559 résultats
199621665Fullerton CA and Los Angeles: Fullerton College Art Gallery / The Artists' Floating Invisible Museum of Actual Art / Public Access Press of the Southern California Institute of Architecture 1996-2004. First editions of three all published of a projected series of four portfolios the series cut short by Eugenia Butler's untimely death of a brain hemorrhage in 2008. One of 80 numbered copies the entire edition produced numbered and signed in the artist's or poet's studio. At the time of the exhibition of The Book of Lies at the 18 Arts Gallery in Santa Monica in 2007 Eugenia Butler wrote: "Sixteen years after the Book of Lies project began the first three of its four volumes are finished. The entirety of the work has taken on form and content far beyond any original imaginings. It has become a rounded voice coming from many voices a discourse about truth in the territory of the unknowable. Its power derives from the strength and integrity of the individual pieces from the communal voice and in single intimate interactions. Each volume is a work of art unto itself that developed from the process of creating it from the individual works themselves and from the relationships between the parts and the whole. At a certain point a bigger vision broke through - something beyond previous understandings - surpassing the initial ideas to become a singular artwork consisting of discrete and powerful works of art. Its subject matter is truth lies and the intimate power of a true work of art." The works of art include pieces by artists and writers Georganne Deen Kim Jones Julia Lohmann John O'Brien Edgar Arceneaux Sally Elesby George Evans Joan Jonas Barry Sanders Arthur Sze Matthew Thomas Kim Abeles Lynn Aldrich Carolee Campbell Steve DeGroodt Janet Fitch Tom Marioni Kim McCarty Michael C. McMillen John Outterbridge Mary Rakow and Madam X. Carolee Campbell of the Ninja Press designed the box brass and enclosures for Vol. III. Images and additional information on The Book of Lies may be found at: http://www.curatorial.com/exhibitions_current/exhib-BookofLies.html. Bookplate in two portfolios with small adhesive shelf labels on each portfolio otherwise the set is in fine condition. Complete sets are rare on the market. Quartos three original portfolios of 81 works of art created out of incised & collaged lead oil paint on vellum original pencil drawings a photograph on platinum paper polaroid photographs cyanotypes ashes of love letters hand-embroidery and holograph and mechanically reproduced images and texts with interleaved translucent sheets noting the artist loose as issued inserted in a paper chemise and cardboard folderor in an individual folder and laid into a clamshell box accompanied by a spiral bound commentary volume in original printed wrappers printed by Carolee Campbell of the Ninja Press. Bookplate in two portfolios with small adhesive shelf labels on each portfolio otherwise the set is in fine condition. Complete sets are rare on the market. Fullerton College Art Gallery / The Artists' (Floating, Invisible) Museum of Actual Art / Public Access Press of the Southern Ca unknown books
19583732451958. Single unlined 8-1/2 x 11 inch leaf holograph text in blue ink recto and verso; old fold lines with small tear and crease to one edge; in franked autograph envelope with light toning and wear. A punchy humorous letter to Sybil Landeau while she was still an undergraduate student at Hunter College the school Audre Lorde was also attending at the time.<br /> <br /> Her friend Eugenia begins by apologizing for her "bad French" stating that since she was "on the verge of leaving New Orleans I wanted to make it really abstruse and delay comprehension until I arrived in S.F. which would make me in two places at once"<br /> <br /> After offering to contact any friends of Landeau's in San Francisco she then writes "What are your present interests aside from Opera exams and Audre Lorde"<br /> <br /> While it is unknown exactly when the friendship between between Landeau - a passionate opera fan and future lawyer - and Lorde became intimate this letter provides perhaps the first indication that Landeau's feelings toward Lorde had begun to evolve into something far more personal. Their resulting affair continued into their graduate years at Columbia University and though it ended at some point during the 1960s both women carried on working together for civil and gay rights and their friendship endured until Lorde's untimely 1992 death.<br /> <br /> An important letter in the biography of Audre Lorde sent to one of her earliest girlfriends. unknown
