41 résultats
19733550London: Trianon Press 1973. No.243 of 808 copies. 4to 6 colour facsimile plates reproduced in Paris at the Trianon Press using the collotype and hand-stencil process one black and white illustration plus 5 pp. of commentary by Geoffrey Keynes. 4to. original quarter dark blue morocco marbled paper covered boards in the original marbled paper covered slipcase. A very good bright copy. Booklabel of Elaine Klemen.A facsimile of the only known copy of The Book of Ahania which was owned by Lessing Rosenwald. The original frontispiece was supplied for this facsimile by its owner Geoffrey Keynes. <br>The Book of Ahania continues the story of the Book of Urizen. As Keynes writes: “Ahania the feminine Emanation of Urizen signifies Pleasure in Blake’s system.the poem begins with.a new character Fuzon who.signifies Passion.Fuzon attacks Urizen.with a fiery globe.Urizen was sorely wounded in the loins and.in his agony at losing his source of pleasure he seized on Ahania calling her Sin.Urizen seeks vengeance on Fuzon creating in the process the Serpent of Materialismâ€. Bentley <em>Blake Books</em> A15 Trianon Press hardcover
19763552London: Printed at the Trianon Press for the Trustees of The William Blake Trust 1976. No. 156 of 480 ordinary copies in addition there were 32 deluxe copies and 26 copies for the Trustees and publishers. 5 colour facsimile plates made using the collotype and hand-stencil process at the Trianon Press in Paris. Printed on Arches pure rag paper to match the paper used by Blake. 4to. quarter brown morocco marbled paper boards in a marbled paper covered slipcase. Very good.The companion volume to the <em>Book of Ahania </em>printed by Blake in Lambeth in 1795.<em> </em>A facsimile of the only known copy of <em>The Book of Los</em> in the British Museum.<br>In his commentary Geoffrey Keynes writes: “the philosophic message of this small book is hidden in apocalyptic verbiage calculated to puzzle Blake’s small audience. Blake seems to have sensed this obscurity as soon as it was completed and as far as is known he never made another copy.or referred to it.â€<br>Bookplate of Alexander Stone on front pastedown. Bentley <em>Blake Books</em> supplement p. 62. Printed at the Trianon Press for the Trustees of The William Blake Trust hardcover
19741252491974. London: Trianon Press 1974. <br /> <br /> Folio 25 color plates 8 proofs and commentary at the end. Original quarter brown morocco slipcase fine. <br /> <br /> § Limited to 500 copies of which this is No. 289. Jerusalem is the longest of Blake's prophetic books and tells of the fall of Albion Blake's embodiment of man or the Western World. This is the facsimile of Lord Cunliffe's copy and Kerrison Preston's proofs; the coloring differs markedly from the Stirling copy also published in facsimile by Trianon. "The long list of color facsimiles produced by the Trianon Press under Arnold Fawcus for the William Blake Trust were above all objects of beauty recreating as near to perfection as possible Blake's original achievements." Martin Butlin Bentley Blake Books A82. unknown
19771073811977. London: Trianon Press: 1977. <br /> <br /> 4to 155 pp. 51 plates. Original full brown morocco slipcase. A fine copy.<br /> <br /> § #5 of 36 de luxe copies signed by Keynes of a total edition of 562 copies. The definitive work about and reproducing all known portraits of Mr. and Mrs. Blake. Not in G.E. Bentley's Blake Books or its supplement. unknown
19723555London: printed in Paris at the Trianon Press for the William Blake Trust 1972. No. VI of 50 de luxe copies. 21 plates - 20 plates reproduced by colour collotype with water-color washes by hand through stencil and one engraving; together with a set of plates showing progressive stages of the collotype and hand stencil process with guide sheet and stencil. Edition de luxe limited to 50 copies with additional proof sheets progressive plates and original stencil etc. 2 vols. 4to and small 4to. full brown morocco in original marbled paper covered slipcase. Near fine prospectus inserted loose.The text is a clear statement of Blake’s beliefs regarding the nature of man. The full book only came to light in 1953 and this is the first reproduction of the text. Such maxims are included as “Man’s desires are limited by his perceptions none can desire what he has not perciev’d sic†and “If any could desire what he is incapable of possessing despair must be his eternal lotâ€.Bentley <em>Blake Books </em>202. One of only 50 de luxe copies with additional material printed in Paris at the Trianon Press for the William Blake Trust unknown
