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Original single-sheet steel engraving of a very fine quality. Overall size ca. 215 x 270 mm. Image size ca. 130 x 190 mm. A three-line caption engraved at bottom in elegant handtooled open-face and italic types. Engraved Artist's and Engraver's signatures underneath image. Engraved Publisher's line below. The print is in its original state, trimmed and gilded on three sides. It is printed with warmer ink, somewhat more dramatic in mood, with fine, crisp detail, subtlety and elegance. In overall fine condition. (A spot.) Preserved in pH-balanced, acid-free Renaissance archival paper. ~ A delicately executed steel engraving, representing a major illustrative work on 19th century Palestine, Syria, and Asia Minor. William Henry Bartlett (born London, 1809) was one of the foremost illustrators of topography of his generation. He travelled extensively throughout Britain, the Americas, and the Middle East, producing his work on location. In 1854 he made his last trip to the Holy Land; he died of fever on board a French ship on his return voyage to England. Bartlett's primary concern was to extract the picturesque aspects of a place and render "lively impressions of actual sights", as he wrote in the preface to "The Nile Boat" (London, 1849). His work became widely known through the numerous engravings after the original drawings and paintings he made. The interest in these engravings today is as much for the exquisite quality of the rendering and presentation of the architecture of the period, as it is for the representation of the landscape. Published in 1836 by Peter Jackson, Late Fisher, Son & Co. of London, it was originally accompanied by descriptions written by John Carne.
Original single-sheet steel engraving of a very fine quality. Overall size ca. 215 x 270 mm. Image size ca. 130 x 190 mm. A two-line caption engraved at bottom in elegant handtooled open-face and italic types. Engraved Artist's and Engraver's signatures underneath image. Engraved Publisher's line below. The print is in its original state, trimmed and gilded on three sides. It is printed with warmer ink, somewhat more dramatic in mood, with fine, crisp detail, subtlety and elegance. In overall fine condition. Preserved in pH-balanced, acid-free Renaissance archival paper. ~ A delicately executed steel engraving, representing a major illustrative work on 19th century Palestine, Syria, and Asia Minor. William Henry Bartlett (born London, 1809) was one of the foremost illustrators of topography of his generation. He travelled extensively throughout Britain, the Americas, and the Middle East, producing his work on location. In 1854 he made his last trip to the Holy Land; he died of fever on board a French ship on his return voyage to England. Bartlett's primary concern was to extract the picturesque aspects of a place and render "lively impressions of actual sights", as he wrote in the preface to "The Nile Boat" (London, 1849). His work became widely known through the numerous engravings after the original drawings and paintings he made. The interest in these engravings today is as much for the exquisite quality of the rendering and presentation of the architecture of the period, as it is for the representation of the landscape. Published in 1836 by Peter Jackson, Late Fisher, Son & Co. of London, it was originally accompanied by descriptions written by John Carne.
Original single-sheet steel engraving of a very fine quality. Overall size ca. 215 x 270 mm. Image size ca. 130 x 190 mm. A two-line caption engraved at bottom in elegant handtooled open-face and italic types. Engraved Artist's and Engraver's signatures underneath image. Engraved Publisher's line below. The print is in its original state, trimmed and gilded on three sides. It is printed with warmer ink, somewhat more dramatic in mood, with fine, crisp detail, subtlety and elegance. In overall fine condition. (Few marginal spots.) Preserved in pH-balanced, acid-free Renaissance archival paper. ~ A delicately executed steel engraving, representing a major illustrative work on 19th century Palestine, Syria, and Asia Minor. William Henry Bartlett (born London, 1809) was one of the foremost illustrators of topography of his generation. He travelled extensively throughout Britain, the Americas, and the Middle East, producing his work on location. In 1854 he made his last trip to the Holy Land; he died of fever on board a French ship on his return voyage to England. Bartlett's primary concern was to extract the picturesque aspects of a place and render "lively impressions of actual sights", as he wrote in the preface to "The Nile Boat" (London, 1849). His work became widely known through the numerous engravings after the original drawings and paintings he made. The interest in these engravings today is as much for the exquisite quality of the rendering and presentation of the architecture of the period, as it is for the representation of the landscape. Published in 1836 by Peter Jackson, Late Fisher, Son & Co. of London, it was originally accompanied by descriptions written by John Carne.
