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Roy. 4to., Third and Best Edition, with very numerous fine coloured reproductions (many full-page and a number on gatefold forma) throughout; cloth, gilt back, a fine copy. This sumptuous standard reference was first published in 1992. The present edition contains valuable updates covering the second and third issues.
Litografia originale stampata per la cartella ''11'' a cura di Gianfranco Pardi Firma e numerazione a matita. Stampata dalla Seri-Arte di Gorle (Bergamo) su carta Fabriano gr 300. Esemplare 102/150. cm 48x48 (Foglio 76x56). . . . . Tiratura 150. .
127p. Plus engraved frontis and full page plates. All edges gilt. 4to. Original full gilt decorated embossed cloth binding, very worn. Engraved plates have some soiling and foxing. A good candidate for rebinding. A wonderful contemporary insight into American Antebellum romantic ideas and ideals. Scarce. WOMEN 2
Acquaforte originale Firma a matita. Timbro a secco dello stampatore. Esemplare 40/90. Cm 34,5x50 (Foglio 50x70). pp.. . . . Tiratura 90. .
Acquaforte Firma a matita. Timbro a secco dello stampatore. Esemplare 21/90. Cm 34,5x50 (Foglio 50x70). . . . . Tiratura 90. .
- Louis Broder, Paris s.d. (1965), 20x24,1cm, une feuille. - Eau-forte originale de Giacometti imprimée sur japon et réalisée pour l'ouvrage Feuilles éparses en hommage à René Crevel. Très bel exemplaire. [ENGLISH DESCRIPTION ON DEMAND]
22x30 cm. 19 pages. Softcover. Cover slightly dirty. Else in good condition.
The catalogue raisonne of the prints. About 160 items described and reproduced, almost all in color. Folio. Original wraps. FINE AND BRIGHT.
LIMITED EDITION. COPY #885. The book contains b&w illustrations. 133X203 mm. 87 pages. Soft cover. Spine and cover edges slightly worn. Spine slightly torn and creased. Rear cover slightly stained. Inscription on first page. Stamp on pages outer side. Yellowing pages. Else in good condition.
In folio, antiporta incisa e 210 tavole (di 212 mancano n. 43 e 134), legatura in piena pelle coeva con fregi in oro e tassello al dorso, cornice impressa a secco ai piatti. Il più importante e bel libro di calligrafia del secolo, e uno dei più interessanti libri di scrittura di tutti i tempi, frutto di un lavoro di anni e di un intero atelier di incisori. Comprende sia testi incisi di teoria che un grande numero di esempi di calligrafia, compresi alfabeti esotici. Fu uno dei primi esempi di libro uscito a fascicoli, qui nella prima edizione in forma di libro. Legatura con qualche abrasione e tracce di uso ai piatti, dorso restaurato; cinque tavole con marginali restauri.
Serifìgrafia e acquerello Firma e titolo a matita. Cm 37x26 (Foglio 50x35). . . . . . .
