View in gallery
Tribute 13, NYC Tribute 13, NYC

From the I - Tribute collection

(The following is excerpted from the Forward of A Tribute by Jay Maisel, Barnes & Noble Books, 2001)

I make no pretense of being able to imagine the sorrow of those who lost loved ones on September 11, 2001.  

This book is a “once upon a time” story: a retelling of a more tranquil, more gentle past, one which will never return. When I first set up my bed 35 years ago in the building in which I still live, I raised it up so hight so that it was level with the windows. The view looks south, downtown. 

Every night, before sleep, the last look of the day was at the twin towers. Every morning when I awoke the first look would be to evaluate the light on the towers and figure out, was I going to photograph them? Or had I done it already? I photographed them from all over the city, from New Jersey, Brooklyn, Queens, from the Plaza looking up, from helicopters looking down, and from other buildings.

New Yorkers were at first wary of the two upstart “new kids on the block.” Later they grew to love and accept them as much or even more than the stately classical favorite, the Empire State Building. They were so very quintessentially our symbols, they were double–as in NY, NY. They were in your face all the time, visible almost anywhere you went. You could orient where you were by where they were. They could be seen for miles from places I’m sure I’ve never been to, whose occupants cherished their distant views as much as we in Manhattan did our intimate ones.

They were amazing sculptural forms, ever-changing pillars of infinite color, agleam with reflection of the day’s light. At night their staccato bands of randomly lit floors glowed high in the night sky, dwarfing their neighbors. Sentinels and beacons, they were ultimately easy targets.

This, then, is a memory of the twin towers of the World Trade Center–a sort of extended group of family snapshots of cherished departed friends in days and nights gone by. Lovingly accumulated over the last 35 years, it is an unabashedly and unashamedly romantic and loving memory.

Tribute 13, NYC

USA
Kodachrome, 1973-2001

$2,400.00

Pay by credit card, check, or over the phone

From the I - Tribute collection

(The following is excerpted from the Forward of A Tribute by Jay Maisel, Barnes & Noble Books, 2001)

I make no pretense of being able to imagine the sorrow of those who lost loved ones on September 11, 2001.  

This book is a “once upon a time” story: a retelling of a more tranquil, more gentle past, one which will never return. When I first set up my bed 35 years ago in the building in which I still live, I raised it up so hight so that it was level with the windows. The view looks south, downtown. 

Every night, before sleep, the last look of the day was at the twin towers. Every morning when I awoke the first look would be to evaluate the light on the towers and figure out, was I going to photograph them? Or had I done it already? I photographed them from all over the city, from New Jersey, Brooklyn, Queens, from the Plaza looking up, from helicopters looking down, and from other buildings.

New Yorkers were at first wary of the two upstart “new kids on the block.” Later they grew to love and accept them as much or even more than the stately classical favorite, the Empire State Building. They were so very quintessentially our symbols, they were double–as in NY, NY. They were in your face all the time, visible almost anywhere you went. You could orient where you were by where they were. They could be seen for miles from places I’m sure I’ve never been to, whose occupants cherished their distant views as much as we in Manhattan did our intimate ones.

They were amazing sculptural forms, ever-changing pillars of infinite color, agleam with reflection of the day’s light. At night their staccato bands of randomly lit floors glowed high in the night sky, dwarfing their neighbors. Sentinels and beacons, they were ultimately easy targets.

This, then, is a memory of the twin towers of the World Trade Center–a sort of extended group of family snapshots of cherished departed friends in days and nights gone by. Lovingly accumulated over the last 35 years, it is an unabashedly and unashamedly romantic and loving memory.

Paper & Printing

Epson Legacy Baryta 

Baryta paper has a white, smooth satin finish with the look and feel of the revered silver halide F-surface darkroom papers and provides excellent image permanence.

13x19 prints are placed on backing board inside a clear plastic bag. They are then packaged in a custom 15x21x3 corrugated box protected inside 3 inches of charcoal foam. More about shipping...

20x30 prints are shipped flat in MasterPak PrintPak Art Shipping Sleeves. A "container within a container" with multiple layers of protection.

40x60 Paper prints will rolled and shipped in a archival tubeMore about shipping...

Dye-Sublimation onto Aluminum (Metal)

Transferring the print to aluminum produces a vivid, archival quality print that is scratch resistant, doesn’t require glass or framing, and is lightweight and easy to hang. More about the paper...

Metal prints are shipped in a sturdy 44x63x3 wooden crate. More about shipping...