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Slim Aarons

Speedboat Landing (Limited Edition)

Introducing the Slim Aarons limited edition estate stamped collection.

A step above our open edition prints, crafted using C-type printing processes for superior quality and depth, honouring the integrity of traditional darkroom techniques. Each print is hand-numbered, limited to 150 editions per image and is finished with an embossed Slim Aarons signature.

Find out more on the estate stamped collection.

A Magnum motorboat belonging to Count Filippo Theodoli arrives at the private jetty of the Il Pellicano Hotel in Porto Ercole, Italy. August 1973. (Photo by Slim Aarons)

All photographs are printed, issued and authorised by Getty Images. As official partners of the Getty Images Gallery, Electric offers certified prints from their iconic photographic archive.

See our Getty Guide for more information on framing, sizing and lead time before placing your order.

About the Artist – Slim Aarons

Slim Aarons was born George Aarons in 1916. He earned his nickname first in the US Army where his tall, slender good looks marked him out from the other squaddies. The army was where he honed his photographic skills as combat snapper. He later said that war taught him the only beach worth landing on was "decorated with beautiful, seminude girls tanning in a tranquil sun."

After World War II Slim travelled across America, picking up assignments from big magazines of the era such as Life, to photograph celebrities and high-flyers. He famously never used a stylist or a make-up artist on any of his shoots. Instead, he said just photographed "attractive people doing attractive things in attractive places."

In 1974 a book was published which captured Aarons's photography prints at its colourful best. It was called A Wonderful Time and it was a thick hardback which - at the time - sold only modestly. It wasn't until a decade or two later that his photos really began to accelerate in value by which time the original books were changing hands for many hundreds of dollars. Now, you can expect to pay in excess of $2,000 for a mint condition copy of his art prints.

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