102 résultats
1913368143New York: Association of American Painters and Sculptors 1913. Matted and framed. 21 x 21 inches. Some yellowing to postcards one spot to formal invitation otherwise near fine. Matted and framed. 21 x 21 inches. Rare set of ephemera from the International Exhibition of Modern Art better known as The Armory Show of 1913 including:<br /> <br /> - Stationary from the organizers of the show: The American Painters and Sculptors New York with Arthur B. Davies Gutzon Borglum Walt Kuhn Elmer L. MacRae listed on the masthead<br /> - Invitation to the Formal Opening of the International Exhibition of Modern Art at the Lexington Avenue Armory on February 17 1913<br /> - Invitation to the Press Preview of the International Exhibition of Modern Art on February 16 1913 "Please present this card."<br /> - Two lapel buttons using the image of the uprooted pine tree traken from the Massachusetts Revolutionary War era battle flag with the text "The New Spirit" created by Walter Kuhn<br /> - Postcard advertising the exhibition with the flag with uprooted tree<br /> - Postcard Battleships 1913 by Elmer L. MacRae treasurer of the Association of American Painters and Sculptors. Association of American Painters and Sculptors unknown
19133556New York: Vreeland Advertising Press 1913. First edition first state. Half-title: International Exhibition of Modern Art. New York 1913. Title-page with vignette; printer's statement on verso. Publisher's color-illustrated wrappers. Advertisements also on inside front and back wrappers. Spine slightly creased with minor surface wear; shallow wear to extremities; faint scattered spotting to covers and some light soiling including a small stain to the lower front cover near the spine. Minor edge creases to corners. Internally clean and complete. Some rust marks at inner margins from original staples. Numerous contemporary pencil annotations throughout the List of Artists and Their Works pp. 17-67 mostly check marks underlining and descriptive marginalia e.g. "cubist" "really good" "awfull" all in a single hand and adding evidential interest. Overall a good to very good copy. First edition first state. Half-title: International Exhibition of Modern Art. New York 1913. Title-page with vignette; printer's statement on verso. Publisher's color-illustrated wrappers. Advertisements also on inside front and back wrappers. pp. 1-16 including ads half-title title imprint preface etc. 17-97 1 blank 4 ads; with a full-page floor plan printed on p. 68. 12mo 195 × 105 mm. <p><br /> First edition first state of the scarce 1913 Armory Show catalogue-an iconic document of American modernism-here with contemporary annotations offering insight into early reception.<br /> <p><p><br /> Catalogue of the International Exhibition of Modern Art-commonly known as the 1913 Armory Show-held at the Sixty-Ninth Regiment Armory in New York City. Organized by the Association of American Painters and Sculptors the show was the first major exhibition in the United States devoted to modern art. It presented some 1300 works by over 300 avant-garde European and American artists offering American audiences their first direct encounter with Post-Impressionism Fauvism and Cubism. Works by Duchamp Matisse Brâncuși and Picasso provoked widespread public and critical reaction and the exhibition is now regarded as a foundational moment in the history of American modernism. After its New York debut the show traveled to Chicago and Boston.<br /> <p><p><br /> This is the first state of the first edition with 97 numbered pages corresponding to the Getty Research Institute copy LCCN 15013453; Accession no. 91-B12639; OCLC 80870711. This version omits the "legend" for the floor plan and contains numerous inconsistencies in the artist index. Several artists are listed twice Gauguin appears three times occasionally under variant spellings or with or without abbreviated forenames and some duplications lack clear explanation. It lists 1040 works; six additional entries-by J. Alden Weir and George Bellows-appear only in the later 105-page issue. We are not aware of any prior bibliographical study describing the differences between these print states. The present version is presumed earlier based on the uncorrected index and omissions later rectified.<br /> <p>. [Vreeland Advertising Press] unknown