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Litografia originale allegata al volume di Ginestra Bendini Calzolari ''Il libro delle erbe magiche''. Litografia stampata a mano su carta Tintoretto Fedrigoni. Esemplare 72/100. Cm 31 x 41. pp.. . Perfetto (Mint). . Edizione di 100 esemplari. .
Litografia originale a colori dalla cartella ''El circulo de piedra'' Firma e numerazione a matita. Timbro a secco dell'Editore Giorgio Upiglio. Stampata su carta delle Cartiere Filicarta. cm 55x45. pp.. . Ottimo (Fine). . Tiratura 125 + XXV. .
Book shows light shelf wear to covers only. Binding is solid and square, covers have sharp corners, exterior shows no other, blemishes, text/interior is clean and free of marking of any kind save prev. owner's intitials at front end paper. Dust jacket shows corner wear with small tears. now wrapped in protective cover. Copperfield story is told in excerpts on L. page with copperplate engraving print at R. page. Unpaginated, about 85 pages, oblong format.
58p. Illustrated with numerous engravings. Title page decorated with a small drawing. All edges gold. Very XLib. Lacks front fly leaves. Sm. 8vo. Original full leather binding, embossed in blind and decorated in gold and black. Beveled edges. Rear board detached. Binding worn. Hardbound. An unfortunately poor copy of a handsome and scarce edition. POETRY2 BOX 2
Acquaforte acquatinta appartenente alla serie tirata nel 1981 per la seconda cartella de ''Le memorie di Casanova'' con testi di Italo Calvino / Etching aquatint pulled for the posthumous edition of ''Le memorie di Casanova'', second portfolio with text by Italo Calvino and etchings by Campigli Firma dell'Artista impressa a stampa. Carta Mulino del Gallo. Stampatore Franco Sciardelli, Milano. cm 24,7x18 (Foglio 50x35). . . Perfetto (Mint). . Tiratura 300+CXXV+25 (A-Z) esemplari. . La lastra fu incisa nel 1965: furono tirate alcune prove, in parte firmate e datate, e 5 prove numerate, firmate e datate, dalla Grafica Romero di Roma. The original edition pulled in 1965 by Grafica Romero in Rome consisted of a few copies, mostly unnumbered and unsigned.
Acquaforte in ocra appartenente alla serie tirata nel 1981 per la seconda cartella de ''Le memorie di Casanova'' con testi di Italo Calvino / Etching on ochre paper pulled for the posthumous edition of ''Le memorie di Casanova'', second portfolio with text by Italo Calvino and etchings by Campigli Firma dell'Artista impressa a stampa. Carta Mulino del Gallo. Stampatore Franco Sciardelli, Milano. cm 24x35 (Foglio 35x50). . . Perfetto (Mint). . Tiratura 300+CXXV+25 (A-Z) esemplari. . La lastra fu incisa nel 1965: furono tirate alcune prove, in parte firmate, dalla Grafica Romero di Roma. The original edition pulled in 1965 by Grafica Romero in Rome consisted of a few copies, mostly unnumbered and unsigned.
Acquaforte acquatinta appartenente alla serie tirata nel 1981 per la seconda cartella de ''Le memorie di Casanova'' con testi di Italo Calvino / Etching aquatint pulled for the posthumous edition of ''Le memorie di Casanova'', second portfolio with text by Italo Calvino and etchings by Campigli Firma dell'Artista impressa a stampa. Carta Mulino del Gallo. Stampatore Franco Sciardelli, Milano. cm 32x24,5 (Foglio 50x35). . . Perfetto (Mint). . Tiratura 300+CXXV+25 (A-Z) esemplari. . La lastra fu incisa nel 1965: del 1° stato fu tirata una sola prova firmata e datata (con scritto in basso a sinistra ''unico''); del 2° stato (col fondo della lastra parzialmente ripreso all'acquatinta) furono tirate solo alcune prove in parte firmate, dalla Grafica Romero di Roma / The original edition pulled in 1965 by Grafica Romero in Rome consisted of a few copies, mostly unnumbered and unsigned, from first and second state.
