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7668CAHIERS DE LA CERAMIQUE, DU VERRE ET DES ARTS DU FEU, N° 29, Paris, Société des amis du musée national de la céramique, 1963. In-4, agrafé, hors-texte en couleurs.
97834Paris, Librairie Plon, 1936. 14 x 23, 427 pp., broché, non coupé, bon état (tranches roussies).
97835Paris, Librairie Plon, 1937. 14 x 23, 431 pp., broché, non coupé, bon état (tranches roussies).
97937Paris, Librairie Plon, 1938. 14 x 23, 280 pp., broché, non coupé, bon état (tranches roussies).
1943R240155922Egloff. 1943. In-12. Broché. Etat d'usage, Tâchée, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur acceptable. 235 pages. Annotation à l'encre en page de faux titre. Plats contrepliés en un rabat.. . . . Classification Dewey : 848-Ecrits divers, citations, journaux intimes, souvenirs, mémoires
1996RO30319786Hermann. 1996. In-8. Broché. Bon état, Couv. convenable, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur frais. 212 pages.. . . . Classification Dewey : 703-Dictionnaire, encyclopédie des beaux-arts et des arts décoratifs
185086760Champrosay s. d. [1840-1860] | 13.50 x 20.10 cm | une page sur un feuillet remplié
185086760Champrosay 1850. Fine. I am madly in love with these innocent and beautiful trees while human nature on the other hand falls every day in my esteem. Champrosay s. d. 1840-1860 13.50 x 20.10 cm une page sur un feuillet remplié Autograph letter signed by the painter Eugène Delacroix to his friend Baron Félix Feuillet de Conches master of protocol at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs under Charles X and Louis-Philippe. One page in black ink on a folded sheet with the autograph address on the verso. Traces of seal and postal stamps dated October 7. The painter writes to his friend Feuillet de Conches a distinguished man of letters whose works were well received and who also amassed an elegant collection of art and autographs in his apartment on the rue Neuve-des-Mathurins the address of this very letter. A charming and witty missive in which Delacroix expresses his enchantment with country life far removed from the bustle of Paris. ""From the summer of 1844 Eugène Delacroix settled at Champrosay on the edge of the Sénart forest near Paris. There he recorded in his journal the impressions inspired by his regular walks through the countryside. He produced numerous sketches later reworked into his large compositions as well as more ambitious landscapes that reveal how in his mature and later years the observation of nature now contemplated for its own sake had become central to his art."" MuMa ""I reply to you late dear Feuillet but you will forgive me: I promise you a Gros very happy to add it to the collection. I pity you for living far from the fields. If we were still in the time of Ovids Metamorphoses I might believe myself in danger of one day being turned into a tree. I am mad about these innocent and beautiful trees while human nature on the other hand loses each day in my esteem. I except of course friends like you and the few who retain a little reason.I embrace you while awaiting this winterEug. Delacroix."" unknown
1981R320038548PLON. 1981. In-8. Relié. Etat d'usage, Couv. convenable, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur acceptable. 942 pages - Signet - Jaquette illustrée en noir et blanc et légèrement abimée en pied + 1 coupure de presse sur DELACROIX (en date du 10 avril 1998).. Avec Jaquette. . . Classification Dewey : 927-Artistes, sportifs
1987R200117938Plon. 1987. In-8. Relié. Bon état, Couv. convenable, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur frais. 942 pages. Jaquette en bon état.. Avec Jaquette. . . Classification Dewey : 927-Artistes, sportifs
1943R300299640La Palatine. 1943. In-8. Broché. Etat d'usage, Couv. partiel. décollorée, Dos plié, Papier jauni. 429 pages - une photo en noir et blanc en frontispice. Avec une carte postale de Delacroix en supplément. Mors très légèrement fendus en coiffes.. . . . Classification Dewey : 848-Ecrits divers, citations, journaux intimes, souvenirs, mémoires
97833Paris, Librairie Plon, 1950. 14 x 23, 536 pp., broché, bon état (papier légèrement jauni).
2004R100089841L.i.e.s.i.. 2004. In-8. Broché. Bon état, Couv. convenable, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur frais. 67 pages agrafées - quelques photos en noir et blanc dans le texte.. . . . Classification Dewey : 320-Science politique
2010RO80241457Belin. 2010. In-4. Relié toilé. Bon état, Couv. convenable, Dos satisfaisant, Mouillures. 653 pages. Nombreuses photos et cartes en couleurs dans et hors texte. Jaquette en bon état. Signet conservé. Trois photos disponibles.. Avec Jaquette. . . Classification Dewey : 944.083-Ve République, 1958 à nos jours
2014R100073401Belin. 2014. In-8. Broché. Bon état, Couv. convenable, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur frais. 653 pages - couverture contrepliée - nombreuses photos et cartes en couleurs et en noir et blanc dans et hors texte - une étiquette collée sur le 2ème plat.. . . . Classification Dewey : 944.083-Ve République, 1958 à nos jours
1937R300324602Félix Alcan. 1937. In-12. Broché. Etat d'usage, Couv. légèrement passée, Dos plié, Papier jauni. 187 pages. Manque en coiffe de tête.. . . . Classification Dewey : 100-PHILOSOPHIE ET DISCIPLINES CONNEXES
1992R300276866PUF. 1992. In-8. Broché. Etat d'usage, Couv. légèrement passée, Dos plié, Intérieur frais. 218 pages.. . . . Classification Dewey : 320-Science politique
2002RO80250477Complexe - CNRS. 2002. In-8. Broché. Bon état, Couv. convenable, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur frais. 239 pages.. . . . Classification Dewey : 928-Ecrivains
86563Gembloux, Duculot, 1987. 15 x 23, 391 pp., broché, bon état (légères pliures au dos insolé).
