187 résultats
3894500808.Ghardcover. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. hardcover
19779018342Venice: Edizioni La Biennale Venezia 1977. 1st. Hardcover. Fine/fine. Bound in publisher's original black cloth cover and spine stamped in white. Very slight bumping to top left corner of cloth overall in excellent condition. Profusely illustrated throughout in black & white. Text in Italian. <br/><br/> Edizioni La Biennale Venezia hardcover
18-7754Washington D.C.: Middendorf Gallery 1989. 4to. ca 85 pp. Very Good. Soft Cover. Illustrated paper wraps. B&W plates throughout. From the library of Pasquale Iannetti as indicated by stamp and library card on end papers.ISBN: 0962189308 9780962189302. Washington, D.C.: Middendorf Gallery, 1989. paperback
59402Paris; Editions Albert Skira 1934 1934 1935. Issues 5 6 and 7 bound together in one hardback volume. 4to 31cm x 25cm iv 33pp 68pp 69pp plus plates and adverts. Bound in plain brown cloth with the original cover of issue number 5 a design by F Bores pasted to the front board. The binding is defective - a substantial section of the spine is missing but the text block remains tightly bound. There are some signs of wear to the contents - the endpapers are foxsed a few of the plates have some creasing of the corners and there is a tear to one page. This book includes originals of issues 5 6 and 7 of the avant-garde surrealist magazine. Please note that the covers of issues 6 and 7 have not been bound in. Text in French. Paris; Editions Albert Skira, 1934, 1934, 1935. hardcover
1936N - 2023 - 45<p>Surrealist-oriented publication founded by Albert Skira. Albert Skira Editor Artistic Director Teriade. No. 9. First edition winter 1936 third year. Original cover by Matisse. Five hors-texts and three typed in color plates. Texts by E. Teriade R. Caillois Man Ray E. James A. Breton J. Prevert Salvador Dali and others.</p> Teriade paperback
1925542699Newark New Jersey: L. Bamberger & Co 1925. Hardcover. Near Fine. Volume III Number 1-Volume III Number 6. Six issues bound without wrappers and preliminary and possibly terminal leaves into two-tone cloth gilt. Quarto. 9-96 9-96 9-96 11-96 9-96 9-96 pp. Articles and ads heavily illustrated in black and white from photographs and drawings; includes eight fashion portraits by Man Ray. Small owner label on front pastedown binding lightly worn with a bit of rubbing on the lower board one leaf with a tiny tear near fine. Six bound issues of Charm magazine a New Jersey women's magazine with a general focus on beauty style cooking and hosting and the finer things of New Jersey society but with forays into literature politics and art. Volume III Number 3 April 1925 is especially notable for featuring the first appearance of Mina Loy's "Modern Poetry" considered a minor modernist classic "often cited and regularly studied" Sophie Oliver in The Journal of Modern Periodical Studies 2020. The magazine was published by Bamberger's Department Store. Issues are charming and uncommon; OCLC locates only seven serial listings but we note only three that possess Volume III NYPL Rutgers Newark Public Library. L. Bamberger & Co hardcover
1933170478Paris: Daniel Masclet 1933. 1930s photographs of the nude by Man Ray Moholy-Nagy Jean Moral and many others First edition first printing. This album was produced from the first International Salon of Nude Photography Paris 1933. Contributing photographers include Jean Moral Carlo Leonetti Drtikol Dr. J. Schuwerack Andreas Feininger Gilchrist Denes Ronay Manasse Dr. Peter Weller Christian Aegerter Ewald Hoinkis Ludwig Harren Bruno Schultz Dr. Alfred Grabner Ing. Alois Zych Jan de Meyere Willy Zielke Pietro Sacchi Pierre Boucher Frank Davis Ergy Landau Bernard Leedham Hans Robertson Forman Hanna Richardson-Cremer Pecsi Walter Sussmann H. Von Perckhammer Charles Hurault A. Keith Dannatt J. Capstack Nickolas Boris Baccarini Franz Fiedler Franz Feiler Walden Hammond Marcel Meys J. Dudley-Johnston L. Caillaud Fred P. Peel Mme. Laure Albin-Guillot Yva Man Ray Moholy-Nagy Harold Orne Bertram Park Maurice Beck Evansmith E.-O. Hoppe Daniel Masclet William Mortensen George Platt Lynes Kalman Szollosy and Verneuil. Quarto. With 96 full page black and white photogravure plates. Original white stiff card wrappers with red cord through spine as issued lettering to front cover in black. Brown stain to foot of spine otherwise an extremely bright; a near-fine copy. unknown
