3 806 résultats
186024278Paris: L. Turgis ca. 1860. EXTREMELY RARE SUITE OF HAND-COLOURED LITHOGRAPHS ON BULLFIGHTING. A complete suite of six large hand-coloured original lithographs by Gustave Doré. 45.5 by 61.4 cm Each plate with the running title 'Corrida de Toros' individual captions in Spanish and French and with 'G. Doré del. A fine set with occasional evidence of age. FIRST ISSUE AND VERY RARE A SUITE OF IMAGES ON BULL FIGHTING AS SEEN AND CHRONICLED BY GUSTAVE DORÉ. In Corrida de Toros Doré captured the strength and movement of the bull the tension the danger in the ring - it almost seems as if the bull has a chance not just at survival but of actually conquering the men on foot and horseback who are supremely annoying it to rage. Doré appears to sympathize with the bull and the tragedy of bullfighting rather than the glory of the fighters.<br> ‘The French artist Gustave Doré was born in Strassburg in 1832. In 1848 he moved to Paris where it was noted that “his facility as a draughtsman was extraordinary.†He was a prolific worker whose talents and creations are greatly valued to the present day. Doré’s first illustrated story was published when he was only fifteen years old. His talent was evident even earlier however. At age five he had been a prodigy troublemaker playing pranks that were mature beyond his years. Seven years later he began carving in cement. Subsequently as a young man he began work as a literary illustrator in Paris winning commissions to depict scenes from books by Rabelais Balzac Milton and Dante.<br> In 1853 Doré was asked to illustrate the works of Lord Byron. This commission was followed by additional work for British publishers including a new illustrated English Bible. A decade later he illustrated a French edition of Cervantes's Don Quixote and his depictions of the knight and his squire Sancho Panza have become so famous that they have influenced subsequent readers artists and stage and film directors' ideas of the physical "look" of the two characters. Doré also illustrated an oversized edition of Edgar Allan Poe's "The Raven" an endeavor that earned him 30000 francs from publisher Harper & Brothers in 1883.<br> Doré's English Bible 1866 was a great success and in 1867 Doré had a major exhibition of his work in London. This exhibition led to the foundation of the Doré Gallery in Covelant Bond Street. After an illness he died in January of 1883. L. Turgis unknown
187647354Paris.: Librairie Hachette et Cie. 1876. Contemporary burgundy half-morocco marbled boards and endpapers banded spine with gilt title in six compartments original publisher's blue printed wrappers and backstrip with titles in red and black retained t.e.g. Small folio. 385 x 296 mm. Half-title with printer's credit verso printed title in red and black and Enault's text illustrated with 174 wood-engraving after Doré of which 52 are full-page. A very scarce deluxe example of Louis Enault's 'Londres' illustrated by Gustave Doré printed on Chine and with a signed original drawing. This is the first French edition; the work was first published in English in 1872 with text by Blanchard Jerrold. No copies of the English edition were issued on Chine.The original drawing by Doré 420 x 350 mm framed separately is a preparatory sketch for one of the illustrations in the book 'Pauvresse à Londres'. The image shows a bare-footed young woman seen from behind carrying a small child on her left shoulder her head turned to the right another child very slightly older her face half-turned towards the viewer shelters within the skirts of the young woman the whole scene suggesting pathos and poverty.'La publication de cette édition française ne reçut que des éloges.' Leblanc.Ray 251 English edition & 252; SR / BF 59. Librairie Hachette et Cie. hardcover
58836Paris: Bureaux de la Société générale de librairie 1855. FIRST EDITION THUS. PRINTED ON PAPIER VÉLIN SATINÉ. 8vo. 20 x 12.5 cm. pp.xxxi16141. Contemporary full crushed red morocco signed by David sides richly tooled in gilt with inlaid green morocco border and flowers four gilt cherubs to corners reflecting "la victime de l'amour" vignette to covers and title-page spine with raised bands and gilt-decorated compartments green morocco doublures stamped with gilt cherubic motifs decorative silk endpapers and additional marbled endpapers all edges gilt some pages uncut with the original wrappers dated 1856 bound in. 425 illustrations by Gustave Doré engraved on wood by Lavieille Rouget Pisan Brévière and Piaud. An extremely fine copy printed on immaculate papier vélin satiné and with particularly fine impressions throughout. First illustrated edition of the Contes drolatiques with 425 illustrations by Gustave Dore praised by Ray "Doré's early masterpiece" Carteret "le chef-d'œuvre d'illustrations de Gustave Doré" and Beraldi who though it the most likely to endure of all Doré's books - "S'il n'en reste qu'un seul ce sera celui-là !" Béraldi. Although the title refers to