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The J. Paul Getty Trust Communications Department 1200 Getty Center Drive, Suite 400 Los Angeles, CA 90049-1681 Tel 310-440-7360 Fax 310-440-7722 Reproduction Permission September 23, 2016 Journalist Re: Reproduction Permission Dear Journalist , Thank you for your recent request for image(s) from the J. Paul Getty Trust and its operating programs (collectively "Getty"). This is a one-time permission for use of the image(s) for the article in your publication and/or for the article/listing on your Web site for a period of up to one year, and for these purposes only. Any further usage will require an additional permission. Image(s) are to be used in their entirety and are not to be cropped, altered or manipulated in any way. All image(s) are either the property of the Getty or are licensed to the Getty for the uses set forth herein. All copyright and collection credits must appear on the same or facing page(s) as the image(s). If noted, identified photographer(s) must be credited. Please refer to the next page(s) for proper notation of image caption(s) and credit(s). Images prepared for web use should use 72dpi resolution. Please let us know if you have any questions or need additional materials. We would appreciate one copy of the publication or article and/or notification of the URL address in which the image(s) appear for our files. Once again, thank you for your interest in the Getty. Sincerely, Julie Jaskol Communications Department The J. Paul Getty Trust Attachments

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Page 1: Reproduction Permission - Gettynews.getty.edu/images/9036/gettylifeandlegacy_imagesheet.pdf3. 4. 1. 2. Statue of Hercules (Lansdowne Herakles), about A.D. 125 Roman Marble Object:

The J. Paul Getty TrustCommunications Department 1200 Getty Center Drive, Suite 400Los Angeles, CA 90049-1681Tel 310-440-7360Fax 310-440-7722

Reproduction Permission

September 23, 2016

Journalist

Re: Reproduction Permission

Dear Journalist ,

Thank you for your recent request for image(s) from the J. Paul Getty Trust and its operating programs(collectively "Getty").

This is a one-time permission for use of the image(s) for the article in your publication and/or for the article/listingon your Web site for a period of up to one year, and for these purposes only. Any further usage will require anadditional permission. Image(s) are to be used in their entirety and are not to be cropped, altered or manipulatedin any way.

All image(s) are either the property of the Getty or are licensed to the Getty for the uses set forth herein. Allcopyright and collection credits must appear on the same or facing page(s) as the image(s). If noted, identifiedphotographer(s) must be credited. Please refer to the next page(s) for proper notation of image caption(s) andcredit(s). Images prepared for web use should use 72dpi resolution.

Please let us know if you have any questions or need additional materials. We would appreciate one copy of thepublication or article and/or notification of the URL address in which the image(s) appear for our files.

Once again, thank you for your interest in the Getty.

Sincerely,

Julie JaskolCommunications DepartmentThe J. Paul Getty Trust

Attachments

Page 2: Reproduction Permission - Gettynews.getty.edu/images/9036/gettylifeandlegacy_imagesheet.pdf3. 4. 1. 2. Statue of Hercules (Lansdowne Herakles), about A.D. 125 Roman Marble Object:

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Statue of Hercules (Lansdowne Herakles), about A.D. 125RomanMarbleObject: H: 193.5 x W: 77.5 x D: 73 cm (76 3/16 x 30 1/2 x 28 3/4 in.)The J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles70.AA.109

Discovered in the ruins of Roman emperor Hadrian’s villa and later sold to the English aristocrat Lord Lansdowne, this statue was purchased by J. Paul Getty in 1951. It was his favorite statue.

Torso of a Statue of a Draped Figure, possibly a Nymph or Muse, A.D. 1–100RomanMarbleObject: H: 165 cm (H: 64 15/16 in.)The J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles54.AA.12

Purchased by J. Paul Getty in 1954 in Florence from Mario Bellini, a dealer from whom Getty acquired several fine pieces.

Lidded Bowl on Dish (écuelle ronde et plateau rond), 1764Sèvres Manufactory French, active 1756–presentSoft-paste porcelainObject [bowl]: H: 12.4 x W: 19.7 x D: 15.2 cm (H: 4 7/8 x W: 7 3/4 x D: 6 in.)Object (dish): H: 4 x Diam.: 21.1 cm (H: 1 9/16 x Diam.: 8 5/16 in.)The J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles78.DE.65

J. Paul Getty was drawn to the royal provenance of this vessel.

Portrait of J. Paul Getty, 1938Gerald L. Brockhurst English, 1890–1978Oil on canvasUnframed: 73.7 x 61 cm (29 x 24 in.)The J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles© Richard Woodward67.PA.2

The portraitist Brockhurst became an important art advisor to J. Paul Getty.

Page 3: Reproduction Permission - Gettynews.getty.edu/images/9036/gettylifeandlegacy_imagesheet.pdf3. 4. 1. 2. Statue of Hercules (Lansdowne Herakles), about A.D. 125 Roman Marble Object:

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5. 6.Standing Vase, about 1785Chinese (Qianlong reign, 1736–1795) and FrenchHard-paste porcelain, gilt bronze mountsObject: H: 81 x Diam.: 56.5 cm (2 ft. 7 7/8 in. x 1 ft. 10 1/4 in.)The J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles70.DI.115

The superlative quality and possible French royal provenance of this object appealed to J. Paul Getty.

