Feature Points
VINTAGE PRINT REPRODUCTION: Historic reproduction of 1976 Thurgood Marshall Print. Printed on archival-grade paper that maintains vivid color accuracy for over 100 years without fading or discoloration.
PREMIUM PHOTO PAPER: Professional luster photo paper with heavyweight construction and semi-gloss finish that minimizes glare while delivering vibrant colors and sharp detail.
PROFESSIONALLY RESTORED: Each image is digitally restored by our art specialists to correct age-related deterioration while preserving authentic historical details and character.
BORDERLESS DESIGN: Artwork prints edge-to-edge for a seamless, gallery-ready appearance. Ships protected in rigid tube packaging to ensure safe delivery and perfect condition upon arrival.
MADE IN USA: Our multi-step restoration process and quality control ensure each print meets professional standards. Every reproduction is individually inspected before shipping.
Additional Information
This distinguished January 28, 1976 official portrait by photographer Robert S. Oakes presents Justice Thurgood Marshall in judicial robes, seated in dignified formal composition. The photograph documents the first African American to serve on the United States Supreme Court, captured during his ninth year on the nation's highest bench after his historic 1967 appointment by President Lyndon B. Johnson.
Marshall had already transformed American jurisprudence before joining the Court, serving as chief counsel for the NAACP Legal Defense Fund where he argued thirty-two cases before the Supreme Court and won twenty-nine. His greatest triumph came in Brown v. Board of Education, the landmark 1954 decision declaring school segregation unconstitutional and dismantling the legal framework of Jim Crow throughout the American South.
The portrait was created as part of the official 1976 Supreme Court photography series, with publication rights verified by the Court in 2004. Marshall would serve until 1991, becoming a powerful voice for civil liberties, criminal defendants' rights, and the marginalized throughout his twenty-four-year tenure on the bench that fundamentally shaped modern constitutional interpretation.
This commanding portrait offers a window into the highest levels of American judicial power during a transformative era. The composition captures a legal giant whose courtroom victories reshaped the nation, making it an extraordinary addition to any collection celebrating civil rights history and American constitutional heritage.
VINTAGE PRINT REPRODUCTION: Historic reproduction of 1976 Thurgood Marshall Print. Printed on archival-grade paper that maintains vivid color accuracy for over 100 years without fading or discoloration.
PREMIUM PHOTO PAPER: Professional luster photo paper with heavyweight construction and semi-gloss finish that minimizes glare while delivering vibrant colors and sharp detail.
PROFESSIONALLY RESTORED: Each image is digitally restored by our art specialists to correct age-related deterioration while preserving authentic historical details and character.
BORDERLESS DESIGN: Artwork prints edge-to-edge for a seamless, gallery-ready appearance. Ships protected in rigid tube packaging to ensure safe delivery and perfect condition upon arrival.
MADE IN USA: Our multi-step restoration process and quality control ensure each print meets professional standards. Every reproduction is individually inspected before shipping.
Additional Information
This distinguished January 28, 1976 official portrait by photographer Robert S. Oakes presents Justice Thurgood Marshall in judicial robes, seated in dignified formal composition. The photograph documents the first African American to serve on the United States Supreme Court, captured during his ninth year on the nation's highest bench after his historic 1967 appointment by President Lyndon B. Johnson.
Marshall had already transformed American jurisprudence before joining the Court, serving as chief counsel for the NAACP Legal Defense Fund where he argued thirty-two cases before the Supreme Court and won twenty-nine. His greatest triumph came in Brown v. Board of Education, the landmark 1954 decision declaring school segregation unconstitutional and dismantling the legal framework of Jim Crow throughout the American South.
The portrait was created as part of the official 1976 Supreme Court photography series, with publication rights verified by the Court in 2004. Marshall would serve until 1991, becoming a powerful voice for civil liberties, criminal defendants' rights, and the marginalized throughout his twenty-four-year tenure on the bench that fundamentally shaped modern constitutional interpretation.
This commanding portrait offers a window into the highest levels of American judicial power during a transformative era. The composition captures a legal giant whose courtroom victories reshaped the nation, making it an extraordinary addition to any collection celebrating civil rights history and American constitutional heritage.