1028821971. London: Trianon Press 1971. <br /> <br /> Small folio 72 pages with 16 color facsimile leaves suites of progressive plates and 116 monochrome illustrations. Marbled boards morocco backstrip slipcase. Signed by Keynes. A fine copy as issued.<br /> <br /> § Limited to 28 copies so inscribed and signed by Geoffrey Keynes this particular volume is labeled no. 2. This is the de luxe edition of the trade version of the Gray issued by the Trianon Press in 1972 using 8-color printing. Although the three-volume folio edition is a magnificent piece of book making this version is more accessible and easier to use and enjoy and the quality of the color printing is Trianon Press at its best. <br /> <br /> The 116 water-color illustrations to Thomas Gray's poems are among Blake's major achievements as an illustrator. They were commissioned in 1797 by Blake's friend the sculptor John Flaxman as a gift for his wife Ann to whom Blake addressed the poem that ends the series. The commission may have been inspired by the Flaxmans' seeing Blake's water-color designs to Edward Young's Night Thoughts begun in 1795. The Gray illustrations follow the same basic format. Blake cut windows in large sheets of the same type of Whatman paper used for the Night Thoughts illustrations and mounted in these windows the texts of Gray's poems from a 1790 octavo edition published by John Murray leaving out some prefatory materials fly-titles the notes and the 7 engraved illustrations. Blake then drew and colored his designs surrounding the letterpress texts. On blank versos near the beginning of each poem and in one case on a separate piece of paper pasted over letterpress text Blake inscribed with pen and ink either titles for each design or quotations from the poem to indicate the passage illustrated. On most text pages Blake also drew a pencil cross left of the first line of the illustrated passage. He numbered most leaves consecutively in pen and ink beginning a new sequence for each of the 13 poems.<br /> <br /> Blake conceived of his work as an illustrated book rather than a series of unbound designs as indicated by his offsetting Gray's texts above and to the right left on versos from the middle of each leaf-then the convention for all letterpress books. Although listed by William Michael Rossetti in his catalogue of Blake's drawings and paintings published in the 1863 and 1880 editions of Alexander Gilchrist's Life of William Blake the Gray illustrations were virtually unknown until their rediscovery by Herbert Grierson in 1919.<br /> <br /> The Trianon Press reproductions are recognized as the finest examples of the art of facsimile reproduction; working from the originals in Paul Mellon's collection each leaf is faithfully hand-colored through stencils to achieve an astonishing exactitude. The Times Literary Supplement stated that nothing like these books had ever been printed before and that it was highly unlikely that they could be printed again. Bentley Blake Books 385. unknown
1073691970. London: Trianon Press 1970. <br /> <br /> 4to with 10 facsimile leaves 5 pp. commentary by Sir Geoffrey Keynes plus 32 pp. of the progressive collotype printings. Full green morocco near fine with green marbled slipcase. <br /> <br /> § Copy III of 36 de luxe copies. The total edition was of 662 copies including 36 de luxe copies numbered I-XXXVI 600 regular copies numbered 1-600 and 26 copies lettered A-Z reserved for the trustees of the William Blake Trust and the publishers. Bentley Blake Books 5. All Religions are One c. 1788 is "a small tractate perhaps Blake's first experiment in his illuminated printing it exists in only one copy. It affirms that the Imagination 'is the true man'. and thus early Blake had completed his revolutionary theory of the nature of man and proclaimed the unity of all true religions." Damon Blake Dictionary. unknown
1047771970. London: Trianon Press 1970. <br /> <br /> 4to 10 facsimile leaves and 5 pp. of commentary. Original full green morocco backstrip slightly faded as usual slipcase.<br /> <br /> § Edition de luxe this being copy h.c. ii limited to 36 copies specially bound with extra suites of the plates of an edition in all of 662 copies. Bentley Blake Books 5. All Religions are One c. 1788 is "a small tractate perhaps Blake's first experiment in his illuminated printing it exists in only one copy. It affirms that the Imagination 'is the true man'. and thus early Blake had completed his revolutionary theory of the nature of man and proclaimed the unity of all true religions." Damon Blake Dictionary. unknown
1081121987. Paris: Trianon Press for the Blake Trust 1987. <br /> <br /> 22 separate plates approx. 15.75 x 12.25 inches 30 x 31 cm each printed in color on Arches housed in a tri-fold paper folder. Very good condition. <br /> <br /> § The New Zealand Set are careful watercolor copies of the central designs of the original engravings produced by the circle of John Linnell presented here in faithful facsimile. Butlin noted in the Blake Quarterly: "The long list of color facsimiles produced by the Trianon Press under Arnold Fawcus for the William Blake Trust were above all objects of beauty recreating as near to perfection as possible Blake's original achievements.". unknown