1933170479Paris: Daniel Masclet 1933. 1930s photographs of the nude by Man Ray Moholy-Nagy Jean Moral and many others First edition first printing. This album was produced from the first International Salon of Nude Photography Paris 1933. Contributing photographers include Jean Moral Carlo Leonetti Drtikol Dr. J. Schuwerack Andreas Feininger Gilchrist Denes Ronay Manasse Dr. Peter Weller Christian Aegerter Ewald Hoinkis Ludwig Harren Bruno Schultz Dr. Alfred Grabner Ing. Alois Zych Jan de Meyere Willy Zielke Pietro Sacchi Pierre Boucher Frank Davis Ergy Landau Bernard Leedham Hans Robertson Forman Hanna Richardson-Cremer Pecsi Walter Sussmann H. Von Perckhammer Charles Hurault A. Keith Dannatt J. Capstack Nickolas Boris Baccarini Franz Fiedler Franz Feiler Walden Hammond Marcel Meys J. Dudley-Johnston L. Caillaud Fred P. Peel Mme. Laure Albin-Guillot Yva Man Ray Moholy-Nagy Harold Orne Bertram Park Maurice Beck Evansmith E.-O. Hoppe Daniel Masclet William Mortensen George Platt Lynes Kalman Szollosy and Verneuil. Quarto. With 96 full-page black and white photogravure plates. Original white stiff card wrappers with red cord through spine as issued lettering to front cover in black. Very minor wear to head of spine covers lightly marked and rubbed otherwise a very good plus copy. unknown
2914171056.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
1983rb14732<p>Paris: Philippe Sers Publishing 1983. Hardcover. Fine. Covering the boards is a nice pink cloth and black lettering in a fine condition. 11 x 8.5 in.</p> Philippe Sers Publishing hardcover
196828347Paris: Galerie Europe. 1968. First Edition; First Printing. Softcover. Wraps metallic gold and black cover a good copy. A tear in the upper left corner of the front wrap has skinned back about ½" of the gold which has been laid back down. Exhibition catalog of a show of Man Ray's surrealist objects.; 8vo 8" - 9" tall . Galerie Europe paperback
46643Framed. #53 of 75 copies. Matted in silver frame with glass. Signed and numbered by the artist in pencil below. Lithograph measures 19 3/4 x 25 3/4". Frame measures 21 1/2 x 28 unknown
193487707Paris: Au sans pareil 1934. Fine. Au sans pareil Paris 1934 14.50 x 21.50 cm broché First edition one of 300 numbered copies on Montgolfier paper the only printing along with 8 copies on Japan paper. The work is illustrated with a frontispiece featuring an unpublished photographic portrait of Jacques Rigaut by Man Ray. A very fine copy. Au sans pareil unknown
2002AM-7188Miriam and Ira D. Wallach Art Gallery New York 2002. paperback. fine. The photographs of Paris were made by Eugène Atget and later assembled into an album by Man Ray. Since 1976 the album has been in the collection of the George Eastman House in Rochester New York. Miriam and Ira D. Wallach Art Gallery, New York unknown
1934140948952Hartford CT: James Thrall Soby 1934. First Edition. Fine. A superlative example of the first edition first issue of May Ray's first monograph. 104 pp. with frontispiece portrait of Man Ray by Pablo Picasso the original title page and gravure plates after photographs by Man Ray with text in English and French. Bound in publisher's comb-bound pictorial card wraps. Light wear to wraps with faint marginal soiling to contents else Fine unusual in such nice condition and with spirals intact.<p>Initial sales were so dismal that the publisher recalled most copies of the first printing and replaced the title page with two different fictitious ones claiming "second edition" and "deuxieme edition" in efforts to stoke demand. Copies like this one with the original title page are therefore rare. A fantastic copy of this pioneering work. James Thrall Soby unknown
19342198Hartford: James Thrall Soby 1934. First edition. Publisher's plastic comb binding stiff wrappers. Minor vertical crease to front cover light chipping to outer edge. Upper and lower portions of the front cover coming loose from the binding but the cover is still held firmly. Internally clean and bright. Now housed in a custom clamshell box.<br /> <br /> The very rare first issue. As Roth describes the publisher "attempted to generate demand where none existed by suggesting the edition had sold out. After replacing the title pages of these copies- presumably a healthy percentage of the run whose sales had in fact been slow to none- with one stating 'deuxième edition' second edition he returned them for sale. Copies with the original title page are exceedingly rare."