this edition as the "cinquiesme édition" it is actually the fourth edition of Les contes drolatiques which was first published between 1832-1837. It is well recorded that Balzac's widow granted permission for the illustrated edition only on the condition: "that no artist but Doré should be allowed to illustrate her husband's works" Anthony North-Peat Gossip from Paris 1864-69 p. 324. According to Carteret there were probably 25 copies printed on chine of which he lists 7 copies to have appeared in commerce. It is likely that copies printed on vélin are equally rare with Carteret again citing just 7 copies. Carteret III pp. 48-53; Bulletin de la Librairie Morgand et Fatout II 6445; Berny Livres anciens romantiques et modernes III 92; Rahir VI 1875; Ray 244. Paris: Bureaux de la Société générale de librairie, 1855. hardcover
186047799Paris & New York.: Turgis & Duane. c.1860. Oblong folio. 320 x 434 mm. Six original colour lithographs by Gustave Doré each heightened with gum arabic. Each plate with the running title 'Corrida de Toros' individual captions in Spanish and French and with 'G. Doré del.'. Four of the lithographs nos. 2 3 5 and 6 are signed in the plate. First edition of Gustave Doré's rare suite of bullfighting lithographs.Each of the plates has the title in both Spanish and French:1. Caida del Picador - Chute d'un Picador.2. Suerta de Banderillas - Banderillero piquant la Banderilla.3. Suerta de Capa - Banderillero excitant le taureau.4. Cogida de un Torero - Torero enlevé par le taureau.5. Suerta de Pica - Coup de Lance.6. Estocada - Coup d'épée.Leblanc pg. 521 unseen; Vindel Toros 1931; not in Sims Reed / Forgeot. Turgis & Duane. unknown
19041057London: Cassell and Company 1904. First Edition. Six volumes folio. Bindings by La Belle Sauvage in full morocco elaborate gilt spines covers and doublures with morocco onlaid masks of Comedy and Tragedy grape and floral inlays in an Art Nouveau style upper doublures of each volume with copper medallions of Dante with a verdigrised patina. The signed "Sir Henry Irving limited edition" number 14 of 55 sets each volume with a watercolor frontispiece by William Satterlee after the famous Gustave Doré designs. 136 full-page wood-engraved plates on Japan paper after Doré. Red moiré silk endpapers hand painted drop caps and decorations throughout. Five of the six volumes skillfully rebacked with the original spines laid down some other points of restoration to the extremities rubbing to the extremities some cracking and chipping to the silk endpapers else internally clean and beautiful. The Divine Comedy’s enduring relevance and universal themes have cemented its status as a cornerstone of Western literary tradition. The vivid imagery makes Dante’s poem particularly well suited to a multitude of illustrative interpretations from Sandro Botticelli’s in the Renaissance to the Romanticism of Doré to the late stage historical-Surrealism of Salvadore Dali. Cassell and Company unknown
LCS-17558Premier tirage de cette suite de 24 lithographies réalisées d’après les dessins de Gustave Doré. Paris, Au Bureau du Journal pour Rire, s.d. [1854].Grand in-4 oblong de (1) f. de titre et 24 lithographies numérotées. Relié en demi-percaline ocre, dos lisse, pièce de titre en maroquin vert. Reliure du XIXe siècle.258 x 330 mm.
In-4°; pp. 492, (4), segue Hymni per totum annum... pp. 70, (2) con colophon Antverpiae excudebat Christophorus Plantinus Architypographus Regius anno MDLXXIII; frontespizio stampato in rosso e nero, entro bordura xilografica e al centro un grande tondo con l’Ascensione della Vergine (il monogramma di firma A.V.L, Antonius van Leest, l’incisore.). L’intero testo (tranne le ultime 70 pagine) è stampato con parti in rosso, ogni pagina entro ricca bordura xilografica a quattro legni. Nel testo illustrazioni di Pieter van der Brocht incise su legno da Antonius van Leest (i nomi dei due artisti fiamminghi si trovano espressi per intero nell’ultima illustrazione, quella dell’Apocalisse, con data 1572; nelle altre incisioni con i monogrammi). Rara edizione, e una delle prime, riccamente illustrata dell’Officium riformato di Pio V, libro d’ore di Plantin, qui nella versione (Variante C) con illustrazioni e bordure xilografiche. Le xilografie a piena pagina sono 19. Legatura in piena pelle con titolo in oro al dorso. Alcuni fori di tarlo passanti al margine interno bianco delle prime e ultime carte.
186151287Sous étui bordé. Reliure plein maroquin brun. Dos à 4 nerfs sautés orné de filets et d'un fleuron central à froid. Panneau orné d'un décor à répétition dessiné par des fleurons disposés sur un pavage de losanges, encadrement intérieur de deux doubles filets dorés. Tranches dorées sur témoins. Reliure signée CONIL-SEPTIER.
153815510Paris, Pierre Vidoue, 1538. In-8 gothique (145 x 90 mm) de (111) ff. (sign. A-N8 O7), maroquin rouge, dos lisse orné, triple filet doré d'encadrement sur les plats, roulette intérieure, tranches dorées (reliure du XVIIIe siècle).
