Metal relief plate,stencil with hand colouring and half-tone block.
Signed from an edition of 25 only.
Based on a newspaper cutting of photographer Roger Murray Leach reflected in the eye of actress Sandra Fehre.
"It sent a shock through me because it encapsulated in a clear image the conflict between what we see for ourselves and what the camera shows us" MR.

Born in Hampstead, London, on 19 March 1908, Rothenstein was the youngest of four. He studied at Chelsea Polytechnic and Central School of Arts and Crafts, 1924-7. He had his first one-man show in 1938 and during World War II participated in the Pilgrim Trust Recording Britain project. After the war, he taught printmaking at Camberwell School of Art and was Art Fellow at Sheffield University in 1962.
Rothenstein became one of the most experimental printmakers in Britain during the ‘50s and ’60s. As well as found objects such as wood offcuts and metal debris, he incorporated fresh 20th century imagery into his relief prints, combining photographic material with traditional woodcuts and linocuts. Numerous major galleries currently hold his work and he was made Hon. RE and elected RA in 1983.