1823759401823. Fine. s. d. ca 1823 12 x 18.20 cm Six pages sur deux feuillets rempliés Almost entirely unpublished handwritten letter from the painter Eugène Delacroix to the love of his youth the mysterious Julie now identified as being Madame de Pron by her maiden name Louise du Bois des Cours de La Maisonfort wife of Louis-Jules Baron Rossignol de Pron and daughter of the Marquis de La Maisonfort Minister of France in Tuscany patron of Lamartine and friend of Chateaubriand. 90 lines 6 pages on two folded leaves. A few deletions and two bibliographical annotations in pencil on the upper part of the first page no114. This letter is one of the last to his lover in private ownership all of Delacroix's correspondence to Madame de Pron being kept at the Getty Research Institute Los Angeles. Only nine of the ninety lines of this unpublished letter were transcribed in the Burlington Magazine in September 2009 alongside the long article by Michèle Hanoosh Bertrand and Lorraine Servois whose research finally revealed the identity of the famous recipient. Sublime love letter from twenty-four-year-old Eugène Delacroix addressed to his lover Madame de Pron twelve years his senior who unleashed the liveliest passion in him. This episode of the painter's youth then considered the rising star of Romanticism for a long time remained a mystery in the biography of Delacroix who was careful to preserve the anonymity of his lover thanks to various pseudonyms: Cara the Lady of the Italians and even Julie as in this letter in reference to the famous epistolary novel Julie ou la Nouvelle Héloïse by Rousseau. For obvious reasons Delacroix did not sign his name on any of the letters in correspondence with the lady. A great figure of the legitimate aristocracy the recipient of this feverish letter is Madame de Pron daughter of the Marquis de La Maisonfort Minister of France in Tuscany patron of Lamartine friend of Chateaubriand. Her beauty was immortalized in 1818 by Élisabeth Vigée-Lebrun who painted her portrait in pastel with an oriental hairstyle. Delacroix and Madame de Pron met in April 1822 when the portrait of the latter's son Adrien was commissioned a pupil at the Lycée Impérial now Lycée Louis-le-Grand. Delacroix had been commissioned for the portrait by his close friend Charles Soulier Madame de Pron's lover who despite himself served as an intermediary for Delacroix. In the absence of Soulier who had gone to Italy the painter and the young women established an intense romantic relationship. The portrait commission became a pretext for their tender meetings in his studio on rue de Grès while no trace of the child's painting has been found to this day. Their adventure lasted a little over a year but it was one of the most intense passions of the artist's life. Our letter undoubtedly corresponds to the last throes of their relationship in the month of November 1823. After one of their visits at the end of a hiatus of several months Delacroix writes to her again under the influence of emotion: I come home with a shaken heart what a wonderful evening! . Sometimes I say to myself: why did I see her again In the calm sanctuary where I lived even in the middle of the invisible places that I had formed . I managed to silence my heart. Madame de Pron had indeed decided to bring an end to their intimate relationship see her letter from 10 November 1823: I want sweet friendship . I do not want to torment you Getty Research Institute. Losing all discernment and with blind devotion Delacroix attempts to revive their affair: Make me lie prove to me that your soul is indeed that of the Julie that I once knew since mine has regained its charming emotions and its worries. But the painter runs into Soulier and General de Coëtlosquet also lovers of Madame de Pron. Delacroix had narrowly avoided a final disagreement with Soulier who had almost seen a letter from Madame de Pron in h unknown
2002R240144150Chez l'auteur. 2002. In-8. Broché. Etat d'usage, Tâchée, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur frais. 196 pages augmentées de nombreux schémas.. . . . Classification Dewey : 973-Etats-Unis
18962521# AUTEUR: Magne Delacroix A. # ÉDITEUR: Hugonis V. imprimerie maçonnique - Paris # ANNÉE ÉDITION: 1896 # COUVERTURE: souple imprimée - grise - titre noir # DÉTAILS: In 8° broché 31pp. ”Nous sommes tous des républicains et des capitalistes, puisque nous sommes tous honnêtes gens, libres, de bonnes moeurs et que nous aimons le travail; nous avons l'amour des uns pour les autres, notre emblème est le tablier, l'équerre et le compas...” # PHOTOS visibles sur www.latourinfernal.com
199835590NY: Abbeville Press 1998. First Edition. Square 4to pp. 148. foreword by Silvie Delacroix-Peretout text by Sam Hunter. Illustrated with 146 full-color reproductions and several photographs. A nice copy in little chipped and scuffed at top of spine dj. Paintings depicting a Paris of the past and a few other places done in a charming somewhat primitive style. Abbeville Press unknown books
15042In-8 de 11;16; 103; 16 pages, demi-basane noire, do slisse orné de filets et un fleuron dorés, tête dorée. Ex-libris Edith-Hélène Le Bas.
2007010074Paris Sotheby's 2007 In-4 Cartonnage illustré