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Chuck Jones "Let Me Straighten Your Tie" Hand Signed, Hand Painted Limited Edition Sericel.
Item #243012

$1,050.00
Add To Cart

Medium
sericel

Dimensions
12.5 x 10.5
x

QART.COM CUSTOM FRAMING SERVICES


What you can expect:

• Personal Service
• Professional design options
• Exceptional quality


The process:

We will email suggestions. You can request further options and make special requests.

Only acid free materials contact the art for long term preservation. Paper works are framed with plexi.

Canvas works are typically framed without plexi so that the vibrancy and interaction with light can be best appreciated.


Framing may be cancelled at any point before actual framing work begins.

Quality Guarantee. You may return your item for a refund within 15 days (excluding shipping).


Feel free to contact us with any questions you may have on this service!


No additional charge for shipping. Alaska and Hawaii addresses will have a higher rate which you can see in your cart by the "custom frame it" option.

"Let Me Straighten Your Tie" is a limited edition animation cel with hand painted coloring on sericel outline. The piece is numbered, hand signed by Chuck Jones (1912-2002), and includes a Certificate of Authenticity! Measures Approx: 12.5" x 10.5"
 
U.S. Delivery  FREE SHIPPING

Chuck Jones (September 21, 1912 - February 22, 2002) was born in Spokane, Washington but grew up in Hollywood, California where he was inspired by the comedic talents and slapstick humor of Charlie Chaplin and Buster Keaton. As a child, he occasionally worked as an extra in Mac Sennett comedies.

Jones graduated from Chouinard Art Institute in Los Angeles (now California Institute of the Arts). He often drew pencil portraits for the price of one dollar each and sold them on Olvera Street in downtown Los Angeles. In 1932, Jones got his first job as a cel washer for Ubbe Iwerks, a former Disney Animator. In 1936, Jones began working for Leon Schlesinger Studio, (later sold to Warner Bros.), after being hired by Friz Freleng as an animator. Once the animation branch of Warner Bros. closed, Jones briefly worked for Disney before moving to MGM where he created new episodes of Tom and Jerry and directed features such as The Dot and the Line, which went on to win an Academy Award for Animated Short Film.

Chuck Jones’ work has been honored at film festivals and museums throughout the world, including a one-man retrospective at the Museum of Modern Art in New York City. His autobiography, Chuck Amuck: The Life and Times of an Animated Cartoonist , appeared in 1989, now in its fifth printing.

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