Sale on canvas prints! Use code ABCXYZ at checkout for a special discount!
Boundary: Bleed area may not be visible.
by David Lee Guss
$36.00
Size
Orientation
Image Size
Product Details
Decorate your bathroom and dry yourself off with our luxuriously soft bath towels and hand towels. Our towels are made from brushed microfiber with a 100% cotton back for extra absorption. The top of the towel has the image printed on it, and the back is white cotton. Available in three different sizes: hand towel, bath towel, and bath sheet.
Design Details
Duke's adversary in Stagecoach,'' Geronimo, adorns this Pima Indian's shirt worn while watching during a parade commemorating the 60th anniversary of... more
Care Instructions
Machine wash cold and tumble dry with low heat.
Ships Within
1 - 2 business days
Duke's adversary in "Stagecoach,'' Geronimo, adorns this Pima Indian's shirt worn while watching during a parade commemorating the 60th anniversary of the invasion of Iwo Jima.
Pima Indian Ira Hayes (1923-1955) was one of the Marines raising the flag on Mt. Surabachi in Joe Rosenthal's immortal Iwo Jima photo.
@2009 David Lee Guss Film homage, JW, Pima Indians watching parade, Sacaton, AZ, 2005
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...
$36.00
There are no comments for Pima Indians watching parade Sacaton Arizona 2005. Click here to post the first comment.