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Acquaforte acquatinta originale. Lastra 1965, stampa 1989 Timbro a secco dell'Editore Giorgio Upiglio. Stampata su carta BFK Rives. Certificazione di autenticità sul retro firmata dalla moglie Lou Larin Lam. Non firmata dall'Artista. Esemplare 4/15. cm 48x37,5 (Foglio 80x59). . . . . Tiratura 120. .
Incisione originale numerata e firmata dall'Artista Stampata a mano con stecca e baren su carta Bunko shi nella stamperia di Romolo e Rosalba Bulla a Roma. Opera allegata al volume di Fabio Sargentini ''Il mio doppio fuma l'oppio''. Edizioni l'Obliquo, 2008. cm 66,0 x 44,5. . . Perfetto (Mint). . Edizione di 50 + XXV esemplari. .
Linoleumgrafia dalla cartella ''Zodiaco'' Firma e numerazione a matita. Stampatore: Giorgio Upiglio, Grafica Uno, Milano. Stampa su carta Alcantara. Timbro a secco dello stampatore. Esemplare A.P. 7/10. cm 22,7x30,7 (Foglio cm 39x58). . . Perfetto (Mint). . Tiratura 60 + X esemplari. .
Linoleumgrafia dalla cartella ''Zodiaco'' Firma e numerazione a matita. Stampatore: Giorgio Upiglio, Grafica Uno, Milano. Stampa su carta Alcantara. Timbri a secco dello stampatore e dell'Artista. Esemplare A.P. 1/10. cm 22,7x30,7 (Foglio cm 39x58). . . Perfetto (Mint). . Tiratura 60 + X esemplari. .
Linoleumgrafia dalla cartella ''Terra tonda africana'' Firma, data e numerazione a matita. Stampatore: Giorgio Upiglio, Grafica Uno, Milano. Stampa su carta Duchene. Timbri a secco dello stampatore e dell'Artista. Esemplare I/VIII. cm 29,7x40 (Foglio cm 38x50). . . Perfetto (Mint). . Tiratura 30 + VIII esemplari. .
Linoleumgrafia dalla cartella ''Terra tonda africana'' Firma, data e numerazione a matita. Stampatore: Giorgio Upiglio, Grafica Uno, Milano. Stampa su carta Duchene. Timbri a secco dello stampatore e dell'Artista. Esemplare IV/VIII. cm 31,4x39,5 (Foglio cm 38x50). . . Perfetto (Mint). . Tiratura 30 + VIII esemplari. .
Linoleumgrafia dalla cartella ''Terra tonda africana'' Firma, data e numerazione a matita. Stampatore: Giorgio Upiglio, Grafica Uno, Milano. Stampa su carta Duchene. Timbri a secco dello stampatore e dell'Artista. Esemplare IV/VIII. cm 29,7x39,7 (Foglio cm 38x50). . . Perfetto (Mint). . Tiratura 30 + VIII esemplari. .
Dittico composto di due litografie originali a colori Firma e numerazione a matita. Timbro a secco dello stampatore Giorgio Upiglio. Stampato su carta BFK Rives. Esemplare 2/55. cm 75x50 (Foglio 79x55). Le misure della lastra e della carta si riferiscono alla singola stampa. . . Ottimo (Fine). . Tiratura 55 + 13 p.d.a.. .
Cartella contenente 4 acquaforti originali, numerate, firmate e datate a matita dall'Artista (cm 17,5x12,5 - foglio 50x35) Stampatore: Elvidio Farabollini di Treia. Ogni incisione reca il timbro a secco dell'Editore. . . . Perfetto (Mint). . Edizione originale di 20 es. numerati. . ROCCAMONTE, Giorgio Amelio (Buenos Aires, 1927 - Roma, 1980). Scultore, ha firmato con Lucio Fontana il Manifesto Blanco nel 1946
Litografia e fotolitografia originale a colori Firma e numerazione a matita. Esemplare H.C.. cm 41,5x30,2 (Foglio 70x50). . . Ottimo (Fine). . Tiratura 90. .