1872302978London: Grant & Co 1872. First edition. Wood-engraved title page illustrated with numerous wood-engraved plates vignettes head- and tail-pieces after Doré. 13 parts in 12. 1 vols. Folio. Original printed wrappers spines repaired. Very good clean set. Cloth folding box. Doré Gustave. First edition. Wood-engraved title page illustrated with numerous wood-engraved plates vignettes head- and tail-pieces after Doré. 13 parts in 12. 1 vols. Folio. Doré's London in original Parts Issue. "Doré's devastating realization of the contrast of wealth and poverty in a modern metropolis makes LONDON one of the great illustrated books of the world.". Ray p. 134 Grant & Co unknown books
18521688081852. #168808 DORÉ Gustave. Folies Gauloises depuis les Romains jusqu'à nos Jours. 20 lithographs by Doré. Oblong folio 335 x 260 mm bound in contemporary half morocco with the original green printed wrappers preserved. Paris: Au Bureau du Journal Amusant n.d. 1852 or 1859. $7500.00 First Edition of this "dazzling survey of French manners and costume through the ages the last of Doré's albums. It is marked by a solidity of conception and a sophistication of outlook to which he hardly aspired in his earlier collections of lithographs" Ray. Each lithograph represents a distinct period in French history beginning with the barbarian hordes Gauls observing a human sacrifice then proceeding to a thirteenth-century Inquisition a fifteenth-century tournament a festival during the reign of Henri III the premiere performance of a 1695 drama by Racine the "edifices" of fashionable women's wigs in the court of Louis XVI a harp recital in 1810 and finally ending with the Romanticism of 1830 and 1840. These illustrations typify Doré's vivid and witty imagination. The date of Les Folies Gauloises has been assigned both to "1852" by Annie Rononciat and "1859" by Leblanc and Malan. Malan adds that the work has become rare "as most copies were long ago taken apart to sell as lithographs separately." A fine copy of this rare and important book. Ray French 245. Beraldi VI p. 29. Malan Gustave Doré p. 35. Renonciat La Vie et l'Oeuvre de Gustave Doré p. 46-47. Leblanc p. 115. unknown books
18551696331855. DORÉ Gustave. Les Contes Drolatiques. By Honore de Balzac. 8vo. 205 x 130 mm bound in nineteeenth century full crushed brown morocco in a slipcase. Paris: Garnier Freres 1873. A superb copy of this Doré masterpiece with fine impressions of the engraving printed on Chine and with "huitieme edition" on the title-page. Gordon Ray called Doré'ss illustrations for the Contes Drolatiques "Doré's early masterpiece." The first illustrated edition was issued with 425 original designs by Gustave Doré comprising 103 full-page engravings and 322 vignettes of varying sizes. It is well recorded that Balzac's widow granted permission for the illustrated edition only on the condition: "that no artist but Doré should be allowed to illustrate her husband's works" Anthony North-Peat Gossip from Paris 1864-69 p. 324. "Si de tous les ouvrages illustrés par Gustave Doré il ne devait en rester qu'un ce serait celui-là: l'illustration est à la hauteur du texte et ce n'est pas peu dire puisque Balzac considérait les "Contes drolatiques" comme son chef-d'oeuvre" Brivois Bibliographie des ouvrages illustrés du XIXe siècle 1883 p. 32. "Ce livre est considéré comme le chef-d'oeuvre d'illustration de Gustaf Doré il est apprécié pour son format agréable et la qualité de son illustration variée et abondante: 425 compositions vignettes et grands bois compris dans la pagination." Carteret III p. 50. Ray Art of the French Illustrated Book 244. See: Rahir 304. Beraldi VI 34 "Un des chef-d'oeuvres de Doré: cette illustration est étonnante d'invention de joyeuse humeur vraiment gauloise et rabelaisienne et pétillante d'esprit." Leblanc 39. Provenance: The library of William Ivins inscribed to him by his father. unknown
1872302978London: Grant & Co 1872. First edition. Wood-engraved title page illustrated with numerous wood-engraved plates vignettes head- and tail-pieces after Doré. 13 parts in 12. 1 vols. Folio. Original printed wrappers spines repaired. Very good clean set. Cloth folding box. Doré Gustave. First edition. Wood-engraved title page illustrated with numerous wood-engraved plates vignettes head- and tail-pieces after Doré. 13 parts in 12. 1 vols. Folio. "Doré's devastating realization of the contrast of wealth and poverty in a modern metropolis makes LONDON one of the great illustrated books of the world.". Ray p. 134; Malan pp. 126-9; Grant & Co unknown
