Whiting’s work is defined by its 19th century sensibility — an enduring influence on generations that followed. Most artists are dead; following is a declaration of love.

Beside the River, No. 24 from the series "Stereoscopic Views of American and Foreign Scenery"
Whiting Bros. Americans, active late 1860s

Harvest Talk
Charles White American, 1918-1979

This, My Brother
Charles White (American, 1918–1979)

Sketchbook
Charles White American, 1918-1979

Portrait of a Woman
Charles White American, 1918-1979

Love Letter III
Charles White (American, 1918-1979) printed and published by Edward Hamilton (American)

Patched Window, from the portfolio "Sequence 15" (1959)
Minor White American, 1908–1976

White Crucifixion
Marc Chagall Born Vitebsk (formerly Russian Empire, now Belarus), 1887; died Saint-Paul, France, 1985

Thirty-Four Hundred Sheridan Road Apartment Building, Chicago, Illinois, Perspective
White and Weber (American, 1923-1932) Bertram A. Weber (American, 1898–1989) Charles Elmer White, Jr. (American, 1876–1936)

A Mile Underground, Kimberly Diamond Mine, South Africa
Margaret Bourke-White American, 1904–1971

World's Highest Standard of Living
Margaret Bourke-White American, 1904–1971

Late August Songs
Pae White American, born 1963

Buchenwald Camp Victims
Margaret Bourke-White American, 1904–1971

Mahatma Gandhi Spinning
Margaret Bourke-White American, 1904–1971

42,000 feet over Kansas
Margaret Bourke-White American, 1904–1971

Fort Peck Dam, Montana
Margaret Bourke–White American, 1904–1971

Vultures of Calcutta, India
Margaret Bourke-White American, 1904–1971

I Have a Dream
Charles White (American, 1918-1979) printed by Daniel Freeman (American) published by Cirrus Editions (American, founded 1970) commissioned by the Graphic Arts Council of the Los Angeles County Museum of Art

Sound of Silence
Charles White (American, 1918-1979) printed by David Panosh

Lighthouse and Wood, Multiple Image
Minor White American, 1908–1976