1912175401London: 1912. As a token of their admiration and respect A commemorative album presented to Sybil Gotto the main organizer of the conference which was chaired by Leonard Darwin. Thirteen of the photographs are signed by the sitter and four are accompanied by their mounted clipped signature. Along with Darwin delegates depicted in the portraits include the politician Paul Doumer the entomologist Vernon Lyman Kellog and the biologist Raymond Pearl. A social hygienist Gotto 1885-1955 afterwards Neville-Rolfe founded the Eugenics Education Society - later the British Eugenics Society - with Francis Galton in 1907. She was an opponent of the "lax morals" that she believed were degenerating society and campaigned for greater contraceptive education improved treatments for sexually transmitted diseases and against prostitution. The conference held from 24 to 30 July 1912 was dedicated to Galton - who had died the previous year - and was attended by Winston Churchill Arthur Balfour and William Osler. The proceedings included lectures on biology education medicine sociology and "Practical Eugenics". A complete list of photographs is available upon request. Quarto 264 x 215 mm. With 18 photographic portraits mounted on thick card stock. Additional photograph of H. Holford Bottomley loosely inserted. Contemporary black morocco spine lettered and decorated in gilt 5 raised bands covers framed with triple fillet and foliate design in gilt front with Gotto's monogram inlaid in red morocco gilt fillets to board edges and turn-ins green moiré endpapers top edge gilt the rest uncut. Spine darkened head of spine and corners neatly restored marks top edge front inner hinge split but holding firm occasional faint foxing to contents: in very good condition. hardcover
1908469579Oregon Hawaii 1908. Hardcover. Very Good. Folio. Measuring 8½" x 15". Quarter leather and black cloth with gilt decorations. Contains 250 sepia-toned albumen photographs measuring between ½†x ½†and 7½" x 9½" with captions. Very good album with worn edges rubbing and some removed pages with very good or better photographs with some fading.<br /> <br /> A photo album compiled by Eugenia Atkinson of Ashland Oregon beginning in 1889. The photographs featured here are views of Oregon California Missouri and Hawaii and do not appear to be in chronological order. Atkinson annotates the photos and includes handwritten captions throughout the album. She begins with images of her hometown with views of Ashland Creek Falls Crater Lakes and a local mill. Atkinson captured daily life in Oregon with images of picnics by the creek interior home scenes and fashionably dressed women posed for a group photo. Atkinson and her friends and family visit Honolulu Hawaii and she includes large format photos of the hotel where they stayed landscapes and local people. Another section of images depicts a trip to Missouri with images of a farm and friends' homes. Atkinson visits the coasts of California and Oregon photographing lifeguards practicing drills the Cliff House in San Francisco Newport Beach and Victorian beachgoers lying in the sand. Other photos show interiors of well-to-do homes portraits of friends family pets and a trip to Stanford. Towards the end of the album a train crash near Ashland is seen; another photo shows an arch constructed for a visit by President Roosevelt.<br /> <br /> Eugenia was the wife of English-born businessman W.H. Atkinson. According to the National Park Service after arriving in Oregon in 1874 Atkinson became “active in the town's principal industrial and banking enterprises†owning shares in the Ashland Flour Mill and the Ashland Woolen Manufacturing Company. He was one of the founders of the Bank of Ashland and helped organize the Ashland Library. Mr. Atkinson died relatively young at the age of 50 in 1894 and Eugenia spent the next 24 years in the house they had built in Ashland now on the National Registry of Historic Places. A photo dated 1889 shows Eugenia standing in front of her house. This album follows Eugenia during her widowhood during her travels and her activities within the community.<br /> <br /> A nice collection of photographs compiled by an important Oregon woman at the turn of the century. hardcover