185070018Paris: Chez Aubert & Cie 1850-51. First Edition First Issue of one of the two earliest and most rare of all Doré's illustrated books. Only Les Travaux d'Hercule precedes this book and like the Trois Artistes Incompris et Mecontens is very rarely if ever seen in commerce. Illustrated with an engraved title-page as the upper cover illustration of the book and over 150 woodcut illustrations throughout. Folio publisher's original and earliest binding of pictorially illustrated yellow paper over boards the upper cover with all-over illustrations printed in red and black. 1 25 pp. A well preserved and handsome copy of this very rare and fragile book some expert and unobtrusive strengthening at the tips and edges a book seldom if ever encountered and even then nearly always with very considerable wear and breakage. FIRST EDITION OF ONE OF THE EARLIEST AND MOST RARE OF DORÉ'S ILLUSTRATED WORKS. 'At 15 years of age Doré had begun his career working as a caricaturist for the French paper Le journal pour rire. Wood-engraving was his primary method at this time. In the late 1840s and early 1850s he made several text comics like Les Travaux d'Hercule 1847 Trois artistes incompris et mécontents 1850-1 Les Dés-agréments d'un voyage d'agrément 1851 and L'Histoire de la Sainte Russie 1854 but subsequently went on to win commissions to depict scenes from books by Cervantes Rabelais Balzac Milton and Dante. He also illustrated "Gargantua et Pantagruel" in 1854.<br> 'Trois Artists is a fascinating book.but dating the Trois Artistes original is a bibliographical challenge. The earliest Journal pour Rire advertisement was in November 29 1850 and the book itself has a Dec. 1850 date in the publisher's catalogue. The second larger Journal pour Rire advertisement was dated January 31 1851 and the book was listed by February 11 1851 in Bibliographie de la France. Whether December or January the book remains along with Les Travaux d'Hercule the most rare of Gustave Doré's illustrated books and one of the earliest "comic books" produced.<br> Gustave Doré 1832-1883 was described by Saturday Review as “The <br>most startling art phenomenon in Europe; his genius at each turn changes like the colors in a kaleidescope into something new and unexpected.†The Fine Arts Quarterly Review also wrote: “Doré is a great and marvelous genius a poet a nation produces once in a thousand years. He is the most imaginative the profoundest the most productive poet that ever sprang from the French race.†These are 1860s quotes from England about a French artist. What did Doré actually do He created a series of dozens of literary folios with thousands of full-page engravings that are still being borrowed today in hundreds of popular culture genres. The Doré phenomenon was all the more remarkable because he was being viciously attacked by British elitists like John Ruskin who asserted that Doré was the Devil come to destroy the morality of the British public who were unsophisticated peasants. But those “unsophisicated peasants†who admired Doré art included the Queen of England the Prince of Wales the Poet Laureate Charles Dickens plus Leo Tolstoy Mark Twain not to mention the Pope. Doré’s <br>dramatic mystical otherworldly imagery transcended dimensions of the physical and the spiritual. While other illustrators showed people standing in a room talking Doré showed images of Spiral Nebula Flying Saucers the depths of Hell and the opening of Heaven in his folios for Dante Milton Tennyson The Bible Rabelais Shakespeare Fairy Tales Fables Don Quixote Baron Munchausen The Ancient Mariner Doré’s social commentary masterpiece London A Pilgrimage and Poe’s The Raven which Doré did not live to see published. Doré was a creative geniuses with unlimited imagination. <br> Consider that Gustave Doré at the age of 15 years and a diminutive teenager walked into the office of Charles Philipon to show his drawings. It is said that he looked to be about 12. Philipon was mesmerized as Doré created new <br>drawings with lightning-fast rapidity right before his eyes. Shortly thereafter a book appeared with a most curious introduction by the Aubert Publishing Company that read “The Labours of Hercules was written drawn and lithographed by a 15-year-old artist who has no teacher or art training.†Thus began the art career of the most prolific and popular illustrator of all time. He wrote and drew several “comic books†before he began the transition to Literary Folios Painting & Sculpture. But the only other edition of Doré’s Hercules in 145 years was a German edition in 1922. Charles Philipon’s company Aubert contracted with Doré'’s father to hire the boy to draw for his Journal pour Rire and Doré had over a thousand engravings published while still a teenager. In 1850 TROIS ARTISTES INCOMPRIS ET MÉCONTENS Three Misunderstood Malcontent Artists with 155 drawings was published. One of the two earliest and now most rare of the young genius's books. And one of the earliest of all "comic books".<br> Considering his illustrations for Cervantes's Don Quixote his depictions of the knight and his squire Sancho Panza have become so famous that they have influenced subsequent readers artists and stage and film directors' ideas of the physical "look" of the two characters. Doré also illustrated an oversized edition of Edgar Allan Poe's "The Raven" an endeavor that earned him 30000 francs from publisher Harper & Brothers in 1883.