Bob Dylan 1966 by Art Kane
Bob Dylan 1966 by Art Kane
Bob Dylan, taken in 1966 by Art Kane
Art Kane, a huge Bob Dylan fan, cornered an uncooperative Dylan on the rooftop of the CBS records building in Los Angeles to get his shot for McCall’s Magazine’s ‘Teen Idols’ photo essay in spring 1966. Dylan was on a break from his infamous first electric tour of Europe, where his folk fans, unhappy about the electric rock direction Dylan’s music had taken, were booing him mercilessly. He was in no mood for a bossy photographer to give him directions, and Art Kane didn’t shoot reportage. “I’m going to stay until I get what I want” Kane said. Dylan eventually crouched in the corner giving a seething look. “I had my shot” said Kane.
Art Kane fine art print details
Limited edition, fine art prints of Art Kane photographs are created from Kane's original negatives and transparencies and have been scanned on a high performance Heidelberg drum scanner with a maximum optical resolution of 19,200 dpi. The Digital C-Type photograph is made by LI Digital Inc., NYC, a specialist in fine art photographic printing. The 16” x 20” and larger sizes are made on an Epson Fine Art Printer using Epson Premium Luster Archival Photo Paper. The photographs include an official Art Kane Estate document that is stamped, dated, edition numbered, and countersigned for authenticity by Jonathan Kane, Art Kane's son and Director of the Art Kane Archive. The document is created on archival crack and peel paper and can be placed on the verso of the image, or on the back of the frame at the client's discretion
Available in two sizes, 16x20” - edition 40 and 30x40” - edition 7
Framed or unframed. Museum grade framing features non-glare museum glass, and Standard framing features UV protected Conservation Clear glass.