Acquatinta, puntasecca, pasta modellante e collage Firma e numerazione a matita. Timbro a secco dello stampatore Giorgio Upiglio. Stampata su carta Hahnemuhle. Esemplare p.d.a.. cm 85x63 (Foglio 106x71,5). pp.. . Ottimo (Fine). Bordi del foglio leggemente sporchi. . .
Litografia originale a colori Firma e numerazione a matita. Stampata da Romolo e Rosalba Bulla a Roma. Esemplare p.d.a.. cm 40x60 (Foglio 50x70). . . Ottimo (Fine). . . .
Folio (430 x 320 mm), [4], 373, [3], liii, [1]pp., printed for private circulation only in 200 copies, early armorial bookplate to front paste-down, cont. half blue morocco, marbled boards, slightly rubbed otherwise a very good copy indeed. Printed uniformly with the catalogue of books and, like that work, printed only for presentation. The map collection was an important constituent of the Royal library (Samuel Johnson recommended buying maps locally in his famous letter to Barnard); The King's Topographical Collection of around 50,000 maps, charts, prints and drawings formerly owned by George III and donated to the Library by George IV, included antiquarian drawings by William Stukeley, large collections of views by Samuel Hieronymus Grimm, the Bucklers and Edward Blore, and the drawings from Captain Cook's voyages or Robert Hay's of Egypt. It was reprinted in 2 vols. 8vo in the same year for commercial distribution. Martin, Privately Printed Books, p. 259.
Roy. 4to., First Edition thus, with numerous engravings throughout; original navy buckram, gilt back, marbled endpapers, gilt top, a near fine copy in publisher's marbled slip-case. EDITION LIMITED TO 150 NUMBERED COPIES SIGNED BY THE ARTIST (THIS COPY NO. 126). THIS EDITION INCLUDES AN ORIGINAL UNPUBLISHED WOOD-ENGRAVING 'PRESCELLY MOUNTAINS, SOUTH WALES' (1972) SIGNED BY THE ARTIST AND HOUSED IN SEPARATE CARD PORTFOLIO. The compliments slip of the Burlington Fine Arts Club Library is loosely inserted.
- Lucien Vogel éditeur, Paris 1925, 18x24cm, relié. - Set of eight original prints in color, drawn on laid paper. The boards are introduced by a text signed LRF Sketches L, LII, LIII, LV, are signed David, respectively on the lower right and left boards. Original prints made ??for the illustration of The Gazette fashionable, one of the finest and most influential twentieth century fashion magazines, celebrating the talent of creators and artists French burgeoning art deco. Famous fashion magazine founded in 1912 by Lucien Vogel, The Gazette fashionable appeared until 1925 with an interruption during the War of 1915 to 1920, due to mobilization of its editor. She is 69 Deliveries from just 2000 copies and is illustrated including 573 color plates and 148 sketches depicting models of fashion designers. Upon publication, these luxury publications "are for bibliophiles and worldly aesthetes" (Françoise Tétart-Vittu "good Gazette of tone" in the fashion dictionary, 2016). Printed on fine laid paper, they use a typeface created specifically for the magazine by Georges Peignot, the Cochin character, taken in 1946 by Christian Dior. The prints are made with the technique of metal stencil, enhanced color and some outlined in gold or palladium. The adventure began in 1912 when Lucien Vogel, man of the world and fashion - it has already participated in Femina magazine - decided to found with his wife Cosette de Brunhoff (John's sister, the father of Babar) Gazette good tone in which the subtitle is then "Art, fashions and frivolities." Georges Charensol quotes the editor: "In 1910, he observed, there was no truly artistic fashion magazine and representative of the spirit of his time. So I thought of making a glossy magazine with truly modern artists [...] I was certain of success because for any fashion country can compete with France. "(" A great art editor. Lucien Vogel "in literary News, No. 133, May 1925). The success of the magazine is immediate, not only in France but also the US and South America. Originally, Vogel therefore brings together a group of seven artists: André-Édouard Marty and Pierre Brissaud, followed by Georges Lepape and Dammicourt; and finally his friends from the School of Fine Arts as are George Barbier, Bernard Boutet de Monvel or Charles Martin. Other talents come quickly reach