<br> Doré's illustrations for the Bible 1866 were a great success and in 1867 Doré had a major exhibition of his work in London. This exhibition led to the foundation of the Doré Gallery in Bond Street London. In 1869 Blanchard Jerrold the son of Douglas William Jerrold suggested that they work together to produce a comprehensive portrait of London. Jerrold had obtained the idea from The Microcosm of London produced by Rudolph Ackermann William Pyne and Thomas Rowlandson published in three volumes from 1808 to 1810. Doré signed a five-year contract with the publishers Grant & Co that involved his staying in London for three months a year and he received the vast sum of Å10000 a year for the project. Doré was mainly celebrated for his paintings in his day. His paintings remain world-renowned but his woodcuts and engravings like those he did for Jerrold are where he excelled as an artist with an individual vision.<br>The completed book London: A Pilgrimage with 180 wood-engravings was published in 1872. It enjoyed commercial and popular success but the work was disliked by many contemporary critics. Some of these critics were concerned by the fact that Doré appeared to focus on the poverty that existed in parts of London. Doré was accused by The Art Journal of "inventing rather than copying". The Westminster Review claimed that "Doré gives us sketches in which the commonest the vulgarest external features are set down". The book was a financial success however and Doré received commissions from other British publishers.<br> Doré's later work included illustrations for new editions of Coleridge's Rime of the Ancient Mariner Milton's Paradise Lost Tennyson's Idylls of the King The Works of Thomas Hood and The Divine Comedy. Doré's work also appeared in the weekly newspaper The Illustrated London News.' Wiki Chez Aubert & Cie hardcover
06358Paris: Au Bureau du Journal Pour Rire 1854. From Lions to Sewer Rats: Doré's Merciless Pencil Spares No Class of Parisian Society"<br /> <br /> DORÉ Gustave. La Ménagerie Parisienne. Paris: Au Bureau du Journal Pour Rire n.d. 1854.<br /> <br /> First proof printing of this remarkable and extremely rare album comprising 24 original lithographs by Veyron after Gustave Doré. The work was advertised in the Bibliographie de la France on 28 October 1854 no. 3826.<br /> <br /> Oblong folio 10 1/4 x 13 1/2 inches; 259 x 343 mm. Original publisher's green paper wrappers title stamped in gilt. <br /> A minute chip to the lower edge of the front wrapper approximately 5/8 x 3/8 inch otherwise a superb fresh copy preserved in the publisher's original glassine and entirely free of foxing. Housed in a quarter red morocco chemise gilt-lettered over marbled boards within a matching red leather-edged slipcase.<br /> <br /> An exceptionally fine and unrecorded example printed on papier vélin fort. Not listed by standard bibliographers the leaves are 5/8 inch wider than usual examples. This suite appears never to have been commercially marketed. It was issued without a printed title-page the title instead stamped in gold on the green wrappers.<br /> <br /> In La Ménagerie Parisienne Doré delivers a scathing and brilliantly observed satire of Parisian society. Social types are transformed into a kind of urban "fauna" each class assigned an animal identity that mirrors its dress posture and moral character - yet without ever sacrificing humanity. Aristocrats of the Faubourg Saint-Germain appear as "lions" and "lionesses" adopting a term already current in 18th-century England while the social scale descends inexorably to the "rats" of the Parisian sewers. Doré's vision is unsparing and no stratum of urban life escapes his scrutiny. Michèle Lavallée Gustave Doré 1832-1883 p. 287.<br /> <br /> Produced during Doré's youth this album reveals the formative synthesis of his influences. While the titles and captions recall Grandville whose work deeply marked Doré's early career the drawings themselves resonate strongly with the graphic force and social acuity of Daumier. Among the most celebrated plates is the riotous assembly of washerwomen a scene that would become emblematic of Doré's early satirical power.<br /> <br /> Doré first visited Paris in 1847 with his parents and soon showed his drawings to Charles Philipon who immediately recognized his talent and engaged him for the Journal Pour Rire. Although Doré's earliest lithographic albums - beginning with Les Travaux d'Hercule published when he was just fifteen - are today among his most engaging works they remain conspicuously under-represented even in advanced collections due to their extreme scarcity. As Gordon Ray observed albums such as Les Différents publics de Paris Les Folies gauloises Les Agréments d'un voyage de désagrément 1851 and La Ménagerie Parisienne 1854 reveal Doré at his most inventive and humorous combining youthful exuberance with a remarkably sophisticated social vision. Gordon Ray. The Art of the Illustrated Book in France 1700-1914 p. 327.