19681075951968. London: Trianon Press 1968. <br /> <br /> 4 vols. 8vo and 12mo Vol. I 8vo i-vii-viii 50 4 pp. Vol. II 12mo 2 pp. 22 plates Vol. III 4 pp. 31 plates Vol. IV 12mo 2 pp. 10 plates negative and copper plate. Original tan morocco volume 4 in brown cloth as issued cloth slipcase gilt lettering to backstrips of all three volumes. Backstrips slightly flaked.<br /> <br /> § Copy #14 with the first three volumes bound in morocco. From an edition of 726 total copies including 700 numbered 1 to 700 of which the first 50 have additional material and are in a special binding and 26 reserved copies lettered A-Z. Volume I is an introductory volume followed by three volumes of plates. <br /> <br /> "In about 1818 Blake revised For Children: The Gates of Paradise giving the work the new title of For the Sexes: The Gates of Paradise and adding three new text plates at the end Plates 19-21. All twenty-one plates are intaglio etchings/engravings. Plates 19-20 contain brief interpretive statements keyed by number to the preceding design plates. The final plate is addressed to Satan as the "God of This fallen World." Blake Archive. Bentley BB 48. unknown
1268401972. London: Trianon Press 1972. <br /> <br /> 3 volumes folio with 116 color facsimile leaves reproduced by collotype and hand-stencil color the text of the poems reproduced from copper-plate with 3 additional printings to reproduce Blake's pencillings and the tone of the paper. Marbled boards morocco backstrips slipcases a fine set as issued.<br /> <br /> § Edition limited to 518 copies in all including 100 copies for Paul Mellon personally of which 12 copies were a super de luxe issue in three volumes with extra material 36 copies were a de luxe issue also with extra material but in sheets unbound18 copies were hors commerce contents unrecorded and 352 copies either bound in 3 volumes in slipcases or as a single set of the loose sheets in a box. This is copy #125.<br /> <br /> The 116 water-color illustrations to Thomas Gray's poems are among Blake's major achievements as an illustrator. They were commissioned in 1797 by Blake's friend the sculptor John Flaxman as a gift for his wife Ann to whom Blake addressed the poem that ends the series. The commission may have been inspired by the Flaxmans' seeing Blake's water-color designs to Edward Young's Night Thoughts begun in 1795. The Gray illustrations follow the same basic format. Blake cut windows in large sheets of the same type of Whatman paper used for the Night Thoughts illustrations and mounted in these windows the texts of Gray's poems from a 1790 octavo edition published by John Murray leaving out some prefatory materials fly-titles the notes and the 7 engraved illustrations. Blake then drew and colored his designs surrounding the letterpress texts. On blank versos near the beginning of each poem and in one case on a separate piece of paper pasted over letterpress text Blake inscribed with pen and ink either titles for each design or quotations from the poem to indicate the passage illustrated. On most text pages Blake also drew a pencil cross left of the first line of the illustrated passage. He numbered most leaves consecutively in pen and ink beginning a new sequence for each of the 13 poems.<br /> <br /> Blake conceived of his work as an illustrated book rather than a series of unbound designs as indicated by his offsetting Gray's texts above and to the right left on versos from the middle of each leaf-then the convention for all letterpress books. Although listed by William Michael Rossetti in his catalogue of Blake's drawings and paintings published in the 1863 and 1880 editions of Alexander Gilchrist's Life of William Blake the Gray illustrations were virtually unknown until their rediscovery by Herbert Grierson in 1919.<br /> <br /> The Trianon Press reproductions are recognized as the finest examples of the art of facsimile reproduction; working from the originals in Paul Mellon's collection each leaf is faithfully hand-colored through stencils to achieve an astonishing exactitude. The Times Literary Supplement stated that nothing like these books had ever been printed before and that it was highly unlikely that they could be printed again. Bentley Blake Books 385. unknown
1077171972. London: Trianon Press 1972. <br /> <br /> Folio with 116 color facsimile leaves reproduced by collotype and hand-stencil color the text of the poems reproduced from copper-plate with 3 additional printings to reproduce Blake's pencillings and the tone of the paper. Original sheets marbled boards morocco backstrip lettered in giltquarter brown morocco box.