198691100Musee / Flammarion. New. 1986. Hardcover. FREE UPGRADE to Courier/Priority Shipping Upon Request - IN STOCK AND IMMEDIATELY AVAILABLE FOR SHIPMENT - FLAWLESS COPY BRAND NEW PRISTINE NEVER OPENED -- Text In French. 192 pages. Catalogue Raisonne Catalog Raisonné Complete Works La Vie et L'uvre Oeuvre Raisonnee Musee / Flammarion hardcover
19380001626HICKORY NORTH CAROLINA NC. Good. 1938. On offer is a super original manuscript archive of three 3 handwritten diaries by Eugenia Vasseur Ivey later Bivens b. April 29th 1919 d. January 20 2011 who worked for the Federal Bureau of Investigations FBI beginning in 1942 for 35 years. Her sister Virginia also worked with the FBI. The books are all 5-year diaries dated 1938-1943 nearly full 1944-1948 2/3rds full and the last only for 1949 and about half full. Prior to her work at the FBI she attended college and taught and she may have also been a hotel clerk. While each year is not full this archive shines on a number of levels given that she writes during the war years travels a fair bit dates a lot and sometimes interesting things happen to her like meeting Norman Rockwell and getting his autograph. As a home front diary she notes blackouts air raids gas rationing and much more relating to life during the war. What may be of particular interest to historians and collectors of FBI material was the fact that she was a super diarist detailing her duties her contacts her bosses and matters from the mundane to bank robberies. We learn she quit the FBI over a transfer dispute but they came back to her months later asking her to come back which she did. We also note that she met her husband Winfred Lee 'Wint' Bivens at the FBI. She went from and average typist to a respected clerical employee and her test results and other works were highly commended it seems. Here are snippets of the early years: 1942 "March 11th Mother went to her club. I get supper. Heard that Elbert is worse so I call off my bridge club I was to have Thursday night. Elbert has Hodgkin's disease no cure. Went to his stomach. Has been having treatments at Duke for it about 3 years March 12th Mother called me at school to tell me Elbert Ivey my 1st cousin died last night. Had busy day at school and company all afternoon after I got home. I went up to A. Blanches and helped in house from 7 to 9:30. So many flowers. He was only 42 years old. Has two sons 5 3. Married Isabelle Parker. Certainly so sad .June 7th Va. and I got up at 6:00 and did final packing car. By 8 boys came over and had breakfast with us. At 9:00 Va. And I left home by car for Silver Bay. I hated to leave mother and daddy. They helped us so to get off. We drove over Mts. all day and went over 45 and got 350 miles to Weston. West Va. By 9:30 at night. Beautiful dinner. Had no trouble. Had nice tourist home for night. Car ok. Jack and Dick were to leave after us going to Asheville and Smokey Mountains and then to Columbia S.C .June 14th Rained all day. I got up about 8 and went to work at front desk. Tom Helde is here for 2 weeks so he showed me a lot of things about job. I had afternoon off so I unpacked and straightened room. At night I worked until 11:00. Don Mac Naughton is back to be head desk clerk when Tommy H. leaves then a new boy is on other shift. I think I will like my job fine .June 15th I slept late as I had morning off. I worked in afternoon and night as Student Conference of 125 came in. It wasn't too bad registering the people. Most came by bus and train. I worked until 12:00 getting cash report made up and everything . September 9th we got up early. Raining but we packed the car. Ate about 8 and went and told everyone goodbye. Left at 9:30. Beautiful drive even in rain. I drove into NY City at 6:00 P.M. Had room at Taft Hotel. At 8 Dick came and took Va. and I to Billy Rose's Diamond Horseshoe. The show was so good. Jack had to work so could not get off. All bright lights are out in NY these days September 17th Va. Mother and I went to Charlotte. We interviewed by FBI man and he offered us jobs in office in Washington. I also saw Bell Tel. man offered me job at $70 per month but that is too low. Va. wants to go to Washington. I don't. But we have to have physical exams and they have to investigate. September 23rd Cut out red plaid skirt and black jacket. Neighbors came in and sat and talked. Then 2 page telegram from John Edgar Hoover telling us of our appointment as clerk in the FBI dept. and to report for duty September 28th. Va. and I both wired we accepted. Went up town in afternoon. We only hope we are