<br /> <br /> A rare and important early Doré album virtually unobtainable in this condition and state.<br /> <br /> The plates:<br /> 1. Lions<br /> 2. Petits Lions Lions adultes<br /> 3. Lionnes<br /> 4. Lionnes Sortie de la messe d'1 heure<br /> 5. Lionnes et leurs petits<br /> 6. Paons<br /> 7. Rats d'opéra<br /> 8. Rats d'égout<br /> 9. Rats peintres alias rapins<br /> 10. Rats de Jardin<br /> 11. Loups<br /> 12. Loups cerviers<br /> 13. Vautours<br /> 14. Les dindons et les oies<br /> 15. Serpents<br /> 16. Pies<br /> 17. Crapauds<br /> 18. Coq de barriere<br /> 19. Tigre / Serin<br /> 20. Pantheres<br /> 21. Chouettes<br /> 22. Vielles Pantheres<br /> 23. Buses<br /> 24. Oiseau de proie / Merlan. Paris: Au Bureau du Journal Pour Rire, [1854] unknown
318340London Paris New York & Melbourne: Cassell & Company Limited. First English Language Edition. Softcover. Good set in original stiff card wrappers with some wear and tear as with age. Remains well-preserved overall; bright and clean.Volume 30 is missing its front cover. Physical description; 30 issues. Notes; No date given. First English Language edition succeeded by the first book form in Sept. 1906. The success of Doré's work this edition led largely to his success. Subjects; Don Quixote. Cervantes. Gustave Doré illustrator. London, Paris, New York & Melbourne: Cassell & Company, Limited paperback
18721270541872. First Edition. LONDON DORÉ Gustave and JERROLD Blanchard. London: A Pilgrimage. London: Grant 1872. Large folio 13-1/2 by 17 inches contemporary three-quarter red morocco raised bands marbled boards and endpapers top edge gilt. $5800.First edition of Doré and Jerrold's London ""superb and noble in sentiment"" van Gogh with 54 striking full-page wood-engravings and 126 in-text vignettes of ""all segments of London society"" by Doré. Handsomely bound.""One can hardly deny that Doré is not merely one of the most popular but also one of the greatest of all illustrators Perhaps Taine summed up Doré's appeal most eloquently: 'every imagination appeared languid in comparison with his. For energy force superabundance originality sparkle and gloomy grandeur I know only one equal to his that of Tintoretto' Doré's devastating realization of the contrast of wealth and poverty in a modern metropolis makes London one of the great illustrated books of the world. The English edition antedates the French by four years and indeed it is a handsomer book"" Ray 327-29. ""By 1872 Doré was the most popular artist in England illustrator or painter. This work was eagerly awaited by the English public having been postponed by the Franco-Prussian War The idea was to match Doré's artistic genius with an in-depth view of all segments of London societythe rich and the poor the common people at work and play famous sites and slums nobility and criminals Many were the days and nights that Doré went in disguise with undercover policemen for protection to see parts of London not listed in any tour guide The result was a book often hailed as the greatest visual expression of the social class struggle ever published"" Malan 127. ""The other day"" once wrote Vincent van Gogh ""I saw a complete set of Doré's pictures of London. I tell you it is superb and noble in sentiment."" Indeed Van Gogh based his 1890 painting ""En Prison"" or ""Prisoner's Round"" on Doré's illustration ""Newgate Exercise Yard"" which appears on page 136. There were two sizes issued by Grant in 1872 albeit without a huge difference between the two: one with the text block measuring 12-1/2 by 16 inches and another at 13 by 16-1/2 inches. This copy is from the larger of the two issues. Malan 281. Plates and text clean corners somewhat rubbed. A few closed tears to first few leaves and tissue guard. A near-fine copy. hardcover
Libro d’Ore di Bonaparte Ghislieri (Libro d’Ore del Perugino, Hours of Bonaparte Ghislieri). British Library, Yates Thompson MS 29, Londra. Franco Cosimo Panini Editore, 2007. Riproduzione in facsimile del manoscritto con miniature, a piena pagina, realizzate dal Perugino altri miniatori quali Lorenzo Costa, Amico Aspertini, Francesco Francia, Matteo da Milano. Legatura in marocchino con, sui piatti, due castoni di pietre dure e due medaglioni centrali raffiguranti l’Annunciazione. Formato 15x21 cm. Pagine 270. Commentario, in italiano, di Benevolo Giancarlo, Kidd, Peter e Medica Massimo. Cofanetto di custodia. Tiratura limitata e numerata di 980 copie. Condizioni ottime.
17297Paris, Au bureau du Journal pour rire, s.d. [1854] In-4, 24 pl., maroquin rouge de l'époque, caissons, filets et arabesques dorés en encadrement sur les plats, des fleurons mosaïqués de peau fauve, verte et brune dans les angles et au milieu des caissons, frise de palmettes à froid et filets dorés cantonnés de fleurons dorés en encadrement autour du fleuron doré central, dos lisse orné de filets dorés et de fleurons dorés et mosaïqués de peau fauve et verte (restaurations du papier, rousseurs, quelques petits frottements et épidermures).
