832 résultats
2006Q-382285008XTASCHEN 2006-02-27. Hardcover. New. New. In shrink wrap. Looks like an interesting title! TASCHEN hardcover
1981KFZZQ100827Iwanami Bookstore 1981. Soft Cover. Fine. KFZZQ100827 Iwanami Bookstore paperback
19931676Taschen 1993. Hardcover. fine. Dali Salvador. Taschen hardcover
201464769Goodman Books. Very Good with no dust jacket. 2014. First. Hardcover. 1847960782 . Bottom spine edge and bottom rear board bumped small tear to rear spine paper. Binding is sound inner pages crisp and clean. Multiple fold-outs envelopes containing facsimile items.; 302 X 29 X 269 millimeters; 88 pages . Goodman Books hardcover
5054Dali's Mustache Salvador Dali & Philippe Halsman Signed "Dali" with Original Drawing of an ant expanding across inside cover to first end paper. Full title "Dali's Mustache: A Photographic Interview by Salvador Dali and Philippe Halsman" New York Simon and Schuster 1954. Halsman 1906-79. Dali ends the Preface about his view of his mustache "Some day perhaps one will discover a truth almost as strange as this mustache - namely that Salvador Dali was possibly also a painter." Halsman captioned photographs of Dali throughout interspersed with bold face questions some obvious "What is beauty" some comical "Dali What makes You Tick" Condition: Cover shows wear and chipping to boards and spine break to spine following two second page of preface with all pages in tact. unknown
1996Q-2080135600Flammarion 1996-01-15. Hardcover. New. New. In shrink wrap. Looks like an interesting title! Flammarion hardcover
1954021413New York: Simon & Schuster 1954. Book. Good. Hardcover. 1st Edition. External tape repairs along the spine some edge wear 2 previous owner's ink names on the front endpaper and rear endpaper seems to be missing. A difficult book to find in nice condition as the spine is quite often missing altogether. Simon & Schuster Hardcover
51-6816Paris: Flammarion 1994. 12mo. 13 x 18cm. Boards in d-j. Fine.The relationship between Dali and Halsman:. The collaboration between Dalà and Halsman began in 1941. They met while working on Labyrinth a project performed by the Ballets Russes at New York’s Metropolitan Opera House in 1941 for which Halsman photographed the costumes designed by DalÃ. They continued to work closely together on joint commissions mainly related to ballet but also generated their own projects such as Dali’s Midsummer Night’s Mare Dali Atomicus Dali Sculpture with Light and In Voluptate Mors in which models are arranged in the shape of a skull. In 1960 Halsman documented the making of DalÃ’s film Chaos and Creation.Philippe Halsman explains the concept of the jointly produced book Dali’s Mustache as follows: “In 1954 the growth of Dali’s mustache miraculously increased. When the painter returned to New York I was amazed: the points of his mustache were higher than his eyebrows. I saw my duty and started to photograph the play and interplay of his mustache. I needed DalÃ’s consent and I approached the great surrealist cautiously: ‘Books have been written about you and about other painters. But there is no book about a part of their personality as for instance Rembrandt’s nose or Picasso’s foot. What a tribute to your genius DalÃ! A book to appear – dedicated not to the whole but only to a small part of you!â€.Text below by Mary PanzerCurator of PhotographsNational Portrait Gallery Smithsonian Institution.Philippe Halsman 1906-1979 was born in Riga Latvia. He studied engineering in Dresden before moving to Paris where he set up his photographic studio in 1932. Halsman's bold spontaneous style won him many admirers. His portraits of actors and authors appeared on book jackets and in magazines; he worked with fashion especially hat designs and filled commissions for private clients. By 1936 Halsman was known as one of the best portrait photographers in France.From the 1940s through the 1970s Philippe Halsman's sparkling portraits of celebrities intellectuals and politicians appeared on the covers and pages of the big picture magazines including Look Esquire the Saturday Evening Post Paris Match and especially Life. His work also appeared in advertisements and publicity for clients like Elizabeth Arden cosmetics NBC Simon & Schuster and Ford. Photographers amateur as well as professional admired Halsman's stunning images. In 1958 a poll conducted by Popular Photography named Halsman one of the "World's Ten Greatest Photographers" along with Irving Penn Richard Avedon Ansel Adams Henri Cartier-Bresson Alfred Eisenstaedt Ernst Haas Yousuf Karsh Gjon Mili and Eugene Smith. Altogether Halsman's images form a vivid picture of prosperous American society in the middle years of the twentieth century. "Philippe Halsman: A Retrospective" is the