Michael Joseph (1941-) - Dogs and bones - unique studio shot test print

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Estimat  € 800 - € 1.000
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27 €
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20 €
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15 €

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Dogs & Bones

Photographer: Michael Joseph
Photo taken in: the 1960s
Original title: Dogs & Bones (or perhaps Life Isn't Fair!)
Print type: Original darkroom print
Signed and titled by the artist
Mount size: 40 × 50 cm

A wonderfully witty, deceptively simple photograph from Michael Joseph's early advertising years, demonstrating how a single visual idea can communicate an entire story in an instant.

Against a vast expanse of white space, two dogs sit facing a delicious dilemma. The larger dog, powerful and imposing, is paired with a tiny bone scarcely worthy of its size. Nearby, a diminutive terrier finds itself the unlikely guardian of an enormous bone, seemingly far beyond its needs.

The arrangement feels immediately wrong - and that is precisely the point.

Within seconds, the viewer begins constructing a narrative. Should the larger dog feel cheated? Is the smaller dog lucky, smug, oblivious, or simply grateful? The photograph invites us to project our own experiences onto the scene. Fairness, fortune, privilege, envy, injustice, luck - all emerge from a composition containing little more than two dogs and two bones.

This was the brilliance of the finest creative directors and advertising photographers of the era. Long before Photoshop, algorithms and focus-grouped marketing campaigns, great advertising often relied upon a single elegant visual paradox. The challenge was not simply to sell a product, but to provoke an emotion, trigger a memory, raise a smile or spark a conversation.

Michael Joseph excelled at precisely this kind of visual storytelling. Throughout his career he transformed animals, objects and everyday situations into memorable narratives that lingered long after the viewer had walked away. Here, with remarkable economy, he creates an image that is humorous, philosophical and surprisingly human.

The photograph's minimalist composition only strengthens its impact. The generous white space isolates the subjects, allowing the absurdity of the situation to resonate. Nothing distracts from the central idea. Every element has a purpose; every detail contributes to the joke.

Although created during the golden age of British advertising photography, the image feels as fresh and relevant today as when it was made. After all, who hasn't occasionally looked at someone else's bone and wondered how they got so lucky?

Printed by Michael Joseph in the darkroom and signed by the artist, this is an original photographic object rather than a later reproduction. Rich tonal values, crisp detail and the unmistakable presence of traditional analogue craftsmanship make it a particularly appealing piece for collectors of vintage photography, advertising history, canine imagery and visual wit.

A charming, intelligent and conversation-starting photograph that proves the most effective ideas are often the simplest.

"Sometimes the big dog gets the small bone. Sometimes the small dog gets the big break."

#MichaelJoseph
#DogsAndBones
#LifeIsntFair
#VisualWit
#VintageAdvertising
#AdvertisingPhotography
#BritishPhotography
#OriginalDarkroomPrint
#SilverGelatinPrint
#DogPhotography
#CreativeDirection
#1960sPhotography
#AnalogPhotography
#MinimalistArt
#PhotographyCollector
#FineArtPhotography
#StorytellingPhotography
#VintagePrint
#PhotographicHumour
#OneOfAKindPhotography

Historien til selger

Min far, Michael Joseph, var en London-basert reklamefotograf fra midten av 1960-tallet til tidlig på 1990-tallet. I løpet av disse tiårene skapte han en ekstraordinær samling arbeid—hans mest kjente bilde er den ikoniske gatefold-omslaget til Beggars Banquet for Rolling Stones. Min fortsatte misjon er å dele og feire det vi kaller «de andre bildene»: de mindre kjente, men likevel overbevisende bildene fra hans arkiv. Dette er verk som levde utenfor overskriftene—testtrykk, alternative rammer fra større oppdrag, og mer stillferdige, mer personlige fotografier, alle laget med hans karakteristiske intensitet, disiplin og hengivenhet til håndverket. Mye av atmosfæren deres kommer fra mørkrommet selv. Dette er fotografier formet av lys, timing og håndverk: kompliserte gruppekomposisjoner, skulpturale stilleben, og øyeblikk som inviterer betrakteren til å dvele ved og se igjen. Variasjon står sentralt i arkivet, og jeg tilbyr ofte unike, enestående verk som ikke finnes noe annet sted. Jeg håper du liker å oppdage farens arbeid like mye som jeg liker å dele det, og at du finner her ikke bare et bilde, men et ekte stykke fotografisk historie. Alle verk sendes nøye beskyttet og pakkes med hengivenhet og omtanke, tilpasset et unikt historisk fotografisk trykk. USA-kjøpere vennligst merk: Told- og avgiftskostnader betales ved avsender og er inkludert i fraktprisen. Ingen ytterligere avgifter bør påløpe ved levering, med mindre forskriftene endres.
Oversatt av Google Translate

Dogs & Bones

Photographer: Michael Joseph
Photo taken in: the 1960s
Original title: Dogs & Bones (or perhaps Life Isn't Fair!)
Print type: Original darkroom print
Signed and titled by the artist
Mount size: 40 × 50 cm

A wonderfully witty, deceptively simple photograph from Michael Joseph's early advertising years, demonstrating how a single visual idea can communicate an entire story in an instant.

