Image 1 of 2
Image 2 of 2
Robert Smith - "A Forest" | Lollapalooza, Chicago 2013
Robert Smith - A Forest, 2013
Archival Print on Canson Infinity Plantine Rag Fibre
16×20 in (40.6×50.8 cm)
Edition of 50 + 1 Artist Proof (AP)
Starting at $600.00
30×40 in (76.2×101.6 cm)
Edition of 25 + 1 Artist Proof (AP)
Starting at $2,000.00
Captured in a rare moment of stillness, Robert Smith stands beneath the glow of stage light — poised between dream and invocation. His presence radiates both defiance and tenderness, echoing through the atmosphere like the first notes of A Forest.
Photographed during The Cure’s 2013 Chicago performance, this piece distills decades of musical melancholy into a single, haunting frame — an artist suspended in his element, enveloped in the sound and solitude that made him a legend.
Edition Details
Each print is hand-signed and numbered by Tyler Curtis, offered in a strictly limited edition of twenty-five large format works and fifty smaller prints. Every edition is produced with meticulous oversight to preserve tonal depth and integrity.
Charitable Contribution:
10% of each sale (before taxes and shipping) will be donated to MusicCares and Gibson Gives, supporting the legacy and future of music and the artists who create it. Donations are processed through registered 501(c)(3) organizations, and purchasers will receive a charitable contribution receipt suitable for tax purposes
Production
Printed on museum-grade Canson Infinity Platine Fibre Rag (310 gsm) by master printers Don Weinstein and Michael Marker at Photo Impact Imaging in Los Angeles, each piece is handled, inspected, and shipped with the same care given to a gallery acquisition.
Authentication
A certificate of authenticity—co-signed by artist Tyler Curtis and curator Chef Curtis Duffy—accompanies every work, verifying its provenance and edition number.
Collector’s Note
More than a photograph, each piece captures a fleeting moment of creative electricity—where light, legacy, and the pulse of cultural history converge. Selected from a roll of hundreds of photos that evening, the fleeting moment between performance and pondering encapsulate the melancholy of one of Rock’s greatest frontmen.
Robert Smith - A Forest, 2013
Archival Print on Canson Infinity Plantine Rag Fibre
16×20 in (40.6×50.8 cm)
Edition of 50 + 1 Artist Proof (AP)
Starting at $600.00
30×40 in (76.2×101.6 cm)
Edition of 25 + 1 Artist Proof (AP)
Starting at $2,000.00
Captured in a rare moment of stillness, Robert Smith stands beneath the glow of stage light — poised between dream and invocation. His presence radiates both defiance and tenderness, echoing through the atmosphere like the first notes of A Forest.
Photographed during The Cure’s 2013 Chicago performance, this piece distills decades of musical melancholy into a single, haunting frame — an artist suspended in his element, enveloped in the sound and solitude that made him a legend.
Edition Details
Each print is hand-signed and numbered by Tyler Curtis, offered in a strictly limited edition of twenty-five large format works and fifty smaller prints. Every edition is produced with meticulous oversight to preserve tonal depth and integrity.
Charitable Contribution:
10% of each sale (before taxes and shipping) will be donated to MusicCares and Gibson Gives, supporting the legacy and future of music and the artists who create it. Donations are processed through registered 501(c)(3) organizations, and purchasers will receive a charitable contribution receipt suitable for tax purposes
Production
Printed on museum-grade Canson Infinity Platine Fibre Rag (310 gsm) by master printers Don Weinstein and Michael Marker at Photo Impact Imaging in Los Angeles, each piece is handled, inspected, and shipped with the same care given to a gallery acquisition.
Authentication
A certificate of authenticity—co-signed by artist Tyler Curtis and curator Chef Curtis Duffy—accompanies every work, verifying its provenance and edition number.
Collector’s Note
More than a photograph, each piece captures a fleeting moment of creative electricity—where light, legacy, and the pulse of cultural history converge. Selected from a roll of hundreds of photos that evening, the fleeting moment between performance and pondering encapsulate the melancholy of one of Rock’s greatest frontmen.