doing right by going .September 29th Went to see U. Harry. He was so surprised to see us. Went again at 9:00. Heard more lectures all day. Took tour of building and went to J. Edgar Hoover's office but he was not in. At 6 we were given our assignments. I am to be typist in fingerprints called Identification Division. Va. with files. We begin work Wed. night 11:30 P.M. to 4:30 A.M. We had supper came to house and to bed early .October 29th I graded cards tonight instead of typing them. Va. is to transfer and start 6 weeks study in tech Monday. Learn how to classify fingerprints and I'm so dissatisfied .November 16th to work at 3:30. Had my 45 day report with Mr. Anderson. It said I was an average new employee and I was discontent and I am. He said he was not pleased with report and fussed at me terrible. I couldn't say a thing as I was so hurt. Went to rest room and cried .December 18th Heard today that Roy Rainhart is out at Ft. Belvoir Virginia and getting well from war and on way to Ireland. Will go out to see him Sunday. Gasoline was frozen today at noon and we only have tank ½ full. Only T. cards good. Eastern fuel shortage critical so was forced to do this. What will daddy do now for business " 1943 "January 1st Slept late. Rainy. Went to work no holiday for us. Touhy gang was caught by FBI in Chicago. Heard from Earl. Went to show before work. Jack Benny in George Washington Slept Here. Good April 7th All our office was called in today into Mr. Scott's office for efficiency report. Mine was excellent. Louise Clark and Va. were too but not others. I was proud of it. I told Mr. Scott that if I didn't get transfer to Charlotte I would probably resign in July. Also told Clark and office. How I want the transfer through .April 10th National Police Academy of FBI had its graduation exercises at 10:30. Va. and I and 2/3 of employees got to go. J. Edger Hoover spoke. Earl Godwin Garvy Firestone and Horace Beck Editor of Collier. So nice. Ate lunch in Internal Revenue Dept. Not so good. My office went out in afternoon and took pictures of us .May 4th Today Norman Rockwell artist for Saturday Evening Post was at Hecht Co. selling bonds and giving copies of his 4 Freedom pictures away. Va. and I went at lunch time to buy a bond and N. Rockwell autographed one of the pictures. He is very homely looking." For months she tells the FBI she wants to transfer to Charlotte or she will resign and finally on October 14 she does resign. After that she is out of work for several months waiting impatiently for the FBI to call for another job in the Charlotte area. Finally in 1944 she gets re-hired and spends the next 35 years with the FBI. There is also so much is happening in 1944 concerning the war and on August 6th she writes this entry about the Atomic Bomb: "August 6th 1944 Today we heard that U.S. used new and mighty bomb Atomic Bomb on the Jap Island of Hiroshima. So powerful it leaves nothing alive which it touches. 2000 times more powerful then B-29 bomb. Levels steel and everything. Wipes out whole cities. Terrible." Besides trips to places like Quebec in 1949 the most extensive seems to be in 1947 when she and her sister take a month and a half trip to the West Coast : "October 18th Thought I would go home after work today but decided not to and decided to go to office party at agent's house they rent out on river. Mr. and Mrs. Cole took me. About 50 or more there mostly married couples. We drank and danced. Had a fine time. I had a time with key and Mr. Cole had to come help me open door at 2 A.M." "December 6th Nice day. Helen is so excited about her trip. She leaves in morning at 4:27 A.M. We had office party out at two agent's house out near river. Nicest place! Had juke box and all decorated for Xmas. About 60 there. Mr. and Mrs. Cole took me. I had fine time and feet tired from dancing. Got home about 2:15 A.M. Even the boss came a few minutes but I didn't get to dance with him." Included are a number 9 of unidentified photos of we assume Eugenia and her family. One of the diaries has a cracked hinge the locks are all cut or broken but overall they are G.; Manuscript; 24mo - over 5" - 5¾" tall; KEYWORDS: HISTORY OF J EDGAR HOOVER FBI FEDERAL BUREAU OF INVESTIGATIONS EUGENIA V. IVEY BIVENS HOMEFRONT HOME FRONT HICKORY NORTH CAROLINA GENDER ISSUES GENDER STUDIES WWII WORLD WAR II WW2 WOMEN'S STUDIES AMERICANA HANDWRITTEN MANUSCRIPT DOCUMENT LETTER AUTOGRAPH KEEPSAKE WRITER HAND WRITTEN DOCUMENTS SIGNED LETTERS MANUSCRIPTS HISTORICAL HOLOGRAPH WRITERS AUTOGRAPHS PERSONAL MEMOIR MEMORIAL PERSONAL HISTORY ARCHIVE DIARY DIARIES ANTIQUITÉ CONTRAT VÉLIN MANUSCRIT PAPIER ANTIKE BRIEF PERGAMENT DOKUMENT antiquité contrat vélin document manuscrit papier Antike Brief Pergament Dokument Manuskript Papier oggetto d'antiquariato atto velina documento manoscritto carta antigüedad hecho vitela documento manuscrito papel. . unknown
