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Bruce Weber — J'Leon Love, Boxer, Detroit, Michigan (49820-195-10)
Bruce Weber

J'Leon Love, Boxer, Detroit, Michigan (49820-195-10)

2006

This silver gelatin photograph from 2006 captures boxer J'Leon Love in Detroit, Michigan, with the quiet intensity and psychological depth that defines Bruce Weber's most celebrated portraiture. Shot in Weber's signature style, the image transcends sports documentation to become something closer to a meditation on the body, discipline, and masculine grace. The gelatin silver process lends the composition a rich tonal range, from deep, velvety blacks to luminous highlights, anchoring the subject in a tradition of photographic craft that Weber has consistently honored throughout his career. Weber has long occupied a singular position at the intersection of fine art and American mythology, bringing to athletes, musicians, and cultural figures the same reverential attention typically reserved for classical portraiture. His photographs of boxers are particularly resonant, finding in the sport a metaphor for endurance, beauty, and the vulnerability beneath physical power. J'Leon Love is rendered here not merely as an athlete but as an archetype, a figure whose presence carries the weight of place, identity, and ambition within the broader American landscape Weber so persistently explores. Measuring 50.8 by 61 centimeters and hand-signed by the artist, this work is presented through Fahey/Klein Gallery, a trusted source for museum-quality photography with a longstanding commitment to Weber's oeuvre. The piece is offered unframed, allowing collectors the freedom to present it according to their own aesthetic vision. For those drawn to photography that balances formal rigor with emotional generosity, this print represents a compelling and historically grounded acquisition.

Medium
Silver Gelatin Photograph
Overall
Signed
Yes
Location
Fahey/Klein Gallery, Los Angeles, CA

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About this work

Bruce Weber, J'Leon Love, Boxer, Detroit, Michigan (49820-195-10), 2006

This silver gelatin photograph from 2006 captures boxer J'Leon Love in Detroit, Michigan, with the quiet intensity and psychological depth that defines Bruce Weber's most celebrated portraiture. Shot in Weber's signature style, the image transcends sports documentation to become something closer to a meditation on the body, discipline, and masculine grace. The gelatin silver process lends the composition a rich tonal range, from deep, velvety blacks to luminous highlights, anchoring the subject in a tradition of photographic craft that Weber has consistently honored throughout his career. Weber has long occupied a singular position at the intersection of fine art and American mythology, bringing to athletes, musicians, and cultural figures the same reverential attention typically reserved for classical portraiture. His photographs of boxers are particularly resonant, finding in the sport a metaphor for endurance, beauty, and the vulnerability beneath physical power. J'Leon Love is rendered here not merely as an athlete but as an archetype, a figure whose presence carries the weight of place, identity, and ambition within the broader American landscape Weber so persistently explores. Measuring 50.8 by 61 centimeters and hand-signed by the artist, this work is presented through Fahey/Klein Gallery, a trusted source for museum-quality photography with a longstanding commitment to Weber's oeuvre. The piece is offered unframed, allowing collectors the freedom to present it according to their own aesthetic vision. For those drawn to photography that balances formal rigor with emotional generosity, this print represents a compelling and historically grounded acquisition.

Medium
Silver Gelatin Photograph
Dimensions
overall: 50.8 x 61 cm
Year
2006
Signed
Hand-signed by the artist
Seen at
Fahey/Klein Gallery, Los Angeles, CA

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Collected by

Nick Phoenix , Andrew P. Cooper, Derek Jones, Marcel Slater