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Landscape Art Print featuring the photograph Hi Jolly Monument by Jeremy Butler

Frame

Top Mat

Top Mat

Bottom Mat

Bottom Mat

Dimensions

Image:

6.00" x 8.00"

Overall:

8.00" x 10.00"

 

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Hi Jolly Monument Art Print

Jeremy Butler

by Jeremy Butler

Small Image

$22.56

Product Details

Hi Jolly Monument art print by Jeremy Butler.   Our art prints are produced on acid-free papers using archival inks to guarantee that they last a lifetime without fading or loss of color. All art prints include a 1" white border around the image to allow for future framing and matting, if desired.

Design Details

Flying next to the grave of camel driver Hi Jolly are the flags of the United States, Arizona, and the POW-MIA flag.

Quartzsite, Arizona, July... more

Ships Within

3 - 4 business days

Additional Products

Hi Jolly Monument Photograph by Jeremy Butler

Photograph

Hi Jolly Monument Canvas Print

Canvas Print

Hi Jolly Monument Framed Print

Framed Print

Hi Jolly Monument Art Print

Art Print

Hi Jolly Monument Poster

Poster

Hi Jolly Monument Metal Print

Metal Print

Hi Jolly Monument Acrylic Print

Acrylic Print

Hi Jolly Monument Wood Print

Wood Print

Hi Jolly Monument Greeting Card

Greeting Card

Art Print Tags

art prints landscape art prints flag art prints sky art prints camel art prints desert art prints arizona art prints

Photograph Tags

photographs landscape photos flag photos sky photos camel photos desert photos arizona photos

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Artist's Description

Flying next to the grave of camel driver Hi Jolly are the flags of the United States, Arizona, and the POW-MIA flag.

Quartzsite, Arizona, July 14, 2025.

Copyright 2025 Jeremy Butler

About Jeremy Butler

Jeremy Butler

You can keep up with Jeremy's latest photographic efforts on his email newsletter: https://jercomphoto.substack.com Jeremy's origin story: He set up a darkroom in his parents' utility room while in high school in Phoenix, around 1970. He pestered his friends relentlessly and ruthlessly throughout the 1970s--constantly thrusting the camera in their faces. But he never could afford to print all the images on some 100 contact sheets. Once he got a scanner, he went wild rediscovering the images he shot during that decade. Perhaps it's just the law of averages that some of them are quite good. These black-and-white images from the seventies provide a view of the decade through the lens of an adolescent photographer who came of age during...

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