the equipped Guy Arnoux, Léon Bakst, Benito, Boutet de Monvel, Umberto Brunelleschi, Chas Laborde, Jean-Gabriel Domergue, Raoul Dufy, Edward Halouze Alexander Iacovleff, Jean Emile Laboureur Charles Loupot, Charles Martin, Maggie Salcedo. These artists, mostly unknown when Lucien Vogel appealed to them, will eventually become iconic figures and artistic sought. These are the same illustrators who make the drawings advertisements Gazette. The boards highlight the dresses and sublime seven artists of the time: Lanvin, Doeuillet, Paquin, Poiret, Worth, Vionnet and Doucet. The designers provide for each number of exclusive models. Nevertheless, some of Illustrations contained no real model, but only the idea that the illustrator is done in the fashion of the day. Gazette fashionable is a milestone in the history of fashion. Combining the aesthetic requirement and plastic unit, it brings together for the first time the great talents of the world of arts, literature and fashion and imposed by this alchemy, a new image of women, slender, independent and bold, also driven by the new generation of designers Coco Chanel, Jean Patou, Rochas Marcel ... Recovery in 1920 by Condé Montrose Nast, Gazette fashionable modeled for the new composition and the aesthetic choices of the "little dying newspaper" that Nast had bought a few years ago: the Vogue magazine. [FRENCH VERSION FOLLOWS] Ensemble de douze estampes originales à l'or fin, tirées sur papier vergé. Les planches présentent des modèles de robes réalisés par quatre grands créateurs, Lanvin, Poiret, Vionney et Worth. Reliure à la bradel en plein papier à motif décoratif, dos lisse, tête dorée.
Acquaforte, acquatinta e puntaseccaoriginale a colori Firma e numerazione a matita. Impressa nella stamperia della Pergola di Piergiorgio Spallacci, Pesaro. Timbro a secco dell'editore. Esemplare IX/X. Cm 120x81 (Foglio cm 150x98). . . Ottimo (Fine). . . .
- Lucien Vogel éditeur, Paris 1922, 18x24cm, en feuilles. - Set of nine original prints in color, drawn on laid paper. The boards are introduced by a text signed Joan Ramon Fernandez. Sketch XII and XIII are signed David, respectively bottom left and right planks. Original prints made ??for the illustration of The Gazette fashionable, one of the finest and most influential twentieth century fashion magazines, celebrating the talent of creators and artists French burgeoning art deco. Famous fashion magazine founded in 1912 by Lucien Vogel, The Gazette fashionable appeared until 1925 with an interruption during the War of 1915 to 1920, due to mobilization of its editor. She is 69 Deliveries from just 2000 copies and is illustrated including 573 color plates and 148 sketches depicting models of fashion designers. Upon publication, these luxury publications "are for bibliophiles and worldly aesthetes" (Françoise Tétart-Vittu "good Gazette of tone" in the fashion dictionary, 2016). Printed on fine laid paper, they use a typeface created specifically for the magazine by Georges Peignot, the Cochin character, taken in 1946 by Christian Dior. The prints are made with the technique of metal stencil, enhanced color and some outlined in gold or palladium. The adventure began in 1912 when Lucien Vogel, man of the world and fashion - it has already participated in Femina magazine - decided to found with his wife Cosette de Brunhoff (John's sister, the father of Babar) Gazette good tone in which the subtitle is then "Art, fashions and frivolities." Georges Charensol quotes the editor: "In 1910, he observed, there was no truly artistic fashion magazine and representative of the spirit of his time. So I thought of making a glossy magazine with truly modern artists [...] I was certain of success because for any fashion country can compete with France. "(" A great art editor. Lucien Vogel "in literary News, No. 133, May 1925). The success of the magazine is immediate, not only in France but also the US and South America. Originally, Vogel therefore brings together a group of seven artists: André-Édouard Marty and Pierre Brissaud, followed by Georges Lepape and Dammicourt; and finally his friends from the School of Fine Arts as are George Barbier, Bernard Boutet de Monvel or Charles Martin. Other talents come quickly