<br /> <br /> § Edition limited to 518 copies in all including 100 copies for Paul Mellon personally of which 12 copies were a super de luxe issue in three volumes with extra material 36 copies were a de luxe issue also with extra material but in sheets unbound18 copies were hors commerce contents unrecorded and 352 copies either bound in 3 volumes in slipcases or as a single set of the loose sheets in a box. This is copy 387. <br /> <br /> The 116 water-color illustrations to Thomas Gray's poems are among Blake's major achievements as an illustrator. They were commissioned in 1797 by Blake's friend the sculptor John Flaxman as a gift for his wife Ann to whom Blake addressed the poem that ends the series. The commission may have been inspired by the Flaxmans' seeing Blake's water-color designs to Edward Young's Night Thoughts begun in 1795. The Gray illustrations follow the same basic format. Blake cut windows in large sheets of the same type of Whatman paper used for the Night Thoughts illustrations and mounted in these windows the texts of Gray's poems from a 1790 octavo edition published by John Murray leaving out some prefatory materials fly-titles the notes and the 7 engraved illustrations. Blake then drew and colored his designs surrounding the letterpress texts. On blank versos near the beginning of each poem and in one case on a separate piece of paper pasted over letterpress text Blake inscribed with pen and ink either titles for each design or quotations from the poem to indicate the passage illustrated. On most text pages Blake also drew a pencil cross left of the first line of the illustrated passage. He numbered most leaves consecutively in pen and ink beginning a new sequence for each of the 13 poems.<br /> <br /> Blake conceived of his work as an illustrated book rather than a series of unbound designs as indicated by his offsetting Gray's texts above and to the right left on versos from the middle of each leaf-then the convention for all letterpress books. Although listed by William Michael Rossetti in his catalogue of Blake's drawings and paintings published in the 1863 and 1880 editions of Alexander Gilchrist's Life of William Blake the Gray illustrations were virtually unknown until their rediscovery by Herbert Grierson in 1919.<br /> <br /> The Trianon Press reproductions are recognized as the finest examples of the art of facsimile reproduction; working from the originals in Paul Mellon's collection each leaf is faithfully hand-colored through stencils to achieve an astonishing exactitude. The Times Literary Supplement stated that nothing like these books had ever been printed before and that it was highly unlikely that they could be printed again. Bentley Blake Books 385. unknown
3584London: printed in Paris at the Trianon Press for the Trustees of the William Blake Trust 1974. Limited to 32 deluxe copies with extra material proofs stencil etc. 25 colour plates printed using the collotype and hand-stencil method 8 proofs and commentary by Geoffrey Keynes at the end 8 colour facsimile trial proofs 12 pages of text plus an extra suite of 14 states of plate C & D with a matching guide-sheet and pochoir stencil. Folio original full brown morocco in the original morocco edged marbled paper covered slipcase. Very slight fading to spine otherwise extremely good.The longest of Blake’s prophetic books which tells of the fall of Albion Blake’s embodiment of man or the Western World. Six copies were printed between 1820 & 1827 and a further 4 copies were printed posthumously. This is the facsimile of Lord Cunliffe’s copy copy B and Kerrison Preston’s proofs; the colouring differs markedly from the Stirling copy which was the first Trianon Press Blake facsimile published in 1950.Bentley Blake Books A82. One of only 32 deluxe copies printed in Paris at the Trianon Press for the Trustees of the William Blake Trust unknown
199839679France: Alain De Gourcuff. New. 1998. Hardcover. 2909838307 . FREE UPGRADE to Courier/Priority Shipping Upon Request IN STOCK AND IMMEDIATELY AVAILABLE FOR SHIPMENT - FLAWLESS COPY PRISTINE - Text in English. 30 color illustrations. -- with a bonus offer-- . Alain De Gourcuff hardcover
19511252551951. London: Trianon Press 1951. <br /> <br /> 4to 6 ix text and 100 color plates. Original blue cloth folding box repaired very good.<br /> <br /> § Limited to 516 copies this is #351. The first of the magnificent series of facsimiles by the Trianon Press of Blake's illuminated books edited by Geoffrey Keynes. Bentley Blake Books 78. Butlin noted in the Blake Quarterly: "The long list of color facsimiles produced by the Trianon Press under Arnold Fawcus for the William Blake Trust were above all objects of beauty recreating as near to perfection as possible Blake's original achievements.". unknown
1269611974. London: Trianon Press 1974. <br /> <br /> Folio 25 color plates 8 proofs and commentary at the end eight color facsimile trial proofs twelve pages of text plus an extra suite of fourteen states of plate B collotype proofs and a matching guide-sheet and stencil. Original full brown morocco slipcase. As new. <br /> <br /> § De luxe copy #XXVI of 32 with extra material proofs stencil etc. Limited to 558 copies including 32 de luxe copies numbered I-XXXII 500 regular copies number 1-500 and 26 regular copies lettered A-Z reserved for the Trustees of the William Blake Trust and the publishers. This is a combined facsimile of Lord Cunliffe's copy copy B and Kerrison Preston's proofs; the coloring differs markedly from the Stirling copy copy E which was the first Trianon Press Blake facsimile published in 1951 see above. Jerusalem is the longest of Blake's prophetic books and tells of the fall of Albion Blake's embodiment of man or the Western World. Bentley BB A82. unknown