Original single-sheet steel engraving of a very fine quality. Overall size ca. 215 x 270 mm. Image size ca. 130 x 190 mm. A two-line caption engraved at bottom in elegant handtooled open-face and italic types. Engraved Artist's and Engraver's signatures underneath image. Engraved Publisher's line below. The print is in its original state, trimmed and gilded on three sides. It is printed with warmer ink, somewhat more dramatic in mood, with fine, crisp detail, subtlety and elegance. In overall fine condition. Preserved in pH-balanced, acid-free Renaissance archival paper. ~ A delicately executed steel engraving, representing a major illustrative work on 19th century Palestine, Syria, and Asia Minor. William Henry Bartlett (born London, 1809) was one of the foremost illustrators of topography of his generation. He travelled extensively throughout Britain, the Americas, and the Middle East, producing his work on location. In 1854 he made his last trip to the Holy Land; he died of fever on board a French ship on his return voyage to England. Bartlett's primary concern was to extract the picturesque aspects of a place and render "lively impressions of actual sights", as he wrote in the preface to "The Nile Boat" (London, 1849). His work became widely known through the numerous engravings after the original drawings and paintings he made. The interest in these engravings today is as much for the exquisite quality of the rendering and presentation of the architecture of the period, as it is for the representation of the landscape. Published in 1836 by Peter Jackson, Late Fisher, Son & Co. of London, it was originally accompanied by descriptions written by John Carne.
Original single-sheet steel engraving of a very fine quality. Overall size ca. 215 x 270 mm. Image size ca. 130 x 190 mm. A two-line caption engraved at bottom in elegant handtooled open-face and italic types. Engraved Artist's and Engraver's signatures underneath image. Engraved Publisher's line below. The print is in its original state, trimmed and gilded on three sides. It is printed with warmer ink, somewhat more dramatic in mood, with fine, crisp detail, subtlety and elegance. In overall fine condition. Preserved in pH-balanced, acid-free Renaissance archival paper. ~ A delicately executed steel engraving, representing a major illustrative work on 19th century Palestine, Syria, and Asia Minor. William Henry Bartlett (born London, 1809) was one of the foremost illustrators of topography of his generation. He travelled extensively throughout Britain, the Americas, and the Middle East, producing his work on location. In 1854 he made his last trip to the Holy Land; he died of fever on board a French ship on his return voyage to England. Bartlett's primary concern was to extract the picturesque aspects of a place and render "lively impressions of actual sights", as he wrote in the preface to "The Nile Boat" (London, 1849). His work became widely known through the numerous engravings after the original drawings and paintings he made. The interest in these engravings today is as much for the exquisite quality of the rendering and presentation of the architecture of the period, as it is for the representation of the landscape. Published in 1836 by Peter Jackson, Late Fisher, Son & Co. of London, it was originally accompanied by descriptions written by John Carne.
Original single-sheet steel engraving of a very fine quality. Overall size ca. 215 x 270 mm. Image size ca. 130 x 190 mm. A two-line caption engraved at bottom in elegant handtooled open-face and italic types. Engraved Artist's and Engraver's signatures underneath image. Engraved Publisher's line below. The print is in its original state, trimmed and gilded on three sides. It is printed with warmer ink, somewhat more dramatic in mood, with fine, crisp detail, subtlety and elegance. In overall fine condition. (A light spot.) Preserved in pH-balanced, acid-free Renaissance archival paper. ~ A delicately executed steel engraving, representing a major illustrative work on 19th century Palestine, Syria, and Asia Minor. William Henry Bartlett (born London, 1809) was one of the foremost illustrators of topography of his generation. He travelled extensively throughout Britain, the Americas, and the Middle East, producing his work on location. In 1854 he made his last trip to the Holy Land; he died of fever on board a French ship on his return voyage to England. Bartlett's primary concern was to extract the picturesque aspects of a place and render "lively impressions of actual sights", as he wrote in the preface to "The Nile Boat" (London, 1849). His work became widely known through the numerous engravings after the original drawings and paintings he made. The interest in these engravings today is as much for the exquisite quality of the rendering and presentation of the architecture of the period, as it is for the representation of the landscape. Published in 1836 by Peter Jackson, Late Fisher, Son & Co. of London, it was originally accompanied by descriptions written by John Carne.
Original single-sheet steel engraving of a very fine quality. Overall size ca. 215 x 270 mm. Image size ca. 130 x 190 mm. A two-line caption engraved at bottom in elegant handtooled open-face and italic types. Engraved Artist's and Engraver's signatures underneath image. Engraved Publisher's line below. The print is in its original state, trimmed and gilded on three sides. It is printed with warmer ink, somewhat more dramatic in mood, with fine, crisp detail, subtlety and elegance. In overall fine condition. (Few marginal spots.) Preserved in pH-balanced, acid-free Renaissance archival paper. ~ A delicately executed steel engraving, representing a major illustrative work on 19th century Palestine, Syria, and Asia Minor. William Henry Bartlett (born London, 1809) was one of the foremost illustrators of topography of his generation. He travelled extensively throughout Britain, the Americas, and the Middle East, producing his work on location. In 1854 he made his last trip to the Holy Land; he died of fever on board a French ship on his return voyage to England. Bartlett's primary concern was to extract the picturesque aspects of a place and render "lively impressions of actual sights", as he wrote in the preface to "The Nile Boat" (London, 1849). His work became widely known through the numerous engravings after the original drawings and paintings he made. The interest in these engravings today is as much for the exquisite quality of the rendering and presentation of the architecture of the period, as it is for the representation of the landscape. Published in 1836 by Peter Jackson, Late Fisher, Son & Co. of London, it was originally accompanied by descriptions written by John Carne.