reach the equipped Guy Arnoux, Léon Bakst, Benito, Boutet de Monvel, Umberto Brunelleschi, Chas Laborde, Jean-Gabriel Domergue, Raoul Dufy, Edward Halouze Alexander Iacovleff, Jean Emile Laboureur Charles Loupot, Charles Martin, Maggie Salcedo. These artists, mostly unknown when Lucien Vogel appealed to them, will eventually become iconic figures and artistic sought. These are the same illustrators who make the drawings advertisements Gazette. The boards highlight the dresses and sublime seven artists of the time: Lanvin, Doeuillet, Paquin, Poiret, Worth, Vionnet and Doucet. The designers provide for each number of exclusive models. Nevertheless, some of Illustrations contained no real model, but only the idea that the illustrator is done in the fashion of the day. Gazette fashionable is a milestone in the history of fashion. Combining the aesthetic requirement and plastic unit, it brings together for the first time the great talents of the world of arts, literature and fashion and imposed by this alchemy, a new image of women, slender, independent and bold, also driven by the new generation of designers Coco Chanel, Jean Patou, Rochas Marcel ... Recovery in 1920 by Condé Montrose Nast, Gazette fashionable modeled for the new composition and the aesthetic choices of the "little dying newspaper" that Nast had bought a few years ago: the Vogue magazine. [FRENCH VERSION FOLLOWS] Ensemble de neuf estampes originales en couleur, tirées sur papier vergé. Les planches sont introduites par un texte signé Jeanne Ramon-Fernandez. Les croquis XII et XIII sont signés David, respectivement en bas à gauche et à droite des planches. Gravures orig
- Lucien Vogel éditeur, Paris 1922, 18x24cm, relié. - Set of eight original prints in color, drawn on laid paper. The boards are introduced by a text signed Joan Ramon Fernandez. The sketches are signed XIX and XXI David, respectively on the lower right and left boards. Original prints made ??for the illustration of The Gazette fashionable, one of the finest and most influential twentieth century fashion magazines, celebrating the talent of creators and artists French burgeoning art deco. Famous fashion magazine founded in 1912 by Lucien Vogel, The Gazette fashionable appeared until 1925 with an interruption during the War of 1915 to 1920, due to mobilization of its editor. She is 69 Deliveries from just 2000 copies and is illustrated including 573 color plates and 148 sketches depicting models of fashion designers. Upon publication, these luxury publications "are for bibliophiles and worldly aesthetes" (Françoise Tétart-Vittu "good Gazette of tone" in the fashion dictionary, 2016). Printed on fine laid paper, they use a typeface created specifically for the magazine by Georges Peignot, the Cochin character, taken in 1946 by Christian Dior. The prints are made with the technique of metal stencil, enhanced color and some outlined in gold or palladium. The adventure began in 1912 when Lucien Vogel, man of the world and fashion - it has already participated in Femina magazine - decided to found with his wife Cosette de Brunhoff (John's sister, the father of Babar) Gazette good tone in which the subtitle is then "Art, fashions and frivolities." Georges Charensol quotes the editor: "In 1910, he observed, there was no truly artistic fashion magazine and representative of the spirit of his time. So I thought of making a glossy magazine with truly modern artists [...] I was certain of success because for any fashion country can compete with France. "(" A great art editor. Lucien Vogel "in literary News, No. 133, May 1925). The success of the magazine is immediate, not only in France but also the US and South America. Originally, Vogel therefore brings together a group of seven artists: André-Édouard Marty and Pierre Brissaud, followed by Georges Lepape and Dammicourt; and finally his friends from the School of Fine Arts as are George Barbier, Bernard Boutet de Monvel or Charles Martin. Other talents come quickly reach the equipped Guy Arnoux, Léon Bakst, Benito, Boutet de Monvel, Umberto Brunelleschi, Chas Laborde, Jean-Gabriel Domergue, Raoul Dufy, Edward Halouze Alexander Iacovleff, Jean Emile Laboureur Charles Loupot, Charles Martin, Maggie Salcedo. These