18541692561854. DORE Gustave. Histoire Dramatique Pittoresque et Caricaturale de la Sainte Russie D'après les Chroniquers et Historiens Nestor Nikan Sylvestre Karamsin Segur etc. 4 207 pp. printed on recto only illustrated with 500 engraved illustrations by Gustave Doré cut onto woodblocks by Sotain. 4to 290 x 195 mm. bound in contemporary brown quarter cloth over marbled boards with the original front and rear wrappers preserved. Paris: Lacour for J. Bry Ainé 1854. First edition early issue. Containing 500 surreal illustrations by Doré this volume presents a blistering criticism of the tyranny of the Russian Czars. In the first issue pages 89 and 97 have large blots of red ink depicting "le regné d'Ivan-le-Terrible." In this copy there is a red blot on page 97 but page 89 is blank. The collaboration between Gustave Doré and the woodcutter Sotain represents an important moment in both artist's development. "Sotain began engraving for the Magasin Pittoresque having executed for Philipon the plates to Beau Monde by Gustave Doré. The understanding that Sotain had for his art his methods and his ingenuity reassured the artist for this project. In the designs of this album Gustave Doré voluntarily multiplied the details of the images which are not usually found in such clarity" Valmy-Baysse Gustave Doré p. 150. Binding repaired and a few spots but overall a fine copy of an extremely rare work. Forberg Gustave Doré: Das graphische Werk II pp. 900-925. Leblanc Catalogue de l'Oeuvre Complet de Gustave Dore p. 135. hardcover
185484305Paris: Au bureau du journal amusant 1854. Fine. Au bureau du journal amusant Paris S.d 1854 34.50 x 26.50 cm relié Gustave's 'jeunesse Doré' talent's no need of years First edition first printing of this rare album with its precious publisher's lithographed green cover by Belin and twenty original captioned lithographed plates by Gustave Doré. One of Doré's earliest efforts his debut album of illustrations he published at age twenty-two: ""In this album Doré begins to display an unprecedented mastery of comedy and exuberance. We are constantly drawn in by the abundant playfulness of his verve and as Béraldi says 'by a very accurate very witty and yet measured observation'""Henri Leblanc Catalogue de l'oeuvre complète de Gustave Doré. Later olive-green 3/4 Russian morocco binding faded spine light scuffing to the corners marbled pastedowns and endleaves original covers preserved binding signed Ch. Septier. Au bureau du journal amusant unknown
18611681521861. DORÉ Gustave. La Ménagerie Parisienne. Comprised of a printed title and 24 lithographic plates. 4to. 243 x 325 mm disbound in a new cloth folding box. Paris: Journal Pour Rire 1854. $4750.00 First Edition of this very early work by Doré. Created as a social satire of French culture La Ménagerie Parisienne was intended by Doré to be witty more than critical. He attributed an animal name to select Parisians attitudes and fashion in clothing corresponding to the characteristics of the animal. For example: Lions portrays a group of preening bearded men haughtily studying female pedestrians as they promenade past; Lionnes gives us a portrait of indifferent women of high class speeding in a carriage through a Parisian street; Rats d'opéra reveal three men in a box at the Paris opera house leering at the stage populated with a phalanx of comely ballerinas; and Coq is a sheer delight displaying a male dancer on tip-toe nose high in the air performing a street jig for a captivated audience. Other subjects include: Loups wolves Les Buses buzzards Chouettes owls Panthères panthers Pie magpies Gens de Bourse stockbrokers and Grandes Dames ou Gens du Peuple. This early Doré publication offers lithographs very much in the spirit and under the influence of Honoré Daumier. "All three of these lithographic albums are rare. Most copies were long ago taken apart to sell the lithographs individually. This copy is without the original wrappers and has some minor foxing and soilng but is a generally fresh and desirable copy of an early Doré rarity. Malan Gustave Doré 230. Leblanc Catalogue de L'Oeuvre Complet de Gustave Doré 237. hardcover books
1872189822London: Grant & Co. 1872. One of the great illustrated books of the world First edition in the publisher's deluxe morocco binding. Showcasing Doré and Jerrold's beautiful and influential "Pilgrimage" around the great metropolis of 19th-century London the ambitious project took four years to complete and was published with 180 engravings depicting various scenes around the city. Doré's striking chiaroscuro drawings faithfully rendered by a team of the finest French wood-engravers reflects the closeness and contrast of London's social classes. The book gained popularity and financial success in both Britain and America. Gordon Ray describes it as simply "one of the great illustrated books of the world". Folio. Wood-engraved frontispiece decorative title page 52 plates with captioned tissue guards illustrations in the text all after Doré. Title and letterpress printed within red double-rule border. Original brown morocco over bevelled boards spine and covers lettered and elaborately decorated in gilt inner dentelles gilt loose French curl patterned endpapers edges gilt. A little rubbing inner hinges reinforced with cloth shallow chips to foot of front free endpaper repaired closed tear to upper margin of engraved title pale damp stains to a few plates contents a little foxed and cockled. A very good copy. Beraldi VI 157; Ray 207 and listed as one of his "Outstanding Books". hardcover