<br /> <br /> Man Ray's first monograph with texts in English and French by Duchamp Tzara Eluard Breton and Man Ray himself. Frontispiece portrait of Man Ray by Picasso. Contains 104 heliogravure images. "Part art part illustration the book was meant to be an inventory of his work a kind of grand promotional catalogue. Man Ray's album was a virtuoso presentation of modern European-style photography. Close-up views distorted angles double exposures night photography negative prints rayographs still lifes nudes portraits fashion photographs and even a painting. were reproduced. Intended for an American more than a European audience the album was Man Ray's means of presenting his career to a homeland that had rarely seen his work." Perpetual Motif: The Art of Man Ray pp. 35-39 Roth pp. 80-81. James Thrall Soby unknown
32865Hartford Conn: James Thrall Soby. First edition. Man Ray. 104 pp plastic spiral binding. Second issue with the false "second edition" statement. A few small rubs and creases to covers; very good. James Thrall Soby unknown
18-7753New York: Dover 1979. 4to. 104 pp. Very Good. Soft Cover. Illustrated paper wraps. Some shelf wear and curling at bottom corner. B&W plates throughout. From the library of Pasquale Iannetti as indicated by stamp and library card on end papers. Scarce.ISBN: 0486238423 9780486238425.Contents:Portrait / Picasso --The age of light / Man Ray --Photographs : Man Ray / Paul EÌluard --Photographs : The visages of woman / AndreÌ Breton --Photographs : Men before the mirror / Rrose SeÌlavy --Photographs : When things dream / Tristan Tzara --Rayographs 1921-1928 New York: Dover, 1979. paperback
1937170731001Paris: GLM 1937. First Edition. Loose Leaves in Cloth Portfolio. Very Good. First edition. Seventeen loose leaves including 12 halftone plates on coated stock in flexible blue cloth portfolio and outer black die-cut wraps. Near Fine with uneven fading to blue cloth portfolio light general shelf wear and with die-cut intact. A lovely example. GLM unknown
1934D7445Hartford Connecticut: James Thrall Soby 1934. First Edition First Issue. Fair. Spiral bound full-color wraps with b/w photo-illustrations heliogravure throughout; pp. 4 104 2 blank colophon complete. First edition first issue including the rare original title-page. Covers and final blank detached; first and last few leaves a little loose with chip out of bottom corner of last leaf pp. 103-104 near the gutter not affecting the images. Certainly a much-used copy but complete uncommon and with nice clean images overall. Sold as is. <br/><br/> James Thrall Soby paperback
19832111902153301180Misuzushobo 1983. Soft Cover. Fine. Number of books: 1 Misuzushobo paperback
19372467<p>Paris Éditions GLM 1937. MAN RAY. La Photographie n'est pas L'Art. Paris: Éditions GLM 1937. Slim octavo 17 loose leaves in original flexible blue cloth portfolio original black die-cut wrapper. First edition of this landmark treatise with 12 full-page halftones of Man Ray's distinctive photographs 'regarded by some as amongst the greatest of the 20th century' Parr & Badger. Jean Cocteau called him 'the poet of the darkroom.' 'It was with Man Ray's arrival in Paris in the summer of 1921 when Dada was at its height that photographic experimentation temporarily leaderless after the disastrous war took a decisive new direction' Frizot 442. 'Man Ray's work introduced a particular note to Dadaism since he used photography and recognized early on that this medium could reproduce the effects of object-based art in two-dimensional form. Photography was in a position to preserve the ordinary and to unleash surreal effects' Icons of Photography 26. 'Although he incorporated photography into his Dadaist practice much of his photographic activity was given over to conventional portrait and fashion commissions. This rankled with him and 'photography is not an art' was a constant theme in his work. La Photographie n'est pas L'Art is one of the most enigmatic yet advanced of all his books. It can be taken as a summation of his experiments in photography and might be said to be his photographic swansong' Parr & Badger 108-09. With text by André Breton. See Roth 80-81 86-87. Interior and images fine. Only light sunning to cover through aperture in wrapper. A fine copy. Scarce. Bauman quote In a contemporary clam shell box in blue cloth.</p> GLM