St. Bartholomew, 1661Rembrandt Harmensz. van Rijn Dutch, 1606–1669Oil on canvasUnframed: 86.7 x 75.6 cm (34 1/8 x 29 3/4 in.)The J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles71.PA.15

J. Paul Getty acquired this painting at the age of seventy and considered the purchase “a happy triumph.”

Bust of J. Paul Getty, 1939Pier Gabriele Vangelli Italian, 1899–1987Medium: MarbleObject: H: 53.3 cm (H: 21 in.)The J. Paul Getty Museum, Los AngelesCopyright: Status undetermined78.SA.40

J. Paul Getty commissioned this bust while in Rome during the summer of 1939.

J. Paul Getty viewing Villa model, 1971

Double Desk, about 1750Bernard II van Risenburgh French, after 1696–about 1766, master before 1730Oak, mahogany, and various woods; gilt-bronze mountsObject: H: 107.8 x W: 158.7 x D: 84.7 cm (3 ft. 6 1/2 in. x 5 ft. 2 1/2 in. x 2 ft. 9 3/8 in.)The J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles70.DA.87

J. Paul Getty pursued this acquisition over several years, having missed the chance to purchase it directly from the private owner.

Portrait of J. Paul Getty, 1941Armando DrechslerGerman, 1901–1964Oil on canvasUnframed: 85.4 x 70.2 cm (33 5/8 x 27 5/8 in.)The J. Paul Getty Museum, Los AngelesCopyright: Status undetermined2003.93

Page 4: Reproduction Permission - Gettynews.getty.edu/images/9036/gettylifeandlegacy_imagesheet.pdf3. 4. 1. 2. Statue of Hercules (Lansdowne Herakles), about A.D. 125 Roman Marble Object:

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12.11. J. Paul Getty with his lion cub named TeresaInstitutional Archives, the Getty Research Institute Copyright: Status undetermined

A lover of animals, Getty established a Wildlife Conservation Prize in 1974.

J. Paul Getty at Jerash (ancient Gerasa) in Jordan, 1954Institutional Archives, the Getty Research Institute Copyright: Status undetermined

While traveling the world on business, J. Paul Getty took time to visit museums and archaeological sites.

J. Paul Getty on his way to the Olympic Games in Amsterdam, 1927Copyright: Status undetermined

J. Paul Getty photographed by Yousuf Karsh, 1964, in the Great Hall of Sutton Place, EnglandResearch Library, the Getty Research Institute Photo by Yousuf Karsh, © The Estate of Yousuf Karsh

J. Paul Getty photographed by Yousuf Karsh, 1964Research Library, the Getty Research Institute Photo by Yousuf Karsh, © The Estate of Yousuf Karsh

J. Paul Getty hosted parties for local orphans at his home in England.Institutional Archives, the Getty Research Institute Copyright: Status undetermined

Page 5: Reproduction Permission - Gettynews.getty.edu/images/9036/gettylifeandlegacy_imagesheet.pdf3. 4. 1. 2. Statue of Hercules (Lansdowne Herakles), about A.D. 125 Roman Marble Object:

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17. Oil fields near Los Angeles (Santa Fe Springs, 1927)Keystone-Mast Collection, UCR/California Museum of Photography, University of California, Riverside

J. Paul Getty refocused oil operations from Oklahoma to California in the 1920s. His very first oil rigs were among many other producers at the Santa Fe Springs oil fields.

J. Paul Getty outside La Posta Vecchia at Palo, Italy. University of Southern California Special Collections Copyright: Status undetermined

It is one of two villas built over the ruins of ancient Roman villas that Getty purchased on the coast of Italy in the 1960s.

Gallery of antiquities with carpets displayed on the walls in the Ranch House, 1957 or laterInstitutional Archives, the Getty Research Institute Copyright: Status undetermined

J. Paul Getty at the beach in Santa Monica, about 1916-19Institutional Archives, the Getty Research Institute Copyright: Status undetermined

Getty Ranch House Museum, Malibu, about 1957Institutional Archives, the Getty Research Institute Copyright: Status undetermined

Cleaver Lease Oil Wells, Los Angeles, about 1926. Pictured are Frank Whitty (with hat), a Getty friend, and Hal Seymour, who was Getty’s oldest friend and first cousin.Institutional Archives, the Getty Research Institute Copyright: Status undetermined

Despite his father’s scorn, J. Paul Getty built Cleaver Lease, a railroad and oil rig outside Los Angeles, and struck oil, which he later sold to Shell at a profit, thus establishing a reputation in California as a real oilman.

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24.23. The Inner Peristyle of the Getty Villa with modern replicas of ancient bronzes from the Villa dei Papiri at Herculaneum. The Getty Villa is modeled after the Villa dei Papiri at Herculaneum.Photo by Julius Shulman and Juergen Nogai

Trams arrive for installation at the Getty Center in late 1994Institutional Archives, the Getty Research Institute Photo by Vladmir Lange

A gallery in the Getty Ranch House Museum, Malibu, showing an array from J. Paul Getty’s collection acquired over a thirty-year span.Institutional Archives, the Getty Research Institute Copyright: Status undetermined

Page 7: Reproduction Permission - Gettynews.getty.edu/images/9036/gettylifeandlegacy_imagesheet.pdf3. 4. 1. 2. Statue of Hercules (Lansdowne Herakles), about A.D. 125 Roman Marble Object: