View allAll Photos Tagged ELIZABETHTAYLOR,
Production key-set master prints of Elizabeth Taylor from National Velvet by Clarence Sinclair Bull.
I write old fashioned fan letters as a hobby. I have been doing this for about a year now. Here are some autographs from my collection
Souvenir book for the 20th Century-Fox movie Cleopatra, 1963. National Publishers, 1963. Art direction: Arthur Klar.
Souvenir book for the 20th Century-Fox movie Cleopatra, 1963. National Publishers, 1963. Art direction: Arthur Klar.
What to say? Liz Taylor's beauty will live forever.
Cosa dire? La bellezza di Liz Taylor vivrà per sempre.
Qué decir? La belleza de Liz Taylor vivirá para siempre.
Was sagen? die Schönheit von Liz Taylor wird ewig leben
The old house of Elizabeth Taylor in Puerto Vallarta is now a small museum dedicated to her love story with Richard Burton
British born child star in 'Lassie Come Home' (1943), 'National Velvet' (1944), 'Courage of Lassie' (1946), 'Life with Father' (1947), 'Little Women (1949) Then came ' Father of the Bride' (1950), 'Father's Little Dividend', (1951), 'A Place in the Sun' (1951), 'Ivanhoe' (1952), 'Cat on a Hot Tin Roof (1958), 'Butterfield 8' (1960), 'Cleopatra' (1963), 'The Sandpiper (1965), 'Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?' (1966), 'The Taming of the Shrew (1967), 'The Only Game in Town' (1970), 'Under Milk Wood' (1972), 'Hammersmith Is Out (1972), 'Night Watch' (1973), 'Ash Wednesday' (1973)
Production key-set master prints of Elizabeth Taylor from The Girl Who Had Everything by Virgil Apger.
The face on this Elizabeth Taylor doll is breathtakingly beautiful and uncannily looks just as Liz Taylor looked at that age. Mattel really did a super job in recreating her face.
This doll is from the classic and very funny movie “Father of the Bride” staring Elizabeth Taylor and Spencer Tracy.
She was released in 2000 and is part of the Timeless Treasures Collection, Celebrity Dolls by Mattel.
I am going through all my dolls and trying to make a call on which to keep and which to sell. Very hard to do.
But, you know, everything in life has a purpose and if that purpose is not fulfilled, I feel it goes against Universal Law. And, this beautiful doll’s purpose is not to be shut in a dark temp controlled closet until I die and then disposed of as my heirs see fit.
For my Flickr groups…
David LaChapelle (born March 11, 1963) is an artist and photographer known for combining a hyper-realistic aesthetic with social messages.
LaChapelle’s striking images have graced the covers and pages of Italian Vogue, French Vogue, Vanity Fair, GQ, Rolling Stone and i-D, and he has photographed personalities as diverse as Björk, Janet Jackson, Tupac Shakur, Madonna, Shakira, Amanda Lepore, Deborah Harry, Eminem, Philip Johnson, Lance Armstrong, Pamela Anderson, Lil' Kim, Uma Thurman, Elizabeth Taylor, David Beckham, Paris Hilton, Jeff Koons, Leonardo DiCaprio, Hillary Clinton, Muhammad Ali, Britney Spears, and Lady Gaga, to name a few.
After establishing himself as a fixture in contemporary photography, LaChapelle decided to branch out and direct music videos, live theatrical events, and documentary films. His directing credits include music videos for artists such as Christina Aguilera, Moby, Jennifer Lopez, Britney Spears, The Vines, No Doubt and Florence and the Machine. His stage work includes Elton John’s The Red Piano and the Caesar’s Palace spectacular he designed and directed in 2004. His burgeoning interest in film led him to make the short documentary Krumped, an award-winner at Sundance from which he developed RIZE, the feature film acquired for worldwide distribution by Lion’s Gate Films. The film was released in the US and internationally in the summer of 2005 to huge critical acclaim, and was chosen to open the 2005 Tribeca Film Festival in New York City.
In 2006, LaChapelle decided to minimize his participation in commercial photography, and return to his roots by focusing on fine art photography. Since then, he has been the subject of exhibitions in both commercial galleries and leading public institutions around the world. He has had record breaking solo museum exhibitions at the Barbican Museum, London (2002), Palazzo Reale, Milan (2007), Museo del Antiguo Colegio de San Ildefonso, Mexico City (2009), the Musee de La Monnaie, Paris (2009), the Museum of Contemporary Art in Taipei, Taiwan and the Tel Aviv Museum of Art, Israel. In 2011, he has had a major exhibition of new work at The Lever House, New York and retrospectives at the Museo Arte Contemporáneo de Puerto Rico (through March 2012), the Hangaram Design Museum in Seoul (through February 2012) and Galerie Rudolfinum, Prague (through February 2012).
David LaChapelle Tak pravil LaChapelle, Galerie Rudolfinum, Praha, 2011 12 13
The galleries he has exhibited in include Tony Shafrazi and Paul Kasmin galleries in New York, Robilant + Voena in London, Alain Noirhomme Gallery in Brussels, Galerie Thomas, Munich and de Sarthe, Hong Kong. In 2012, LaChapelle is breaking new ground in his own career by showing an exhibition titled Earth Laughs in Flowers at four different international galleries simultaneously: Reformierte Dorfkirche in St. Moritz, branches of Robilant + Voena in London and Milan, and Fred Torres Collaborations in New York.