- Lucien Vogel éditeur, Paris 1924-1925, 18x24,5cm, deux doubles feuillets. - Extrait original tiré de La Gazette du bon ton, illustré de huit dessins en couleurs de Geffroy. On y joint un double feuillet de texte concernant la mode d'hiver chez différents créateurs (Lanvin, Poiret, Vionnet et Worth). Célèbre revue de mode fondée en 1912 par Lucien Vogel, La Gazette du bon ton a paru jusqu'en 1925 avec une interruption durant la Guerre de 1915 à 1920, pour cause de mobilisation de son rédacteur en chef. Elle se constitue de 69 livraisons tirées à seulement 2000 exemplaires et est illustrée notamment de 573 planches en couleurs et de 148 croquis représentant des modèles de grands couturiers. Dès leur parution, ces luxueuses publications « s'adressent aux bibliophiles et aux mondains esthètes » (Françoise Tétart-Vittu « La Gazette du bon ton » in Dictionnaire de la mode, 2016). Imprimées sur beau papier vergé, elles utilisent une police typographique spécialement créée pour la revue par Georges Peignot, le caractère Cochin, repris en 1946 par Christian Dior. Les estampes sont réalisées grâce à la technique du pochoir métallique, rehaussées en couleurs et pour certaines soulignées à l'or ou au palladium. L'aventure commence en 1912 lorsque Lucien Vogel, homme du monde et de la mode - il a déjà participé à la revue Femina - décide de fonder avec sa femme Cosette de Brunhoff (sur de Jean, le père de Babar) La Gazette du bon ton dont le sous-titre est alors « Art, modes et frivolités ». Georges Charensol rapporte les propos du rédacteur en chef : « En 1910, observe-t-il, il n'existait aucun journal de mode véritablement artistique et représentatif de l'esprit de son époque. Je songeais donc à faire un magazine de luxe avec des artistes véritablement modernes [...] J'étais certain du succès car pour la mode aucun pays ne peut rivaliser avec la France. » (« Un grand éditeur d'art. Lucien Vogel » in Les Nouvelles littéraires, n°133, mai 1925). Le succès de la revue est immédiat, non seulement en France, mais aussi aux Etats-Unis et en Amérique du Sud. À l'origine, Vogel réunit donc un groupe de sept artistes : André-Édouard Marty et Pierre Brissaud, suivis de Georges Lepape et Dammicourt ; et enfin ses amis de l'École des beaux-arts que sont George Barbier, Bernard Boutet de Monvel, ou Charles Martin. D'autres talents viennent rapidement rejoindre l'équipée : 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, Charles Martin, Maggie Salcedo. Ces artistes, inconnus pour la plupart lorsque Lucien Vogel fait appel à eux, deviendront par la suite des figures artistiques emblématiques et recherchées. Ce sont ces mêmes illustrateurs qui réalisent les dessins des publicités de la Gazette. Les planches mettent en lumière et subliment les robes de sept créateurs de l'époque : Lanvin, Doeuillet, Paquin, Poiret, Worth, Vionnet et Doucet. Les couturiers fournissent pour chaque numéro des modèles exclusifs. Néanmoins, certaines des illustrations ne figurent aucun modèle réel, mais seulement l'idée que l'illustrateur se fait de la mode du jour. La Gazette du bon ton est une étape décisive dans l'histoire de la mode. Alliant l'exigence esthétique et l'unité plastique, elle réunit pour la première fois les grands talents du monde des arts, des lettres et de la mode et impose, par cette alchimie, une toute nouvelle image de la femme, élancée, indépendante et audacieuse, également portée par la nouvelle génération de couturiers Coco Chanel, Jean Patou, Marcel Rochas... Reprise en 1920 par Condé Montrose Nast, La Gazette du bon ton inspirera largement la nouvelle composition et les choix esthétiques du « petit journal mourant » que Nast avait racheté quelques années auparavant : le magazine Vogue. Très bel exemplaire. [ENGLISH DESCRIPTION ON DEMAND]
In -4°, pp. 215, manca legatura. Raccolta di cento tavole illustrate in bianco e nero di Gavarni (1804-1866), disegnatore e litografo parigino. Prima edizione in raccolta.
28x25 cm. 157 pages. Hardcover. Rear cover slightly stained. Spine slightly curved. Else in good condition. PLEASE NOTE: This item is overweight. We may ask for extra shipping costs.