1986C91100Musee / Flammarion. As New. 1986. Hardcover. FREE UPGRADE to Courier/Priority Shipping Upon Request - IN STOCK AND IMMEDIATELY AVAILABLE FOR SHIPMENT - FLAWLESS COPY BRAND NEW PRISTINE NEVER OPENED -- Text In French. 192 pages. Catalogue Raisonne Catalog Raisonné Complete Works La Vie et L'uvre Oeuvre Raisonnee -- with a bonus offer-- - May be EITHER: out of print OOP and extremely rare in this pristine condition; signed by author or contributor; or a first or special edition; inquire for details . Musee / Flammarion hardcover
196736802New York: Harcourt Brace & World. As New. 1967. Hardcover. FREE UPGRADE to Courier/Priority Shipping Upon Request IN STOCK AND IMMEDIATELY AVAILABLE FOR SHIPMENT - TEXT PRISTINE 437 pages. ASIN: B0006D74CS . Book Description: "Both witness to and victim of Stalins reign of terror a courageous woman tells the story of her harrowing eighteen-year odyssey through Russias prisons and labor camps." -- with a bonus offer-- . Harcourt, Brace & World hardcover
196839466Cambridge MA: Fogg Art Museum / Harvard University. As New. 1968. Hardcover Monograph. FREE UPGRADE to Courier/Priority Shipping Upon Request IN STOCK AND IMMEDIATELY AVAILABLE FOR SHIPMENT - TEXT PRISTINE - 321 works catalogued and illustrated -- with a bonus offer-- . Fogg Art Museum / Harvard University hardcover
196832411Fogg Art Museum Harvard University / New York Graphic Society. As New. 1968. Paperback. FREE UPGRADE to Courier/Priority Shipping Upon Request - IN STOCK AND IMMEDIATELY AVAILABLE FOR SHIPMENT - TEXT PRISTINE - 321 works catalogued and illustrated -- with a bonus offer-- . Fogg Art Museum, Harvard University / New York Graphic Society paperback
199175186Museum. New. 1991. Paperback. FREE UPGRADE to Courier/Priority Shipping Upon Request - IN STOCK AND IMMEDIATELY AVAILABLE FOR SHIPMENT - Flawless copy brand new pristine never opened -- 32 pp. With 14 ills. 28 x 20 cm. -- with a bonus offer-- . Museum paperback
197569605New York: W W Norton. Fine. 1975. Hardcover. 039330227X . FREE UPGRADE to Courier/Priority Shipping Upon Request - IN STOCK AND IMMEDIATELY AVAILABLE FOR SHIPMENT - TEXT PRISTINE - Corresponds to / earlier editoin of ISBN: 039330227X. Frist edition so stated -- with a bonus offer-- . W W Norton hardcover
1923182347Baltimore: Williams & Wilkins Company 1923. Eugenics grows in America First editions of both volumes of the papers from the second international eugenics congress; from the library of the American Eugenics Society with their stamp to the front free endpapers. The three international eugenics congresses were the central forum for the worldwide eugenics movement to share papers and propose policies. Britain hosted the first congress in 1912 at the University of London. The second congress took place at the American Museum of Natural History in New York in September 1921. Henry Fairfield Osborn presided Alexander Graham Bell was the honorary president and the key guest speaker was Leonard Darwin the son of Charles who advocated measures to eliminate the unfit. The third congress met in 1932 at the same venue. The American Eugenics Society was founded in 1922 in the aftermath of the second congress and only dissolved in 2019. It was the main American body promoting eugenics in the 1920s during which eugenic policies were introduced in numerous American states and immigration quotas were set to limit immigration from outside western and northern Europe. The papers of the congress show the breadth of the movement which was at the forefront of scientific research at the time. Some are reputable studies of heredity traits but most include panic-stricken notions of national decline due to the increase of undesired races and peoples:. The papers include "Some Notes on the Jewish problem" "Negro-White Intermixture and Intermarriage" and "The War from the Eugenic point of view". 2 vols octavo. With frontispieces and 45 plates. Original blue cloth spines lettered in gilt. Faint shadow of removed label to spines. Light rubbing and very light wear at extremities contents clean and unmarked save for trivial notations on contents pages. A very good copy. hardcover