19832081502111703631Misuzushobo 1983. Soft Cover. Fine. Number of pages: 256p Size: 31cm Misuzushobo paperback
29081Paris circa 1950. 1 tirage sur carte d'après-guerre signé « Man Ray » à la mine de plombe en angle inférieur droit. . L'épreuve est signée Man Ray à la mine de plomb en angle inférieur droit et contient au dos la mention de la main de Char « René Crevel ». Ce tirage constitue l'un de ceux que Man Ray a fourni dans les années 50-60 à ses amis proches. Un tirage figurait dans la vente Breton 2003 n° 5106 identique à celui-ci – sans être signé. C'est la seule épreuve signée connue : ce tirage constitue l'un de ceux que Man Ray a fourni dans les années 1950-1960 à ses amis proches. Un tirage figurait dans la vente Breton 2003 n° 5106 identique à celui-ci - mais non signé. Notre épreuve est celle de René Char avec une note au verso de la main du poète. Le suicide de Crevel le frappa douloureusement. Des années plus tard il avouera : « Je n'ai pu depuis la mort de ce frère précieux relire un seul de ses ouvrages. C'est dire combien je m'ennuie de lui de l'éclat de sa présence des conquêtes de sa pensée dont il était prodigue. C'est l'homme parmi ceux que j'ai connus qui donnait le mieux et le plus vite l'or de sa nature. Il ne partageait pas il donnait. » Toutes les autres épreuves recensées de ce portrait iconique sont vierges de la signature de Man Ray et souvent dans des tirages tardifs réalisés par Gassman. Lorsque Pierre Paraf le directeur de La République rend hommage à René Crevel dont le suicide vient d'être découvert il évoque un artiste « dont les généreuses indignations étaient servies par un âpre talent satirique ». L'écrivain et poète surréaliste de la première heure mais exclu du mouvement en 1935 et membre critique du Parti communiste depuis 1922 s'est donné la mort à son domicile ne laissant qu'une note pour sa maîtresse la comtesse argentine Tota Cuevas de Vera : « Prière de m'incinérer. Dégoût. » Peut-être celui d'une France bourgeoise et parlementaire de la IIIe République qu'il méprisait l'une et l'autre telle qu'il la décrivait avant sa mort dans les colonnes de Comoedia : « Vice en pantoufle adultères rondouillards mesquinerie lésine sourire faussement bonhomme au fond positivisme insensible jusqu'à la minute catastrophique où alors la terreur pousse les esprits soi-disant libres à remettre Dieu à la mode à s'en tirer par une assurance sur la vie et sur la mort. Tous ces symptômes d'ailleurs accusent une maladie qui pour être celle de la Troisième République ne date point d'hier. » René Crevel consacre un article à Man Ray dès 1925 qu'il présente comme l'auteur d'une chasse miraculeuse et comme un sorcier un « chasseur du mystère » Crevel « Le Miroir aux objets » L'Art vivant n° 14 15 août 1925. Man Ray tire ce portait sept ans plus tard. Il sera utilisé bien plus tard pour la couverture de la biographie de Michel Carassou et également par Claude Courtot pour le frontispice de son René Crevel aux « Poètes d'aujourd'hui » chez Seghers 1969 une image dont Marie Laurencin témoigna de son extraordinaire justesse avec ses « cheveux jamais pareils et son visage changeant d'adolescent rieur et malheureux ». Jean-Claude Vrain dans son catalogue de Portraits d'écrivains datait ce portrait de 1932 : « Ce très beau portrait tranche avec la plupart des photographies de René Crevel que nous possédons. L'écrivain y fait moins dandy sa mise est moins élégante. Il apparaît ici sous un aspect beaucoup plus ‘terrien' en bras de chemise le col déboutonné. Son visage moins angélique que d'habitude mais toujours d'un aspect poupin exprime une détermination et une force que l'on retrouve dans certains de ses textes les plus virulents comme Le Clavecin de Diderot » n° 307 du catalogue. La version proposée non signée était également un tirage tardif des années 1970 par Pierre Gassman. Le Centre Pompidou conserve le négatif de la photo qui a servi à ce recadrage sous la cote AM 1995-281 524. Provenance : René Char [Paris, circa 1950]. 1 tirage sur carte, d'après-guerre, signé « Man Ray » à la mine de plombe en angle inférieur droit. unknown
19634737Paris: Editions Prisma 1963. Cloth. Collectible; Fine/Very Good. A crisp clean copy of the 1963 1st French edition. Near Fine in a bright VG pictorial dustjacket with light fading along the spine. Quarto nicely-reproduced Man Ray portraits thruout. Editions Prisma unknown