- s.d. (1924), 93x78mm, autre. - Diane et Actéon aux Marquises. Noa Noa. Unique proof of the woodcut drawn and engraved after Paul Gauguin by George-Daniel de Monfreid [between 1904 & 1924] | 9,3 x 7,8 mm | one sheet Original proof, likely unique, of this intermediate state of a woodcut drawn and engraved by George-Daniel de Monfreid after two works by Paul Gauguin. Print on Japan silk, annotation by the artist in the left-hand margin. Woodcut drawn and engraved after two works, the man holding a branch being a reproduction of a watercolor on page 37 of the Noa Noa manuscript, while the full-length woman originally observed by this browser, is presented here in bust with her hand to her face, model reproduced on a woodcut engraved by Gauguin on page 4 of the manuscript (and his original sketch pasted on page 51), evoking a similar scene. The final woodcut will serve as the head of chapter IV of the first true illustrated edition of Noa Noa, published by Crès in 1924, the first illustrated work after Paul Gauguin and a majestic tribute to one of the precursors of modern art. Superb engraving synthesizing a watercolor from the original Noa Noa manuscript, inspired by the myth of Diana and Actaeon, engraved by Gauguin's closest friend and executor, the artist George-Daniel de Monfreid, heir to the album he would offer to the French State in 1927. A likely unique proof, part of 17 known test woodcuts from the early project to publish Noa Noa, all made on various fine papers and annotated by the artist. Woodcut engraved after a watercolor reinterpreting the myth of Diana, surprised in the bath by Actaeon. In the engraving, Monfreid took care to preserve the typical of deer antler shape of the branch seized by the indiscreet, which evokes its metamorphosis by the goddess. A very rare work by Gauguin mixing ancient mythology and island exoticism, whose subversive power seems entirely carried by the vahine Diana's expression of feint surprise. It is from the original illustrated manuscript of Noa Noa, brought back from Tahiti by Segalen on the artist's death in 1903, that Monfreid began producing this fundamental work from as early as 1904. This is the second version of this "to read and look at" notebook. The first manuscript, written on the return of his first voyage and entrusted by Gauguin to Charles Morice in 1893, responded to a different project. Gauguin had composed only the text, interspersed with blank pages for Morice's poems. But after several years without news, Morice preferred to publish a version entirely rewritten by himself in 1901. Gauguin, therefore, copied his manuscript and illustrated it during his second stay in Polynesia, with sketches, watercolors and collages. This album, that the artist enriched and safely preserved until his death, is preserved today at the Musée d'Orsay. It is, therefore, from this manuscript, the only one illustrated, that Monfreid composed the edition of Gauguin's Noa Noa. However, although Monfreid's publication was forward, it took more than twenty years to complete, in part due to a copyright dispute with Charles Morice who wanted to be co-author of the forthcoming edition and whose poems would eventually be preserved. The result of several years of reflection and work, the 1924 edition is both faithful to the watercolors and woodcut engravings illustrating the precious manuscript, and to the whole of Gauguin's Tahitian work, who died in indifference. Monfreid thus engraves several drawings from the original notebook and enriches it with woodcuts made from other works of which he is the custodian. Some of these compositions combine several paintings, while scrupulously respecting the artist's line, transforming the work into a true journey through the painter's works. The very choice of using wood engraving is a tribute to this technique prized by Gauguin, who, in Pont-Aven, produced 10 woodcuts to illustrate his manuscript between his two Polynesian stays. The interm
- s.d. (1924), 93x78mm, autre. - La Mémoire et l'Imagination. Noa Noa. Unique proof of the woodcut drawn and engraved after Paul Gauguin by George-Daniel de Monfreid [between 1904 & 1924] | 9,3 x 7,8 cm | one sheet Original proof, likely unique, of this intermediate state of a woodcut drawn and engraved by George-Daniel de Monfreid after a watercolor by Paul Gauguin. Print on fine cream laid paper, annotation by the artist in the left-hand margin. Woodcut drawn and engraved after a watercolor from the Noa Noa manuscript, pasted on a page of text of the famous album. The final woodcut will serve as the head of the first illustrated edition of Noa Noa, published by Crès in 1924, the first illustrated work after Paul Gauguin and a majestic tribute to one of the precursors of modern art. Superb and significant engraving after a very specific watercolor from Paul Gauguin's manuscript, a real breakthrough in text, engraved by his closest friend