Acquaforte in ocra appartenente alla serie tirata nel 1981 per la seconda cartella de ''Le memorie di Casanova'' con testi di Italo Calvino / Etching on ochre paper pulled for the posthumous edition of ''Le memorie di Casanova'', second portfolio with text by Italo Calvino and etchings by Campigli Firma dell'Artista impressa a stampa. Carta Mulino del Gallo. Stampatore Franco Sciardelli, Milano. cm 32,3x24,5 (Foglio 50x35). . . Perfetto (Mint). . Tiratura 300+CXXV+25 (A-Z) esemplari. . La lastra fu incisa nel 1965: furono tirate alcune prove, in parte firmate, dalla Grafica Romero di Roma. The original edition pulled in 1965 by Grafica Romero in Rome consisted of a few copies, mostly unnumbered and unsigned.
Acquaforte in ocra appartenente alla serie tirata nel 1981 per la prima cartella de ''Le memorie di Casanova'' con testi di Italo Calvino / Etching on ochre paper pulled for the posthumous edition of ''Le memorie di Casanova'', first portfolio with text by Italo Calvino and etchings by Campigli Firma dell'Artista impressa a stampa. Carta Mulino del Gallo. Stampatore Franco Sciardelli, Milano. cm 32x24,7 (Foglio 50x35). . . Perfetto (Mint). . Tiratura 300+CXXV+25 (A-Z) esemplari. . La lastra fu incisa nel 1965: furono tirate alcune prove, in parte firmate, dalla Grafica Romero di Roma. The original edition pulled in 1965 by Grafica Romero in Rome consisted of a few copies, mostly unnumbered and unsigned.
Litografia a colori. 3° stato in cui le figure sono state modificate nei contorni, le mani e i volti, dai quali è stato cancellato il fondo ocra chiaro, sono ridisegnati in ocra e i panneggi in verde chiaro e bruno. Il fondino è tirato in bruno chiaro o grigio. Tiratura: alcune prove d'artista in parte firmate + 200 es. numerati + LX es. in colori diversi Firmata, numerata e datata a matita. Stampatore Desjobert, Parigi. Carta Arches, timbro a secco dell'editore. Esemplare 197/200 su fondino grigio. Cm 42,6x32,2. . . Molto buono (Very Good). Qualche lievissima fioritura ai bordi del foglio (Some light yellowing on the edges of the sheet). Tiratura: alcune p.d.a. + 200 + LX es. numerati. .
No marks or inscriptions. No creasing to covers or to slightly sunned spine. A very clean very tight copy with bright unmarked boards, foxing to page edges and no bumping to very sharp corners. Protected in glassine jacket.. All twelve colour prints in excellent condition in folder at front plus 31pp. Techniques of water colour, pastel and print plus full size colour plates and descriptions.
No marks or inscriptions. No creasing to covers or to slightly sunned spine. A very clean very tight copy with bright unmarked boards, foxing to page edges and no bumping to corners. Protected in glassine jacket.. All twelve colour prints in excellent condition in folder at front plus 31pp. Full size colour plates and descriptions featuring the artist as a critic of society. Scarce volume in this series.
No marks or inscriptions. No creasing to covers or to spine. A very clean very tight copy with bright unmarked boards, foxing to page edges and no bumping to very sharp corners. Protected in glassine jacket.. All twelve colour prints in excellent condition in folder at front plus 31pp. Techniques of water colour, pastel and print plus full size colour plates and descriptions with emphasis on the fresco or wall painting.
Acquaforte acquatinta Firma a matita. Esemplare XX/XX. Cm 34x25 (Foglio 50x35). pp.. . Ottimo (Fine). . Tiratura XX. .