Against a vast expanse of white space, two dogs sit facing a delicious dilemma. The larger dog, powerful and imposing, is paired with a tiny bone scarcely worthy of its size. Nearby, a diminutive terrier finds itself the unlikely guardian of an enormous bone, seemingly far beyond its needs.

The arrangement feels immediately wrong - and that is precisely the point.

Within seconds, the viewer begins constructing a narrative. Should the larger dog feel cheated? Is the smaller dog lucky, smug, oblivious, or simply grateful? The photograph invites us to project our own experiences onto the scene. Fairness, fortune, privilege, envy, injustice, luck - all emerge from a composition containing little more than two dogs and two bones.

This was the brilliance of the finest creative directors and advertising photographers of the era. Long before Photoshop, algorithms and focus-grouped marketing campaigns, great advertising often relied upon a single elegant visual paradox. The challenge was not simply to sell a product, but to provoke an emotion, trigger a memory, raise a smile or spark a conversation.

Michael Joseph excelled at precisely this kind of visual storytelling. Throughout his career he transformed animals, objects and everyday situations into memorable narratives that lingered long after the viewer had walked away. Here, with remarkable economy, he creates an image that is humorous, philosophical and surprisingly human.

The photograph's minimalist composition only strengthens its impact. The generous white space isolates the subjects, allowing the absurdity of the situation to resonate. Nothing distracts from the central idea. Every element has a purpose; every detail contributes to the joke.

Although created during the golden age of British advertising photography, the image feels as fresh and relevant today as when it was made. After all, who hasn't occasionally looked at someone else's bone and wondered how they got so lucky?

Printed by Michael Joseph in the darkroom and signed by the artist, this is an original photographic object rather than a later reproduction. Rich tonal values, crisp detail and the unmistakable presence of traditional analogue craftsmanship make it a particularly appealing piece for collectors of vintage photography, advertising history, canine imagery and visual wit.

A charming, intelligent and conversation-starting photograph that proves the most effective ideas are often the simplest.

"Sometimes the big dog gets the small bone. Sometimes the small dog gets the big break."

#MichaelJoseph
#DogsAndBones
#LifeIsntFair
#VisualWit
#VintageAdvertising
#AdvertisingPhotography
#BritishPhotography
#OriginalDarkroomPrint
#SilverGelatinPrint
#DogPhotography
#CreativeDirection
#1960sPhotography
#AnalogPhotography
#MinimalistArt
#PhotographyCollector
#FineArtPhotography
#StorytellingPhotography
#VintagePrint
#PhotographicHumour
#OneOfAKindPhotography

Historien til selger

Min far, Michael Joseph, var en London-basert reklamefotograf fra midten av 1960-tallet til tidlig på 1990-tallet. I løpet av disse tiårene skapte han en ekstraordinær samling arbeid—hans mest kjente bilde er den ikoniske gatefold-omslaget til Beggars Banquet for Rolling Stones. Min fortsatte misjon er å dele og feire det vi kaller «de andre bildene»: de mindre kjente, men likevel overbevisende bildene fra hans arkiv. Dette er verk som levde utenfor overskriftene—testtrykk, alternative rammer fra større oppdrag, og mer stillferdige, mer personlige fotografier, alle laget med hans karakteristiske intensitet, disiplin og hengivenhet til håndverket. Mye av atmosfæren deres kommer fra mørkrommet selv. Dette er fotografier formet av lys, timing og håndverk: kompliserte gruppekomposisjoner, skulpturale stilleben, og øyeblikk som inviterer betrakteren til å dvele ved og se igjen. Variasjon står sentralt i arkivet, og jeg tilbyr ofte unike, enestående verk som ikke finnes noe annet sted. Jeg håper du liker å oppdage farens arbeid like mye som jeg liker å dele det, og at du finner her ikke bare et bilde, men et ekte stykke fotografisk historie. Alle verk sendes nøye beskyttet og pakkes med hengivenhet og omtanke, tilpasset et unikt historisk fotografisk trykk. USA-kjøpere vennligst merk: Told- og avgiftskostnader betales ved avsender og er inkludert i fraktprisen. Ingen ytterligere avgifter bør påløpe ved levering, med mindre forskriftene endres.
Oversatt av Google Translate

Detaljer

Utskriftsdato
1990
Kunstner
Michael Joseph (1941-)
Solgt av
Eier eller forhandler
Tittel på kunstverk
Dogs and bones - unique studio shot test print
Tilstand
Original
Teknikk
Gelatin-søv trykk
Height
38,9 cm
Utgave
Authentic darkroom print by the photographer
Width
34,8 cm
Signatur
Signert for hånd
Sjanger
Billedkunst fotografi
FrankrikeBekreftet
501
Objekter solgt
100%
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