and executor, the artist George-Daniel de Monfreid, heir to the album he would offer to the French State in 1927. The initial watercolor was cut out in waves around the female figure and pasted on the last chapter to prevent it from being read and thus get the story back on track. Gauguin had also added winding lines starting from the watercolor on the text page, thus giving the impression of a cave breaking through the page, by the psychic power of the sitting woman whose head diffuses the undulating rays. Monfreid decided to place it at the head of the work accompanied by two birds taken from other works, to illustrate the power of the artist and his imagination. A likely unique proof, part of 17 known test woodcuts from the early project to publish Noa Noa, all made on various fine papers and annotated by the artist. Unique proof of a woodcut engraved after the mystical watercolor erasing the first ending of the story to allow the reader to graphically enter the painted album, repeated in the printed version as the initiatory opening of the engraved story. It is from the original illustrated manuscript of Noa Noa, brought back from Tahiti by Segalen on the artist's death in 1903, that Monfreid began producing this fundamental work from as early as 1904. This is the second version of this "to read and look at" notebook. The first manuscript, written on the return of his first voyage and entrusted by Gauguin to Charles Morice in 1893, responded to a different project. Gauguin had composed only the text, interspersed with blank pages for Morice's poems. But after several years without news, Morice preferred to publish a version entirely rewritten by himself in 1901. Gauguin, therefore, copied his manuscript and illustrated it during his second stay in Polynesia, with sketches, watercolors and collages. This album, that the artist enriched and safely preserved until his death, is preserved today at the Musée d'Orsay. It is, therefore, from this manuscript, the only one illustrated, that Monfreid composed the edition of Gauguin's Noa Noa. However, although Monfreid's publication was forward, it took more than twenty years to complete, in part due to a copyright dispute with Charles Morice who wanted to be co-author of the forthcoming edition and whose poems would eventually be preserved. The result of several years of reflection and work, the 1924 edition is both faithful to the watercolors and woodcut engravings illustrating the precious manuscript, and to the whole of Gauguin's Tahitian work, who died in indifference. Monfreid thus engraves several drawings from the original notebook and enriches it with woodcuts made from other works of which he is the custodian. Some of these compositions combine several paintings, while scrupulously respecting the artist's line, transforming the work into a true journey through the painter's works. The very choice of using wood engraving is a tribute to this technique prized by Gauguin, who, in Pont-Aven, produced 10 woodcuts to illu
- s.d. (1924), 93x78mm, autre. - Les Odalisques aux mangues. Noa Noa. Unique proof of the woodcut drawn and engraved after Paul Gauguin by George-Daniel de Monfreid [between 1904 & 1924] | 9,3 x 7,8 cm | one sheet Original proof, likely unique, of this intermediate state of a woodcut drawn and engraved by George-Daniel de Monfreid after Paul Gauguin. Print on fine cream laid paper, annotation by the artist in the left-hand margin. Woodcut drawn and engraved after two different works. The back of the woman is an exact reproduction of an ink from page 92 of the Noa Noa manuscript, while the woman lying down takes up the well-known theme of the woman with mangos, Te Arii Vahine-Opoi, that Gauguin represented in paint as well as with an engraving in 1898. The final woodcut will serve as the head of chapter V of the first true illustrated edition of Noa Noa, published by Crès in 1924, the first illustrated work from Paul Gauguin and a majestic tribute to one of the precursors of modern art. Superb and significant engraving uniting two major themes of the Tahitian work, including the central drawing of the Noa Noa manuscript, faithfully engraved by Gauguin's closest friend and executor, the artist George-Daniel de Monfreid. A likely unique proof, part of 17 known test woodcuts from the project to prematurely publish Noa Noa, all made on various fine papers and annotated by the artist. Woodcut engraved from two major original works. By uniting these two vahines with sensual postures, Monfreid brings about a true synthesis of Gauguin's work, all while using the traditional double figure of the artist's paintings. It is from the original illustrated manuscript of Noa Noa, brought back from Tahiti by Segalen on the artist's death in 1903, that Monfreid began producing this fundamental work from as early as 1904. This is the second version of this "to read and look at" notebook. The first