Acquaforte e bulino. Serie completa di 10 tavole (cm. 62 x 44) incise da Michele Torres, Giovanni Martino De Boni, Domenico Marchetti, Angelo Testa, Luigi Cunego, eseguita e stampata dalla Calcografia Camerale in Roma tra il 1811 ed il 1812. Folio massimo, legatura editoriale in carta azzurrina con titolo al piatto superiore, fogli integri con margini originali, una piega ben restaurata sul fianco superiore, piccoli restauri. Etching and burin. A complete serie of 10 plates carved by Michele Torres, Giovanni Martino De Boni, Domenico Marchetti, Angelo Testa, Luigi Cunego, printed by the Calcografia Camerale in Rome, between 1811 and 1812. Editorial binding on blue paper with title on front cover, original edges, a well restored warp on the center of plates, minor restaurations.
Acquaforte su fondino celeste Firma a matita. Esemplare 23/99. Cm 33,5x25 (Foglio 50x35). . . Ottimo (Fine). . Tiratura 99. .
Litografia. Opera appartenete alla cartella ''Venezia 73'' contenente 31 opere grafiche di maestri italiani ed un saggio di Piero Chiara, pubblicata dall'Unesco Firma a matita. Il foglio reca il timbro a secco del Museo di Castelvecchio di Verona e quello della Stamperia del Cappello. Esemplare 96/100. Cm 70x50. . . . . Tiratura 100 + XI f.c.. .
RARE album printed on the occasion of an exhibition of works by Beatrice Caracciolo, an Italian artist whose work has been shown in numerous exhibitions in the United States and Europe, including a retrospective devoted to her work at the Villa Medici in 2010 in Rome. She lives and works in Paris. This book contains 22 reproductions of Caracciolo's works from her second solo exhibition held in 06.09-05.10.13 (photographic prints in intaglio on waxed paper) and numerous other plates reproducing her work. The photoengravings (Fuoco), woodcuts (Lines of Fire) and collages (Blades of Fire) are preceded by quotes from Gaston Bachelard, René Char, Guy Debord, James George Frazer, Mahatma Gandhi, Heraclitus, Petrarch, Henri Michaux and William Butler Yeats.245x175mm. 187 pages. White cloth Hardcover. Black lettering on front cover. Cover dirty. Cover corner and edges slightly bumped. [SUMMARY]: This extremely rare catalog of works by a fascinating modern artist with accompanying texts by renowned writers is in very good condition.
Quattro serigrafie originali a colori, numerate e firmate, di Bruno Caraceni (cm34,7x25). Presentazione di Sandra Orienti Cartella a cura di Giuseppe Appella. Serigrafie stampate su carta Usomano di gr. 220 dal Feltro di Roma. Es. 52/97. 4to. pp. 4. . Ottimo (Fine). . Edizione originale di 97 es. numerati. . Bruno Caraceni, particolarmente attivo negli Anni 60 e 70, partecipa a tre edizioni della Biennale di Venezia, 1956, 1958, 1968, a tre edizioni della Quadriennale di Roma e a un'edizione della Biennale di Tokyo. Ha tenuto molte mostre personali, sia in Italia che all'estero.
Catalogue raisonne of the lithographs. About 100 items illustrated and thoroughly described. Six tipped-in color plates. Large 4to. Publisher's cloth. Fine in a very good dustjacket.
RARE collection of 24 high-quality b&w prints by Antonio Carbonati, depicting the scenery of Rome at the post-war period. 415x300mm. 24 plates. No binding (folder format). Softcover. Cover worn and stained. Cover edges tattered and partly torn, spine partly torn. Some pages yellowing, with very few age-stains at edges (not touching the prints themselves). [SUMMARY]: This collection of rare and collectible prints is otherwise in good condition.
pp. xviii, [1], 20-234 + Woodcut frontis plate. Foxed. Small 12 mo. 150 mm. Original binding of illustrated printed paper over boards with leather spine; boards detached. Small woodcut of a ship sailing away from home on the front cover; publisher's advertisements on the rear. Ink manuscript ownership: Miss Ann Herr's Book 1837. Also a later ownership. **PRICE JUST REDUCED! PA IMPRINTS 6
Litografia originale a colori dalla cartella ''El circulo de piedra'' Firma e numerazione a matita. Timbro a secco dell'Editore Giorgio Upiglio. Stampata su carta delle Cartiere Filicarta. cm 55x45. . . Ottimo (Fine). . Tiratura 125 + XXV. .
