Frank Zappa Fine Art Print
Image may not exactly match item shipped.
In cooperation with photographer Baron Wolman, this print was hand colorized by Ann Rhoney. Hand coloring refers to a method of manually adding color to a monochrome photograph, generally either to heighten the realism of the image or for artistic purposes.
11x14 Matted, Signed & Numbered are from a limited edition of 150.
16x20 Matted, Signed & Numbered are from a limited edition of 150.
20x24 Matted, Signed & Numbered are from a limited edition of 75.
"In May 1968, Rolling Stone writer Jerry Hopkins and I went up to Frank Zappa's house high atop Laurel Canyon in Los Angeles to interview and photograph Frank for a cover story. For some unknown reason, in the hills above the house was a collection of old and rusting road grading equipment, including this big D-7 or D-8 tractor upon which Frank started climbing and miming and having a good ol' time." -Baron Wolman
About Wolfgang's Photography
The majority of our photography is custom produced to ensure the finest quality. Please allow 4-7 days for processing before your photo will ship. Vintage images were produced using a wide range of cameras. The size listed is the size of the paper used to produce the print. In some cases, there will be a white border surrounding the image.
Settling in Haight-Ashbury in the 60's, Wolman was surrounded by Janis and the Grateful Dead in close-by digs. Wolman was soon accompanying journalist Jann Wenner to the now famous and genre-defining Mills College conference on rock music. Wenner happened to be the founder of Rolling Stone magazine. He liked Wolman's style, offered him a job and Wolman launched as the first official document-er of the new psychedelic age. Beginning with the magazine's opening issue, Wolman's photographs were windows on the parade of the different, the delightful and the doomed, and his pictures became the gold standard by which rock photography would be measured.