manuscript, written on the return of his first voyage and entrusted by Gauguin to Charles Morice in 1893, responded to a different project. Gauguin had composed only the text, interspersed with blank pages for Morice's poems. But after several years without news, Morice preferred to publish a version entirely rewritten by himself in 1901. Gauguin, therefore, copied his manuscript and illustrated it during his second stay in Polynesia, with sketches, watercolors and collages. This album, that the artist enriched and safely preserved until his death, is preserved today at the Musée d'Orsay. It is, therefore, from this manuscript, the only one illustrated, that Monfreid composed the edition of Gauguin's Noa Noa. However, although Monfreid's publication was forward, it took more than twenty years to complete, in part due to a copyright dispute with Charles Morice who wanted to be co-author of the forthcoming edition and whose poems would eventually be preserved. The result of several years of reflection and work, the 1924 edition is both faithful to the watercolors and woodcut engravings illustrating the precious manuscript, and to the whole of Gauguin's Tahitian work, who died in indifference. Monfreid thus engraves several drawings from the original notebook and enriches it with woodcuts made from other works of which he is the custodian. Some of these compositions combine several paintings, while scrupulously respecting the artist's line, transforming the work into a true journey through the painter's works. The very choice of using wood engraving is a tribute to this technique prized by Gauguin, who, in Pont-Aven, produced 10 woodcuts to illustrate his manuscript between his two Polynesian stays. The intermediate woodcuts, until then unknown, testify to the slow work of composition to restore the artistic richness of Gauguin's work by his most faithful artistic companion and first champion: "When I saw Gauguin for the first time, I was greatly disconcerted by the details of art that radiated from his works as well as from the conversations
- s.d. (1924), 93x78mm, autre. - Retour de pêche aux thons et bonites. Noa Noa. Unique proof of the woodcut drawn and engraved after Paul Gauguin by George-Daniel de Monfreid [between 1904 & 1924] | 9,3 x 7,8 cm | one sheet Original proof, likely unique, of this intermediate state of a woodcut drawn and engraved by George-Daniel de Monfreid after a watercolor by Paul Gauguin. Print on fine cream laid paper, annotation by the artist in the left-hand margin. Woodcut drawn and engraved from the first watercolor of the Noa Noa manuscript, pasted on a page of text of the famous album. The final woodcut will serve as the head of chapter X of the first true illustrated edition of Noa Noa, published by Crès in 1924, the first illustrated work from Paul Gauguin and a majestic tribute to this precursor of modern art. Superb and significant engraving of the work opening Paul Gauguin's manuscript, engraved by his closest friend and executor, the artist George-Daniel de Monfreid, heir to the album he would offer to the French State in 1927. This likely unique proof, part of 17 known test woodcuts from the project to prematurely publish Noa Noa, all made on various fine papers and annotated by the artist. Woodcut engraved from the watercolor inaugurating one of the painter's most beautiful albums, symbolizing the Tahitian art of living, between the nourishing sea and earthly pleasures. It is from the original illustrated manuscript of Noa Noa, brought back from Tahiti by Segalen on the artist's death in 1903, that Monfreid began producing this fundamental work from as early as 1904. This is the second version of this "to read and look at" notebook. The first manuscript, written on the return of his first voyage and entrusted by Gauguin to Charles Morice in 1893, responded to a different project. Gauguin had composed only the text, interspersed with blank pages for Morice's poems. But after several years without news, Morice preferred to publish a version entirely rewritten by himself in 1901. Gauguin, therefore, copied his manuscript and illustrated it during his second stay in Polynesia, with sketches, watercolors and collages. This album, that the artist enriched and safely preserved until his death, is preserved today at the Musée d'Orsay. It is, therefore, from this manuscript, the only one illustrated, that Monfreid composed the edition of Gauguin's Noa Noa. However, although Monfreid's publication was forward, it took more than twenty years to complete, in part due to a copyright dispute with Charles Morice who wanted to be co-author of the forthcoming edition and whose poems would eventually be preserved. The result of several years of reflection and work, the 1924 edition is both faithful to the watercolors and woodcut engravings illustrating the precious manuscript, and to the whole of Gauguin's Tahitian work, who