first historical survey of his work.Halsman's career came to a dramatic halt in the summer of 1940 when Hitler's troops invaded Paris. Albert EinsteinHis wife daughter sister and brother-in-law who all held French passports immigrated to America but as a Latvian citizen Philippe Halsman could not obtain a visa. For several long months he waited in Marseilles along with many others who were forced to escape fascist Europe. Finally through the intervention of Albert Einstein who had met Halsman's sister in the 1920s Halsman obtained permission to enter the United States and he arrived in New York in November 1940 with little more than his camera.Halsman's big break came when he met Connie Ford a striking young model who agreed to pose in exchange for prints for her portfolio.Constance Ford When publicists at Elizabeth Arden saw Halsman's photograph of Ford against an American flag they used the image to launch a national campaign for "Victory Red" lipstick. A year later in the fall of 1942 Life asked Halsman to shoot a story on new hat design. To Halsman's delight his portrait of the model smiling through a feathery brim landed on the cover. One hundred more covers followed before the magazine ceased weekly publication in 1972.When Halsman began working for Life the magazine was only six years old and photojournalism was still a new field. Before the existence of Life and its competitors Americans learned about the world from newspapers radio and newsreels. But the new picture magazines published pages filled with bright dramatic photographs bringing Americans vivid information that no other media could match. Frank SinatraIn the spirit of a variety show or a world's fair magazines combined stories about international politics everyday life news events celebrities exotic scenery and humor to prove that "so much of the world so judiciously selected had never been seen before in one place." Today to understand the significance of those great magazines we need only look at the many forms of mass media that have come to replace them. Now we find photographs on television and billboards; in special publications devoted to news people fashion or sports; in newspapers; in museums and galleries; and on the Internet. And ironically the more places there are to see photographs the harder it is to attract viewers. But in 1942 when Philippe Halsman's portrait simply appeared on the cover of Life and immediately reached a large united audience.Surrealism:.In Paris Halsman studied the work of other artists and photographers especially the surrealists from whom he learned to make images that surprised his viewers. By including homely and ultimately disturbing details he gave his subjects memorable tension. Through subtle lighting sharp focus and close cropping he turned formal fashion shots into serious investigations of character. When Halsman posed NBC comedians against bare white paper eliminating all defining context their isolation made them look both frail and funny.Salvidor Dali Most important of all from the surrealists' exploration of the erotic unconscious Halsman learned how to combine glamour sex and wholesome energy in one portrait. This unusual ability made him Life's favorite photographer for sensual stars like Marilyn Monroe and Brigitte Bardot. Halsman's sympathy for surrealism also led to his long productive friendship with Salvador Dali. Halsman met Dali on assignment in 1941 and over the next three decades they became partners on many projects including a series of playful tableaux that had all the disturbing irrationality of dreams or a painting by Dali. Their most notable production was "Dali Atomicus" in which the artist his canvas furniture cats and water all appear suspended in air.Psychological Portraiture:.Over the course of his career Halsman enjoyed comparing his work to that of a good psychologist who regards his subjects with special insight. With his courtly manners and European accent Halsman also fit the popular stereotype at a time when Americans regarded psychology with fascinated skepticism. In fact Halsman was proud of his ability to reveal the character of his sitters. As he explained "It can't be done by pushing the person into position or arranging his head at a certain angle. It must be accomplished by provoking the victim amusing him with jokes lulling him with silence or asking impertinent questions which his best friend would be afraid to voice.".Marilyn MonroeIn the spring of 1952 Halsman put his signature technique to work when Life sent him to Hollywood to photograph Marilyn Monroe. Halsman asked Monroe to stand in a corner and placed his camera directly in front of her. Later he recalled that she looked "as if she had been pushed into the corner