Cartella contenente 6 litografie originali a colori, eseguite da Luigi Bartolini nel laboratorio delle Edizioni d'Arte il Bisonte a Firenze, tra il dicembre 1961 e il marzo 1962, ed un frontespizio litografico inciso dall'Autore. Titoli delle opere: "Villa in Sabina", "Strada di Villa Madama", "Il davanzale in fiore", "Anna nei boschi", "Fonte di campagna", "Le fioraie" (cm 65x46 - 46x65 c.ca). Le litografie sono numerate, titolate e firmate da Bartolini a matita. Con due poesie dell'Autore: "La passeggiata" e "Gli uccelli" Esemplare 6/30. Cm 66x48. pp. 4 + 7. . Molto buono (Very Good). . Prima edizione di 100+XXX es. numerati. .
Acquaforte originale stampata per il volume ''La Nencia da Barberino'' di Lorenzo de Medici, Bucciarelli, Ancona 1965. La tiratura dell'acquaforte è del 1961 Firma e titolo a matita (Firma e data sulla lastra: Bartolini 1959). Esemplare p.d.a.. Cm 12,5x18,5 (Foglio 35x51). . . Ottimo (Fine). . 100 + alcune pda. .
Acquaforte originale di Luigi Bartolini (cm 4x4,6) non firmata. Opera allegata al periodico "L'Incisione" n. 16 che contiene altra acquaforte originale, numerata e firmata, di Walter Piacesi (Omaggio a Piero Della Francesca, cm 18,3x16,3). Testo inedito di Dino Garrone . 4to. pp. 20. . Perfetto (Mint). . . . Sarà questa una delle lastre incise da Luigi Bartolini rincorrendo il cavallini di Monte Mario? Consegnatami dal grande Artista, con piacere ora la dono agli amici di questa rivista che porta il titolo da lui stesso suggerito. L'autenticità dell'acquaforte è convalidata dal timbro a secco - il cui disegno è stato delineato da Bartolini nel 1962 - delle edizioni Bucciarelli (Nota dell'Editore Brenno Bucciarelli)
Acquaforte originale. Una delle 4 acqueforti che illustrarono la raccolta di versi dell'A. ''Poesie 1960'', pubblicata da Bucciarelli Firma a matita (L.B.). Esemplare p.d.a.. Cm 6,8x3,6 (Foglio 17x25,5). . . . . Tiratura 100 + alcune p.d.a. .
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). . . .
Acquaforte. Opera appartenete alla cartella ''Testamento per Luciana'', contenente l'incisione ed un testo dell'Artista Disponibile senza la cartella. Esemplare p.d.a.. Cm 10,5x5 (Foglio 35x25). . . . . Tiratura 100 + alcune p.d.a.. .
This is a very good hardcover copy in a very good dust jacket. Completely clean inside and very clean outside as well, just a small piece chipped out of the top edge of the front jacket panel. Text in Italian. Introduction by Alfonso Gatto. Illustrated in color and black & white. 12" high X 10" wide, 213 pages. A beautiful copy. This book will be securely wrapped and packed in a sturdy box and shipped with tracking.
In-4° oblungo; frontespizio inciso e 50 tavole incise all’acquaforte da Pinelli (1781-1835), raffiguranti scene di costume ambientate nella campagna romana; i personaggi sono dediti a giochi, lavori, attività varie della vita quotidiana, anche a Roma e nel regno di Napoli; le ambientazioni sono in Ciociaria, Cerbara, Tivoli, Albano, Fracati, Pietra Terrazzana, Roma. L’indicazione di responsabilità presente su quasi tutti i rami è “Pinelli Fece 1815 Roma”. Buona copia.