1989x-0849345804CRC Pr I Llc 1989. Hardcover. New. 1st edition. 267 pages. 10.50x7.25x0.75 inches. CRC Pr I Llc hardcover
199526168Los Angeles: Cinubia 1995. Very Good /Very Good . Los Angeles: Cinubia 1995-2009. First Editions limited to 750 to 1000 copies each. Three volumes in four; large square quartos; publisher's cloth in pictorial dust jackets; chiefly photographic illus. throughout many in color. Light shelf wear some dust-soil to textblock extremities else a Very Good or better set. Contents as follows: <br /> <br /> Vol. I: 1840-1916<br /> Vol. II part 1: 1915-1968<br /> Vol. II part 2: 1918-1968<br /> Vol. III: 1969-2000. Cinubia unknown
193590899New York: John Wiley & Sons Inc 1935. Presumed First Edition First printing. Hardcover. Good. x 139 3 pages. Footnotes. Tabular Data. Appendix. Bibliography. by Frank Lorimer Index. No dust jacket present. A previous owner was Flemmie P. Kittrell name on fep. A fascinating work a statement of purpose 'arranged in the form of a catechism' from the American Eugenics Society of which Huntington was president. 'This book is an attempt to state in simple but accurate language the main principles of eugenics and their application to social problems.' Ellsworth Huntington September 16 1876 – October 17 1947 was a professor of geography at Yale University during the early 20th century known for his studies on environmental determinism/climatic determinism economic growth and economic geography. He served as president of the Ecological Society of America in 1917 the Association of American Geographers in 1923 and president of the board of directors of the American Eugenics Society from 1934 to 1938. Flemmie Pansy Kittrell December 25 1904 – October 3 1980 was the first African American woman to earn a Ph.D. in home economics. Her Ph.D. focused on nutritional interventions to address high Black mortality rates in the 1930s and she was also the first African American woman to get a Ph.D. from Cornell University. She transformed the field of home economics in the United States and internationally through research and programming on adult nutrition Black infant feeding practices and the importance of preschool enrichment experiences for children. Her work was foundational to the development of Head Start a national social program that provides early childhood education health and nutrition services to low-income children and families in the United States. Kittrell also served as an international ambassador using home economics to address global malnutrition and poverty. The American Eugenics Society AES was a pro-eugenics organization dedicated to "furthering the discussion advancement and dissemination of knowledge about biological and sociocultural forces which affect the structure and composition of human populations". It endorsed the study and practice of eugenics in the United States. Its original name as the American Eugenics Society lasted from 1922 to 1973 but the group changed their name after open use of the term "eugenics" became disfavored; it was known as the Society for the Study of Social Biology from 1973–2008 and the Society for Biodemography and Social Biology from 2008–2019. The Society was disbanded in 2019. During the Progressive Era Huntington expressed concern about immigration and the race mixing. He claimed that liberal immigration policy would lead to the "highest racial values" being "irrevocably swamped by those of lower calibre." Tomorrow's Children is a historical text outlining the goals of the eugenics movement in the United States. The book serves as a "catechism" or guide for the American Eugenics Society detailing the goals and principles of eugenics during that era. It discusses the application of eugenic principles including controversial ideas surrounding population control and sterilization which were active topics of debate in the 1930s. John Wiley & Sons, Inc hardcover