- Lucien Vogel éditeur, Paris Février 1913, 19x24,5cm, une feuille. - Original color print, printed on vergé paper, signed in the plate. An original print used to illustrate the Gazette du bon ton, one of the most attractive and influential 20th century fashion magazines, featuring the talents of French artists and other contributors from the burgeoning Art Deco movement. A celebrated fashion magazine established in 1912 by Lucien Vogel, La Gazette du bon ton appeared until 1925, with a hiatus from 1915 to 1920 due to the war (the editor-in-chief having been called up for service). It consisted of 69 issues printed in only 2,000 copies each and notably illustrated with 573 color plates and 148 sketches of the models of the great designers. Right from the start, this sumptuous publication "was aimed at bibliophiles and fashionable society," (Françoise Tétart-Vittu, "La Gazette du bon ton", in Dictionnaire de la mode, 2016) and was printed on fine vergé paper using a type cut specially for the magazine by Georges Peignot, known as Cochin, later used (in 1946) by Christian Dior. The prints were made using stencils, heightened in colors, some highlighted in gold or palladium. The story began in 1912, when Lucien Vogel, a man of the world involved in fashion (he had already been part of the fashion magazine Femina) decided, with his wife Cosette de Brunhoff - the sister of Jean, creator of Babar - to set up the Gazette du bon ton, subtitled at the time: "Art, fashion, frivolities." Georges Charensol noted the reasoning of the editor-in-chief: "'In 1910,' he observed, 'there was no really artistic fashion magazine, nothing representative of the spirit of the time. My dream was therefore to make a luxury magazine with truly modern artists...I was assured of success, because when it comes to fashion, no country on earth can compete with France.'" ("Un grand éditeur d'art. Lucien Vogel" in Les Nouvelles littéraires, no. 133, May 1925). The magazine was immediately successful, not only in France but also in the United States and Latin America. At first, Vogel put together a team of seven artists: André-Édouard Marty and Pierre Brissaud, followed by Georges Lepape and Dammicourt, as well as eventually his friends from school and the School of Fine Arts, like George Barbier, Bernard Boutet de Monvel and Charles Martin. Other talented people soon came flocking to join the team: Guy Arnoux, Léon Bakst, Benito, Boutet de Monvel, Umberto Brunelleschi, Chas Laborde, Jean-Gabriel Domergue, Raoul Dufy, Édouard Halouze, Alexandre Iacovleff, Jean Émile Laboureur, Charles Loupot, Chalres Martin, Maggie Salcedo. These artist, mostly unknown when Lucien Vogel sought them out, later became emblematic and sought-after artistic figures. It was also they who worked on the advertising drawings for the Gazette. The plates put the spotlight on, and celebrate, dresses by seven designers of the age: Lanvin, Doeuillet, Paquin, Poiret, Worth, Vionnet and Doucet. The designers provided exclusive models for each issue. Nonetheless, some of the illustrations are not based on real models, but simply on the illustrator's conception of the fashion of the day. The Gazette du bon ton was an important step in the history of fashion. Combining aesthetic demands with the physical whole, it brought together - for the first time - the great talents of the artistic, literary, and fashion worlds; and imposed, through this alchemy, a completely new image of women: slender, independent and daring, which was shared by the new generation of designers, including Coco Chanel, Jean Patou, Marcel Rochas, and so on... Taken over in 1920 by Condé Montrose Nast, the Gazette du bon ton was an important influence on the new layout and aesthetics of that "little dying paper" that Nast had bought a few years earlier: Vogue. [FRENCH VERSION FOLLOWS] Estampe originale en couleur, tirée sur papier vergé et signée en bas à droite. Gravure originale réalisée pour l'illustratio
