I co-founded the first film society on campus and ran it for four years. While at the U of A, I studied with the master black and white photo essayist W. Eugene Smith (1918-1978) the last year of his life. I am the last person cited in Jim Hughes' definitive biography of Gene, as I wrote about attending his final...

 

$59.00

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