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Eggleston, William

WILLIAM EGGLESTON Dolls on a Cadillac, 2004

Regular price $125
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William Eggleston’s Dolls on a Hood presents a haunting yet mesmerizing scene: a cluster of discarded dolls sprawled across the gleaming hood of a Cadillac. The car’s reflective surface distorts the world around it, adding a surreal quality to the image. A master of capturing the beauty and mystery of the mundane, Eggleston turns this everyday moment into something rich with symbolism—contrasting childhood innocence with the cool detachment of polished metal.

Details

Sku: CB3767

Artist: William Eggleston

Title: Dolls on a Cadillac

Year: 2004

Signed: No

Medium: Offset Lithograph

Edition Size: Unknown

Framed: No

Frame Suggestion: Inquire with our experts for framing suggestions.

Condition: A: Mint

Dimensions

Paper Size: 27.5 x 39.25 inches ( 70 x 100 cm )

Image Size: 25.25 x 38.5 inches ( 64 x 98 cm )

WILLIAM EGGLESTON Dolls on a Cadillac, 2004

$125

About the Artist

William Eggleston

William Eggleston (b. 1939) is an American photographer known for elevating color photography as a legitimate art form. Born in Memphis and raised in Mississippi, he was influenced by Robert Frank and Henri Cartier-Bresson. Working largely in isolation, Eggleston gained early recognition when MoMA curator John Szarkowski encountered his vivid color prints in 1969. Eggleston began teaching at Harvard in the early 1970s, where he discovered dye-transfer printing—a technique that brought extraordinary richness to his work. This process produced some of his most iconic images, including The Red Ceiling (1973), which he described as “like red blood that’s wet on the wall.”
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