- Lucien Vogel éditeur, Paris Janvier 1914, 19x24,5cm, une feuille. - Original color print, printed on vergé paper, signed in the plate. An original print used to illustrate the Gazette du bon ton, one of the most attractive and influential 20th century fashion magazines, featuring the talents of French artists and other contributors from the burgeoning Art Deco movement. A celebrated fashion magazine established in 1912 by Lucien Vogel, La Gazette du bon ton appeared until 1925, with a hiatus from 1915 to 1920 due to the war (the editor-in-chief having been called up for service). It consisted of 69 issues printed in only 2,000 copies each and notably illustrated with 573 color plates and 148 sketches of the models of the great designers. Right from the start, this sumptuous publication "was aimed at bibliophiles and fashionable society," (Françoise Tétart-Vittu, "La Gazette du bon ton", in Dictionnaire de la mode, 2016) and was printed on fine vergé paper using a type cut specially for the magazine by Georges Peignot, known as Cochin, later used (in 1946) by Christian Dior. The prints were made using stencils, heightened in colors, some highlighted in gold or palladium. The story began in 1912, when Lucien Vogel, a man of the world involved in fashion (he had already been part of the fashion magazine Femina) decided, with his wife Cosette de Brunhoff - the sister of Jean, creator of Babar - to set up the Gazette du bon ton, subtitled at the time: "Art, fashion, frivolities." Georges Charensol noted the reasoning of the editor-in-chief: "'In 1910,' he observed, 'there was no really artistic fashion magazine, nothing representative of the spirit of the time. My dream was therefore to make a luxury magazine with truly modern artists...I was assured of success, because when it comes to fashion, no country on earth can compete with France.'" ("Un grand éditeur d'art. Lucien Vogel" in Les Nouvelles littéraires, no. 133, May 1925). The magazine was immediately successful, not only in France but also in the United States and Latin America. At first, Vogel put together a team of seven artists: André-Édouard Marty and Pierre Brissaud, followed by Georges Lepape and Dammicourt, as well as eventually his friends from school and the School of Fine Arts, like George Barbier, Bernard Boutet de Monvel and Charles Martin. Other talented people soon came flocking to join the team: Guy Arnoux, Léon Bakst, Benito, Boutet de Monvel, Umberto Brunelleschi, Chas Laborde, Jean-Gabriel Domergue, Raoul Dufy, Édouard Halouze, Alexandre Iacovleff, Jean Émile Laboureur, Charles Loupot, Chalres Martin, Maggie Salcedo. These artist, mostly unknown when Lucien Vogel sought them out, later became emblematic and sought-after artistic figures. It was also they who worked on the advertising drawings for the Gazette. The plates put the spotlight on, and celebrate, dresses by seven designers of the age: Lanvin, Doeuillet, Paquin, Poiret, Worth, Vionnet and Doucet. The designers provided exclusive models for each issue. Nonetheless, some of the illustrations are not based on real models, but simply on the illustrator's conception of the fashion of the day. The Gazette du bon ton was an important step in the history of fashion. Combining aesthetic demands with the physical whole, it brought together - for the first time - the great talents of the artistic, literary, and fashion worlds; and imposed, through this alchemy, a completely new image of women: slender, independent and daring, which was shared by the new generation of designers, including Coco Chanel, Jean Patou, Marcel Rochas, and so on... Taken over in 1920 by Condé Montrose Nast, the Gazette du bon ton was an important influence on the new layout and aesthetics of that "little dying paper" that Nast had bought a few years earlier: Vogue. [FRENCH VERSION FOLLOWS] Estampe originale en couleur, tirée sur papier vergé, signée en bas à gauche de la planche. Gravure originale réalisée pour l