artists, mostly unknown when Lucien Vogel appealed to them, will eventually become iconic figures and artistic sought. These are the same illustrators who make the drawings advertisements Gazette. The boards highlight the dresses and sublime seven artists of the time: Lanvin, Doeuillet, Paquin, Poiret, Worth, Vionnet and Doucet. The designers provide for each number of exclusive models. Nevertheless, some of Illustrations contained no real model, but only the idea that the illustrator is done in the fashion of the day. Gazette fashionable is a milestone in the history of fashion. Combining the aesthetic requirement and plastic unit, it brings together for the first time the great talents of the world of arts, literature and fashion and imposed by this alchemy, a new image of women, slender, independent and bold, also driven by the new generation of designers Coco Chanel, Jean Patou, Rochas Marcel ... Recovery in 1920 by Condé Montrose Nast, Gazette fashionable modeled for the new composition and the aesthetic choices of the "little dying newspaper" that Nast had bought a few years ago: the Vogue magazine. [FRENCH VERSION FOLLOWS] Ensemble de huit estampes originales en couleur, tirées sur papier vergé. Les planches sont introduites par un texte signé L. R. F. Les croquis L, LII, LIII, LV, sont signés David, respectivement en bas à droite et à gauche des planches. Reliure à la br
- Lucien Vogel éditeur, Paris 1922, 18x24cm, relié. - Set of eight original prints in color, drawn on laid paper. The boards are introduced by a text signed Joan Ramon Fernandez. The sketches are signed XIX and XXI David, respectively on the lower right and left boards. Original prints made ??for the illustration of The Gazette fashionable, one of the finest and most influential twentieth century fashion magazines, celebrating the talent of creators and artists French burgeoning art deco. Famous fashion magazine founded in 1912 by Lucien Vogel, The Gazette fashionable appeared until 1925 with an interruption during the War of 1915 to 1920, due to mobilization of its editor. She is 69 Deliveries from just 2000 copies and is illustrated including 573 color plates and 148 sketches depicting models of fashion designers. Upon publication, these luxury publications "are for bibliophiles and worldly aesthetes" (Françoise Tétart-Vittu "good Gazette of tone" in the fashion dictionary, 2016). Printed on fine laid paper, they use a typeface created specifically for the magazine by Georges Peignot, the Cochin character, taken in 1946 by Christian Dior. The prints are made with the technique of metal stencil, enhanced color and some outlined in gold or palladium. The adventure began in 1912 when Lucien Vogel, man of the world and fashion - it has already participated in Femina magazine - decided to found with his wife Cosette de Brunhoff (John's sister, the father of Babar) Gazette good tone in which the subtitle is then "Art, fashions and frivolities." Georges Charensol quotes the editor: "In 1910, he observed, there was no truly artistic fashion magazine and representative of the spirit of his time. So I thought of making a glossy magazine with truly modern artists [...] I was certain of success because for any fashion country can compete with France. "(" A great art editor. Lucien Vogel "in literary News, No. 133, May 1925). The success of the magazine is immediate, not only in France but also the US and South America. Originally, Vogel therefore brings together a group of seven artists: André-Édouard Marty and Pierre Brissaud, followed by Georges Lepape and Dammicourt; and finally his friends from the School of Fine Arts as are George Barbier, Bernard Boutet de Monvel or Charles Martin. Other talents come quickly reach the equipped Guy Arnoux, Léon Bakst, Benito, Boutet de Monvel, Umberto Brunelleschi, Chas Laborde, Jean-Gabriel Domergue, Raoul Dufy, Edward Halouze Alexander Iacovleff, Jean Emile Laboureur Charles Loupot, Charles Martin, Maggie Salcedo. These artists, mostly unknown when Lucien Vogel appealed to them, will eventually become iconic figures and artistic sought. These are the same illustrators who make the drawings advertisements Gazette. The boards highlight the dresses and sublime seven artists of the time: Lanvin, Doeuillet, Paquin, Poiret, Worth, Vionnet and Doucet. The designers provide for each number of exclusive models. Nevertheless, some of Illustrations contained no real model, but only the idea that the illustrator is done in the fashion of the day. Gazette fashionable is a milestone in the history of fashion. Combining the aesthetic requirement and plastic unit, it brings together for the first time the great talents of the world of arts, literature and fashion and imposed by this alchemy, a new image of women, slender, independent and bold, also driven by the new generation of designers Coco Chanel, Jean Patou, Rochas Marcel ... Recovery in 1920 by Condé Montrose Nast, Gazette fashionable modeled for the new composition and the aesthetic choices of the "little dying newspaper" that Nast had bought a few years ago: the Vogue magazine. [FRENCH VERSION FOLLOWS] Ensemble de huit estampes originales en couleur, tirées sur papier vergé. Les planches sont introduites par un texte signé Jeanne Ramon-Fernandez. Les croquis I et II sont signés David, en bas à droite des planches. Reliure à la bradel en plein papier à
- Aubier 1972, 65x50cm, une feuille. - Lithographie originale imprimée sur BFK de Rives. Mention "Epreuve d'artiste" rédigée au crayon en bas à gauche. Signature de l'artiste au crayon en bas à droite de la planche. Marges salies avec petites traçes de pliure. Paysage mystérieux à la végétation luxuriante, le feu au centre, représente le titan sur un fond de collines dans des tons verts et orangés. [ENGLISH DESCRIPTION ON DEMAND]
- Lucien Vogel éditeur, Paris 1922, 18x24cm, relié. - Set of eight original prints in color, drawn on laid paper. The boards are introduced by a text signed Joan Ramon Fernandez. The sketches are signed XIX and XXI David, respectively on the lower right and left boards. Original prints made ??for the illustration of The Gazette fashionable, one of the finest and most influential twentieth century fashion magazines, celebrating the talent of creators and artists French burgeoning art deco. Famous fashion magazine founded in 1912 by Lucien Vogel, The Gazette fashionable appeared until 1925 with an interruption during the War of 1915 to 1920, due to mobilization of its editor. She is 69 Deliveries from just 2000 copies and is illustrated including 573 color plates and 148 sketches depicting models of fashion designers. Upon publication, these luxury publications "are for bibliophiles and worldly aesthetes" (Françoise Tétart-Vittu "good Gazette of tone" in the fashion dictionary, 2016). Printed on fine laid paper, they use a typeface created specifically for the magazine by Georges Peignot, the Cochin character, taken in 1946 by Christian Dior. The prints are made with the technique of metal stencil, enhanced color and some outlined in gold or palladium. The adventure began in 1912 when Lucien Vogel, man of the world and fashion - it has already participated in Femina magazine - decided to found with his wife Cosette de Brunhoff (John's sister, the father of Babar) Gazette good tone in which the subtitle is then "Art, fashions and frivolities." Georges Charensol quotes the editor: "In 1910, he observed, there was no truly artistic fashion magazine and representative of the spirit of his time. So I thought of making a glossy magazine with truly modern artists [...] I was certain of success because for any fashion country can compete with France. "(" A great art editor. Lucien Vogel "in literary News, No. 133, May 1925). The success of the magazine is immediate, not only in France but also the US and South America. Originally, Vogel therefore brings together a group of seven artists: André-Édouard Marty and Pierre Brissaud, followed by Georges Lepape and Dammicourt; and finally his friends from the School of Fine Arts as are George Barbier, Bernard Boutet de Monvel or Charles Martin. Other talents come quickly reach the equipped Guy Arnoux, Léon Bakst, Benito, Boutet de Monvel, Umberto Brunelleschi, Chas Laborde, Jean-Gabriel Domergue, Raoul Dufy, Edward Halouze Alexander Iacovleff, Jean Emile Laboureur Charles Loupot, Charles Martin, Maggie Salcedo. These artists, mostly unknown when Lucien Vogel appealed to them, will eventually become iconic figures