03768Paris: Au Bureau du Journal Amusant 1854. A Superb Copy <br/>Of One of the Master's Earliest Successes<br/><br/>DORÉ Gustave. Les Différents Publics de Paris. Paris: Au Bureau du Journal Amusant 1854. <br/><br/>First edition. Oblong quarto 10 x 13 1/4 in; 254 x 335 mm. Lithograph title and twenty original lithograph plates. <br/><br/>Publisher's lithographed green boards small piece 1 1/8 inch missing from top of spine. Ink signature on front free end-paper. Some light foxing heavier on preliminary leaves. A superb copy of the second 'collection' from the most popular and successful French book illustrator of the mid 19th century. <br/><br/>"These twenty lithographs are studies of massed humanity ranging from the audiences at the great Parisian theatres to the crowds at a wrestling match or a Punch and Judy show. Without exception they are striking in conception and fertile in detail. To compare Doré's version of the reader's room at the library no. 14 and amongst Doré's celebrated with Daumier's in Les bas bleus is to ask one's self what word is left for the first if the second is called a caricature. Yet each of Doré's scenes is based on close observation and the album provides valuable testimony to the manners of the day" Ray.<br/><br/>One of Doré's earliest efforts with which he made his debut at age twenty-two Les Différents Publics de Paris "scored an easy success.brilliant.masterly lithographed skits on Paris" Gosling p. 16 38. <br/><br/>An important volume and a cornerstone to any collection of Doré.<br/><br/>Beraldi Vl 30. Leblanc 90. Rahir 404. Ray 241.<br/><br/><br/>List of Plates:<br/><br/>1. Opéra Italien.<br/>2. Comédie Francaise.<br/>3. Opéra la fosse aux lions.<br/>4. Jardin Des Plantes.<br/>5. Odéon.<br/>6. Folies Nouvelles.<br/>7. Seraphin.<br/>8. Funambules.<br/>9. Soirées Fantastiques de Robert Houdin<br/>10. Le Theatre Guignol.<br/>11. Cirque et Hippodrome.<br/>12. Les Lutteurs.<br/>13. Les Abonnés Au Canon Du Palais Royal.<br/>14. La Bibliotheque Salle de travail.<br/>15. Les Joueurs De Boules.<br/>16. Amphithéatre De L'Ecole De Médecine.<br/>17. Cours D' Anatomie Comparée Au Jardin Des Plantes.<br/>18. La Coulisse De La Bourse.<br/>19. Justice De Paix Du 12me. Arrondissement.<br/>20. Les Revues. Paris: Au Bureau du Journal Amusant, [1854] unknown books
03768Paris: Au Bureau du Journal Amusant 1854. A Superb Copy <br /> Of One of the Master's Earliest Successes<br /> <br /> DORÉ Gustave. Les Différents Publics de Paris. Paris: Au Bureau du Journal Amusant 1854. <br /> <br /> First edition. Oblong quarto 10 x 13 1/4 in; 254 x 335 mm. Lithograph title and twenty original lithograph plates. <br /> <br /> Publisher's lithographed green boards small piece 1 1/8 inch missing from top of spine. Ink signature on front free end-paper. Some light foxing heavier on preliminary leaves. A superb copy of the second 'collection' from the most popular and successful French book illustrator of the mid 19th century. <br /> <br /> "These twenty lithographs are studies of massed humanity ranging from the audiences at the great Parisian theatres to the crowds at a wrestling match or a Punch and Judy show. Without exception they are striking in conception and fertile in detail. To compare Doré's version of the reader's room at the library no. 14 and amongst Doré's celebrated with Daumier's in Les bas bleus is to ask one's self what word is left for the first if the second is called a caricature. Yet each of Doré's scenes is based on close observation and the album provides valuable testimony to the manners of the day" Ray.<br /> <br /> One of Doré's earliest efforts with which he made his debut at age twenty-two Les Différents Publics de Paris "scored an easy success.brilliant.masterly lithographed skits on Paris" Gosling p. 16 38. <br /> <br /> An important volume and a cornerstone to any collection of Doré.<br /> <br /> Beraldi Vl 30. Leblanc 90. Rahir 404. Ray 241.<br /> <br /> <br /> List of Plates:<br /> <br /> 1. Opéra Italien.<br /> 2. Comédie Francaise.<br /> 3. Opéra la fosse aux lions.<br /> 4. Jardin Des Plantes.<br /> 5. Odéon.<br /> 6. Folies Nouvelles.<br /> 7. Seraphin.<br /> 8. Funambules.<br /> 9. Soirées Fantastiques de Robert Houdin<br /> 10. Le Theatre Guignol.<br /> 11. Cirque et Hippodrome.<br /> 12. Les Lutteurs.<br /> 13. Les Abonnés Au Canon Du Palais Royal.<br /> 14. La Bibliotheque Salle de travail.<br /> 15. Les Joueurs De Boules.<br /> 16. Amphithéatre De L'Ecole De Médecine.<br /> 17. Cours D' Anatomie Comparée Au Jardin Des Plantes.<br /> 18. La Coulisse De La Bourse.<br /> 19. Justice De Paix Du 12me. Arrondissement.<br /> 20. Les Revues. Paris: Au Bureau du Journal Amusant, [1854] unknown