cornered with no way to escape." Then Halsman his assistant and Life's reporter staged a "fiery" competition for Monroe's attention. "Surrounded by three admiring men she smiled flirted giggled and wriggled with delight. During the hour I kept her cornered she enjoyed herself royally and I . . . took between 40 and 50 pictures.".In this widely familiar portrait Monroe wears a white evening gown and stands with her back against two walls one dark the other light her eyes half closed and her dark lipsticked mouth partly open. Yet Halsman deftly avoided any explicit representation of the true subject of the picture. Using the euphemistic language of the time Halsman's assistant admired the photographer's ability to make "suggestive" pictures of beautiful women which still showed "good taste" emphasizing "expression" rather than "physical assets." And then the assistant added "Halsman is very adept at provoking the expression he wants.".Jumpology:.In 1950 NBC asked Halsman to photograph many of its popular comedians. Milton Berle Ed Wynn Sid Caesar Groucho Marx Bob Hope Red Skelton and many others came to Halsman's studio where they performed while he captured their antics on film. A single session could generate two or three hundred pictures. When Halsman compared these comic images to more traditional portraits he found that comedians often jumped and always stayed in character. Desperation and good humor finally drove him to ask others to jump for his camera when the Ford Motor Company commissioned him to make an official family photograph in honor of the company's fiftieth anniversary. WindsorsHalsman spent a long tiring session with nine edgy adults and eleven restless children. Afterward Halsman's irrepressible humor inspired him to ask matriarch Mrs. Edsel Ford "May I take a picture of you jumping'" The astonished Mrs. Ford replied "You want me to jump with my high heels" Next her daughter-in-law Mrs. Henry Ford II requested a turn. The "jump" pictures had surprising charm and over the next six years Halsman asked many clients to jump for him. Van Cliburn Edward R. Murrow and Herbert Hoover declined Halsman's invitation but most people realized they had nothing to lose. Some gained considerably like the suddenly buoyant and likable Vice President Richard Nixon who jumped for Halsman in the White House. Halsman claimed the jumps revealed character that was otherwise hidden. "When you ask a person to jump his attention is mostly directed toward the act of jumping and the mask falls so that the real person appears.".Halsman also pursued this project to discover something about himself. "I assure you that often before approaching the person my heart would beat and I would have to fight down all my inhibitions in order to address this request to my subject. At every time when the subject agreed to jump it was for me like a kind of victory." How did Halsman persuade so many to abandon their composure for his camera Somehow he managed to convince each one that the risk was all his own.Like many who escaped Hitler's Europe Philippe Halsman rarely discussed the past. He rightly insisted that his most important work took place in America and in many ways his adopted country became his subject. One typical review noted his patriotic flair praising Halsman's "unsanctimonious and immensely intense portrayal of American bounce." From a historian's perspective it seems clear that Halsman invented a glowing image of the nation as he saw it using light persuasion nerve imagination psychology and experience. This place and these faces are his creation.Halsman's perpetual quest for hidden truth also recalls his personal history as an artist and a refugee. Halsman knew that the effort to establish one's identity had significance far beyond the needs of the celebrity marketplace. "This fascination with the human face has never left me. . . . Every face I see seems to hide and sometimes fleetingly to reveal the mystery of another human being. . . . Capturing this revelation became the goal and passion of my life.". Paris: Flammarion, 1994. hardcover
1993Q-2080124331FLAMMARION 1993-12-07. Hardcover. New. New. In shrink wrap. Looks like an interesting title! FLAMMARION hardcover
1982WB16623Paris: Arthaud 1982. Hardcover. Very Good. Publisher's pictorial cloth. pp. 128. Photographs throughout. The 1982 reissue of this clever book. Inscribed by Halsman's wife Ivonne to whom the book was dedicated <br/><br/> Arthaud hardcover
195425008New York: Simon and Schuster 1954. Pictorial boards. Very Good. A solid tight copy of the 1954 1st edition of this playful collaboration between artist and photographer. Crisp and VG in its wonderful pictorial boards with very light rubbing and soiling along the panels and a small neat ink inscription at the front free endpaper. 12mo rich gravure photographs throughout. Lacking its original dustjacket. Simon and Schuster unknown