200052236Los Angeles: St. Ann's Press 2000. Limited edition. Hardcover. Near fine condition. 15/25. Signed and numbered "David Levinthal 2000 V # 15" on half-title. Small Folio. 138pp. portfolio. Original red velvet covered boards with color photo pasted to cover with blind-stamped lettering on spine black endpapers. Red velvet chemise with original signed photograph 15/25 / 10 x 7" both housed in red velvet slipcase. Missing second photograph. Black endpapers.<br /> <br /> Known for his iconic photographs using miniature figures and toys this volume echoes Edward Hopper paintings and urban life in for Levinthal typical "dreamlike" settings. "Ever the strategist David Levinthal risks seeming idiotic throwing off those who seek to understand him. He likes declaring with innocent aplomb how much "fun" it is to make art with toys. Some apologists play along naively taking him at his word. Others seek to give his method the currently acceptable artistic cachet by grouping it with that of practitioners of goofy postmodernist theatrics." Eugenia Parry. St. Ann's Press hardcover
199949762New York: Graphis 1999. Limited edition. Hardcover. Good to fine condition. 49/100. Signed Jayne Hinds Bidaut on title page and on limitation page underneath original tintype laid to printed limitation leaf of handmade paper pasted to inside back cover of clamshell box; stiff transparent tissue guard laid in. <br /> <br /> Quarto. 223 1pp. Original red cloth with offset reproduction of tintype laid to debossed square of cover black lettering on cover and spine blind-stamped publisher's name; housed in black cloth blind-stamped clamshell box. Black endpapers and ribbon marker. With facsimile of handwritten dedication to her parents at rear. <br /> <br /> "Jayne Hinds Bidaut is a contemporary American fine artist who lives and works in New York and Connecticut. Jayne is best known for mastering the once antiquated process of the tintype. Her fine art monograph Tintypes Jayne Hinds Bidaut 1999 encompasses 108 images from her “Academy Figures†“Insects†and “Stereoscopic Nudes†series." Joseph Bellows Gallery. Notes relating to the essay short biographical statments and acknowledgments at rear. Clamshell box rubbed else in fine condition. Graphis hardcover
1926015351Paris Grasset 1926 In-12 Broché Edition originale Dédicacé par l'auteur
1999324600New York: Graphis 1999. First edition. Signed on title page; includes original tintype edition 37 of 100 The original tintype is mounted on paper attached to the inside of the box; the paper is signed and numbered by Bidaut. 224 pp. 107 four-color plates from Bidaut's "Academy Figures" "Insects" and "Stereoscopic Nudes" series. 4to. Publisher's red cloth photo tipped onto covers; fine. In black cloth drop box with very light shelf wear else a near fine copy. First edition. Signed on title page; includes original tintype edition 37 of 100 The original tintype is mounted on paper attached to the inside of the box; the paper is signed and numbered by Bidaut. 224 pp. 107 four-color plates from Bidaut's "Academy Figures" "Insects" and "Stereoscopic Nudes" series. 4to. Graphis unknown
19941452LV Legislatura de la H. Cámara de Diputados 1994. 1st Edition. Hardcover. Very Good. Text in Spanish. On the legislative history of Mexico. Extremely rare! Some minor wear to the covers. Flyleaf has a greeting card glued on. Page edge a bit darkened. 288 pp. LV Legislatura de la H. Cámara de Diputados hardcover
1985mon0000014203Guideposts 1985. 1985. Hardcover. Good. in x in x in. Guideposts 1985. hardcover
2000175376Los Angeles CA: St. Ann's Press 2000. First edition. Hardcover. Number 84 of only 100 specially bound copies. Essay by Eugenia Parry. A collection of 100 color photographs of imagined locations with toy figures in various settings. A fine copy in velvet covered boards with color image inset on the front cover and in a velvet slipcase and with an original color c print housed in a you guessed it velvet chemise. Photograph is in very fine condition and is signed by Levinthal on the reverse side and numbered as well. The book is also signed and numbered as well. No dust jacket as issued. St. Ann's Press unknown books
2000190181Los Angeles CA: St. Ann's Press 2000. First edition. Hardcover. Number 77 of only 100 specially bound copies. Essay by Eugenia Parry. A collection of 100 color photographs of imagined locations with toy figures in various settings. A fine copy in velvet covered boards with color image inset on the front cover and in a velvet slipcase and with an original color c print housed in a you guessed it velvet chemise. Photograph is in very fine condition and is signed by Levinthal on the reverse side and numbered as well. The book is also signed and numbered as well. No dust jacket as issued. St. Ann's Press unknown
1997DADAX0380789108Avon Books 1997-11-01. First Edition. paperback. New. 4.50x1.00x7.00. Buy with confidence. Excellent Customer Service & Return policy. Avon Books paperback