Painting of indigenous Mexicans done by John Coleman Burroughs and exhibited at Stendahl Gallery. Burroughs was the son of Edgar Rice Burroughs, American author best known for his creation of the character Tarzan.
Painting of indigenous Mexican man by John Coleman Burroughs and exhibited at Stendahl Gallery. The painting is titled "Hombre y Pipa" (Man and Pipe). The paintings were oils and pastels. Burroughs was the son of Edgar Rice Burroughs, American author best known for his creation of the character Tarzan.
Photograph of a picture of "Little Red Riding Hood," being propped up for a portrait by an unidentified woman. The portrait stands at center, balanced on the floor of a porch. It stands slightly lopsided. A woman stands behind it. Her arm reaches down from the top edge of the frame and her hand grazes the edge of the picture to help support it. A door stands behind the woman. In the picture, Little Red Riding Hood stands at center in the snow outside the open front door of a dwelling. The photograph was taken for Daisy Kellum for whom this picture was an in-joke.
An underexposed photograph of the picture, "Little Red Riding Hood," propped up in a rocking chair in the Jones home in Red Bluff. The painting sits center in a rocking chair. Dolls sit on the ground to the far left in front of a wall. A curtain is spread open at right giving way to an entryway between rooms. A door stands in the distance at right. In the picture, Little Red Riding Hood stands at center in the snow outside the open front door of a dwelling. The photograph was taken for Daisy Kellum for whom this picture was an in-joke.
Photograph of 3 paintings Otis Art Institute students on a wall. The larger center painting shows a Viking type ship with a sail in water seen from a cliff with steep mountains in the background.
This photograph appears with the article, “New Statue of Lincoln—General Greely Given Medal—Quintuplet Kids Born,” Los Angeles Times, 20 Mar. 1935: 18.