and artistic sought. These are the same illustrators who make the drawings advertisements Gazette. The boards highlight the dresses and sublime seven artists of the time: Lanvin, Doeuillet, Paquin, Poiret, Worth, Vionnet and Doucet. The designers provide for each number of exclusive models. Nevertheless, some of Illustrations contained no real model, but only the idea that the illustrator is done in the fashion of the day. Gazette fashionable is a milestone in the history of fashion. Combining the aesthetic requirement and plastic unit, it brings together for the first time the great talents of the world of arts, literature and fashion and imposed by this alchemy, a new image of women, slender, independent and bold, also driven by the new generation of designers Coco Chanel, Jean Patou, Rochas Marcel ... Recovery in 1920 by Condé Montrose Nast, Gazette fashionable modeled for the new composition and the aesthetic choices of the "little dying newspaper" that Nast had bought a few years ago: the Vogue magazine. [FRENCH VERSION FOLLOWS] Ensemble de huit estampes originales en couleur, tirées sur papier vergé. Les planches sont introduites par un texte signé Jeanne Ramon-Fernandez. Les croquis XIX et XXI sont signés David, respectivement en bas à droite et à gauche des planches. Reliure
RARE LIMITED EDITION OF 435 COPIES - COPY No.236 of a book set in British-ruled Palestine, written by Goncourt prize winners - the brothers Jérome (1874-1953 ) and Jean Tharaud (1877-1952). The exquisite illustrations are by two eminent French artists: the Orientalist painter and illustrator André Suréda (1872-1930) and the graphic artist Georges Beltrand (1881-1969). 300x215mm. 164 pages. Red leather Hardcover with gilt spine. Cover slightly curved. Cover and spine stained, rubbed/scratched and fading/yellowing. Cover corner bumped and peeling. Cover upper edge rubbed. Spine hinges upper part cracked and glued. Spine edge bumped and peeling/tattered. Pages slightly yellowing and rough-cut as published. [SUMMARY]: This extremely rare deluxe edition of a lavishly illustrated book about the Holy Land is in good condition. PLEASE NOTE: This item is overweight. We may ask for extra shipping costs.
120:200 mm. Auf Kartonträger montiert (350:445 mm). Beiliegend eine Ansicht der Via Flaminia (185:282 mm), auf gleichformatigen Kartonträger montiert. Hübsche, unsignierte Ansichten der italienischen Hafenstadt Castellamare di Stabia am Golf von Neapel, darunter zwei Darstellungen der ehemaligen königlichen Residenz Reggia di Quisisana, die im 18. Jahrhundert durch die Bourbonen renoviert wurde und 1878 vom Haus Savoyen in Gemeindebesitz überging. Die übrigen Zeichnungen zeigen den Blick von Vico Equense über Castellamare, mit dem rauchenden Vesuv im Hintergrund, eine Ruine sowie den Hafen von Castellammare. Beiliegend eine Zeichnung der Via Flaminia in Rom. - Wohlerhalten.
Engraving in original hand-colour. 16 x 13 cm (sheet dimensions: 30 x 21 cm). Matted. A rare engraving showing the Indian priest Aaron, the first converted native preacher of Malabar, dressed in white cloth and presenting to the viewer two pages from the Acts of the Apostles in Tamil. The Tamil Bible translation was famously published in 1713 by the Saxon missionary Bartholomaeus Ziegenbalg, who had been posted to the Danish colony of East India (Malabar) in the early 18th century. A nearly half-page letterpress text below the engraving elaborates on the conversion and life of Aaron, who was born ca. 1699, baptised in 1718, and ordained in 1733. - The engraver and botanist J. S. Müller (1715 - ca. 1792), known as John Miller in Britain, was born in Nuremberg, where he trained under Johann Christoph Weigel. He came to England in 1744 with his brother Tobias - an engraver of architecture - and remained there the rest of his life, producing several important botanical works and apparently also forging several oil paintings for London's appreciative art market. - Traces of folds; insignificant duststains to margins.
Acquaforte inclusa nella cartella ''Cinquanta incisioni di artisti italiani'', pubblicata da Prandi nel 1963 Firma e numerazione a matita (Firma e data sulla lastra). Esemplare 37/75. Cm 24,5x17 (Foglio 45x32). . . Ottimo (Fine). . . .