19541514Small Hardback pictorial cover 1954 First Edition some edge wear Simon & Schuster hardcover
1954000360New York NY: Simon & Schuster. Good Plus/No Jacket. 1954. No Edition Stated. Pictorial Cover. 5 1/2" x 7" HARD COVER Wear at edges book rubbed and scratched. Photographic interview with B&W photos throughout. Has three newspaper clippings about a Dali showing and a review from the National Gallery of Art laid in. 126 pages. . Simon & Schuster unknown
200016716Cumberland Rhode Island U.S.A.: Yale Univ Pr. New. 2000. Hardcover. 0300081774 . FREE UPGRADE to Courier/Priority Shipping Upon Request - IN STOCK AND IMMEDIATELY AVAILABLE FOR SHIPMENT - Flawless -- with a bonus offer-- . Yale Univ Pr hardcover
19762092902143801861Futami shobo 1976. Soft Cover. Fine. Number of books: 1 book Futami shobo paperback
149870New York: Ballantine Books 1974. First edition second printing of this illustrated work by Salvador Dali. Quarto original pictorial wrappers illustrated with 40 glossy color plates. Presentation copy boldly inscribed by Salvador Dali in black felt tip on the verso of the front cover and half-title page with his enormous signature and a large drawing of a woman's head wearing a conical hat to the bottom left. In fine condition. Edited by David Larkin. Introduction by J.G. Ballard. The infamous Surrealist in full colour and in his own words Picasso called Dali "an outboard motor that's always running." Dali thought himself a genius with a right to indulge in whatever lunacy popped into his head. Painter sculptor writer and film maker Salvador Dali 1904-1989 was one of the century's greatest exhibitionists and eccentrics -- and was rewarded with fierce controversy wherever he went. He was one of the first to apply the insights of Sigmund Freud and psychoanalysis to the art of painting. He brought extraordinary sensitivity imagination and concern for precision to bear upon submerged levels of consciousness. Ballantine Books unknown
0019861958: New York Graphic Society Book. Very Good. Hardcover. 1st Edition. First American Edition. Illustrated boards in printed acetate dustjacket. Illustrated with black & white reproductions and 17 tipped-in color plates. Top edge a trifle dusty. Dustjacket with red lettering has 2 closed tears but no missing pieces. 94 pp. 37x35 cm. . New York Graphic Society Hardcover
46238Berlin Propyläen 1969. 4° o. P. ca. 120 Bl. durchgeh. tlw. farb. Abb. Kart. m. OU OU min. gebrauchsspurig sonst tadellos in Schuber. Dt. Erstausgabe. 010 Berlin, Propyläen, 1969 unknown
25151-Atlantis / Editorial Blume 1985-. First edition. Text in Spanish. Illustrated in colour and black and white. Unpaginated. Pictorial boards. Small chip to rear edge. Very good. No dustjacket. Ask to see our other Salvador Dali titles. Dali. Dali. Dali.Spain Spanish Artist 20th Century 3881999809 -Atlantis / Editorial Blume (1985)- hardcover
40990München Schirmer/Mosel 2005. 4° 607 S. unzähl. Abb. davon 249 farbig OLwd. m. OU. Tadell. Englische Originalausgabe. 010 München, Schirmer/Mosel, 2005 unknown
197778491Paris : Draeger 1977. 305x220mm. photos couleurs et n/b reliure d'ÂŽditeur sous jaquette. Jaquette en trÂs bons ÂŽtat. Bel exemplaire. 2011 Draeger unknown
197378490Paris : Draeger 1973. 305x220mm. photos couleurs et n/b reliure d'ÂŽditeur sous jaquette. Jaquette en trÂs bons ÂŽtat. Bel exemplaire. 2170 Draeger unknown
26116-Espasa Calpe 1977-. First edition. Text in Spanish. 315x260mm 253 pages. Illustrated in colour and black and white. Cloth with gilt design by Dali 1972 a little corner fraying. Some light spotting to prelims and endpages. No dustjacket known. Very good. Ask to see our other Salvador Dali titles. We specialise in exhibition catalogues. Dali. Por Ramon Gomez de la Serna spanish artist 8423942740 -Espasa Calpe (1977)- hardcover
19747425New York: Harry N. Abrams Inc. Publishers 1974. Abridged Edition. Hardcover. Unpaginated. Quarto. measuring 9" x 12". Publisher's ivory cloth over boards with stamped gilt lettering and illustration to the spine and front board. Illustrated with many full-page and in-text black-and-white and colour plates and illustrations throughout. Near fine contents without blemish and with firm sound binding; near fine and housed in its elaborately illustrated unclipped dustjacket. Uncommon in commerce in this edition and state. <br/><br/> Harry N. Abrams, Inc., Publishers hardcover
1974ALIliDAL93New York: Harry N. Abrams Inc. 1974. 1974. 4to. pp. 140. 98 illus. 30 colour many full & double-page. cloth. dw. Abridged Edition. Hardcover. New York: Harry N. Abrams, Inc. [1974]. Hardcover