In4° grande oblungo, legatura solida in mezza pelle rossa con angoli, fregi dorati al dorso, tasselo con titolo in oro al piatto superiore. Seconda edizione la prima completa con tutte le tavole. PP. (6), 170, più 52 tavole. Buon esemplare. I dodici canti del poema eroicomico, in dialetto romanesco, che diede la notorietà a Giuseppe Berneri (1637-1701) pubblicato insieme alle famose incisioni all’acquaforte di Pinelli (1781-1835) che ritraggono vivide scene popolari, con personaggi e costumi contemporanei, iconografia della Roma ottocentesca.
In-4°; pp. (32), con 2 tavole f.t. incise da Francesco Bartolozzi (1727-1815), una vignetta incisa su rame al frontespizio, una testatina e 3 grandi finalini, di cui due da invenzioni di Piazzetta, incise da Fiorenza Marcello e Felicita Sartori. Sonetto introduttivo di Gasparo Gozzi, al termine una poesia di Giovanni MArsili. Legatura in cartonato colorato. Gamba p. 613.
15x21 cm. 31 pages. Paperback in dust jacket. In good condition.
28x21.5 cm. 238 pages. Softcover. Spine slightly wrinkled. Else in good condition. PLEASE NOTE: This item is overweight. We may ask for extra shipping costs.
8vo., Second Edition, with title-vignette and 73 fine wood-engravings by Parker; green cloth, gilt back, a near fine copy in unclipped dustwrapper. Long-awaited reissue of the original edition of 1936. THIS EDITION IS NOW ELUSIVE IN ITS OWN RIGHT.
LIMITED EDITION - COPY No.338. RARE collection of 12 b&w silkscreen (serigraph) prints by an eminent Argentinian artist Juan Batlle Planas (1911-1966) belonging to the surrealist school, but orienting in his later phases to romanticism. Many of his works, while obscure, were sombre in feeling, influenced by social unrest and economic and political problems in Argentina. Batlle Planas was an influence on numerous Latin American painters, including Roberto Aizenberg and Dalila Puzzovio, who studied under him. The prints depict San Telmo ("Saint Pedro González Telmo") - the oldest barrio (neighborhood) of Buenos Aires characterized by its picturesque colonial buildings. 390x280mm. 12 separate plates & 12 text pages (6 unbound double pages) laid in Hardcover folder with cloth spine and string-tie closure. Prints actual size: 26x16cm printed on white framing background. Title sticker mounted on folder front cover. Folder curved. Folder strings tattered. Folder edges and corners bumped and worn/peeling. Folder front board dirty. Folder rear board and spine stained. Folder flaps detached. Spine edges tattered/peeling. [SUMMARY]: Only the folder of this extremely rare collection of unique silkscreen prints has sustained some wear. All plates are in very good condition and ready for framing!
Portfolio of 10 exquisite landscape etchings by Pierre Bazire, each of which is JUSTIFIED (10/15) AND SIGNED IN PENCIL. These etchings evoke the rustic, pastoral landscapes of southern France, bathed in soft sunlight. Additionally there is a title/justification leaf (signed by Gustave Arthur Dassonville, for whom the edition was printed) with an eleventh etching, and another signed proof of that etching (so 12 etchings in all, of which 11 are full-page, loose, signed, and justified). Printed on fine Arches wove paper. Folio. Loose as issued in cloth portfolio with paper label. FINE AND BRIGHT, with no defects. Very rare (only 20 sets were printed: 1-15 and I-V).
8vo., First Edition, with coloured frontispiece and numerous fine engravings in monochrome (a number full-page) in the text, small neat contemporary signature on front free endpaper; green cloth, backstrip lettered in silver, grey endpapers, a near fine copy in price-0clipped dustwrapper. SCARCE IN THIS CONDITION.
Cartella di 6 litografie originali a colori firmate, datate e numerate dall'Artista: Il successo (cm 48x34), Trionfale (cm 48x68), Il sogno (cm 47x66), Progetto per il calvario (cm 40x56), Ritratto di Erode (cm 44x44), La pietra (cm 37,7x58) Stampate presso Il Torchio di Milano. Timbro a secco dello stampatore. Carta Fabriano. Esemplare 11/30. Fogli 50x70. pp.. Dedica autografa dell'autore ad un importante letterato italiano sulla cartella datata 1962 (Inscribed and signed by the Artist to an important Italian literary man, dated 1962). Molto buono (Very Good). . Prima edizione di 30 esemplari numerati. . ''Il suo dipinto è un racconto complicato, irto di interruzioni e di cautele, un campo di interazioni reciproche, ove una costruzione finisce coll'affiorare limpidamente tra una serie di contrappunti e di sostegni tematici'' (Giorgio Kaisserlian, Catalogo della mostra, Galleria De' Foscherari 1963).
Litografia in seppia Firma e numerazione a matita. Esemplare p.d.a.. Cm 40x50 (Foglio 50x70). . . . . . .