died in indifference. Monfreid thus engraves several drawings from the original notebook and enriches it with woodcuts made from other works of which he is the custodian. Some of these compositions combine several paintings, while scrupulously respecting the artist's line, transforming the work into a true journey through the painter's works. The very choice of using wood engraving is a tribute to this technique prized by Gauguin, who, in Pont-Aven, produced 10 woodcuts to illustrate his manuscript between his two Polynesian stays. The intermediate woodcuts, until then unknown, testify to the slow work of composition to restore the artistic richness of Gauguin's work by his most faithful artistic companion and first champion: "When I saw Gauguin for the first time, I was greatly disconcerted by the details of art that radiated from his works as well as from the conversations of this extraordinary man... You immediately felt that he was the Master" (in L'Hermitage, 1903). [FRENCH VERSION FOLLOWS] Epreuve originale probablement unique de cet état intermédiaire d'un bois dessiné et gravé d'après une aquarel
- s.d. (1924), 93x78mm, autre. - Tehura. Original proof engraved after the painting "Merahi Metua no Tehamana". Intermediate state for Noa Noa [between 1904 & 1924] | 9,3 x 7,8 cm | one sheet Original proof, likely unique, of this intermediate state of "Tehura", wood drawn and engraved after Paul Gaughin's painting "Merahi Metua no Tehamana" by George-Daniel de Monfreid. Print on fine cream laid paper, annotation by the artist in the left-hand margin. The definitive wood served as the head of chapter VI, "Le Conteur parle", page 81 of the true first edition of Noa Noa published by Crès in 1924, the first illustrated work from Paul Gauguin and a majestic tribute to one of the precursors of modern art. A most important and very first woodcut of Gauguin's masterpiece, engraved by his closest friend and executor, artist George-Daniel de Monfreid, to whom Gauguin offered the painting after two unsuccessful exhibitions. Likely unique proof, part of 17 known test prints from the project to publish prematurely Noa Noa, all made on various fine papers and annotated by the artist. Precious woodcut after Gauguin's masterpiece Merahi metua no Tehamana, showing the painter's wife, his main tahitian model. It is from the original illustrated manuscript of Noa Noa, brought back from Tahiti by Segalen on the artist's death in 1903, that Monfreid began producing this fundamental work from as early as 1904. This is the second version of this "to read and look at" notebook. The first manuscript, written on the return of his first voyage and entrusted by Gauguin to Charles Morice in 1893, responded to a different project. Gauguin had composed only the text, interspersed with blank pages for Morice's poems. But after several years without news, Morice preferred to publish a version entirely rewritten by himself in 1901. Gauguin, therefore, copied his manuscript and illustrated it during his second stay in Polynesia, with sketches, watercolors and collages. This album, that the artist enriched and safely preserved until his death, is preserved today at the Musée d'Orsay. It is, therefore, from this manuscript, the only one illustrated, that Monfreid composed the edition of Gauguin's Noa Noa. However, although Monfreid's publication was forward, it took more than twenty years to complete, in part due to a copyright dispute with Charles Morice who wanted to be co-author of the forthcoming edition and whose poems would eventually be preserved. The result of several years of reflection and work, the 1924 edition is both faithful to the watercolors and woodcut engravings illustrating the precious manuscript, and to the whole of Gauguin's Tahitian work, who died in indifference. Monfreid thus engraves several drawings from the original notebook and enriches it with woodcuts made from other works of which he is the custodian. Some of these compositions combine several paintings, while scrupulously respecting the artist's line, transforming the work into a true journey through the painter's works. The very choice of using wood engraving is a tribute to this technique prized by Gauguin, who, in Pont-Aven, produced 10 woodcuts to illustrate his manuscript between his two Polynesian stays. The intermediate woodcuts, until then unknown, testify to the slow work of composition to restore the artistic richness of Gauguin's work by his most faithful artistic companion and first champion: "When I saw Gauguin for the first time, I was greatly disconcerted by the details of art that radiated from his works as well as from the conversations of this extraordinary man... You immediately felt that he was the Master" (in L'Hermitage, 1903). [FRENCH VERSION FOLLOWS] Epreuve originale probablement unique de cet état intermédiaire de "Tehura", bois dessiné et gravé d'après le tableau Merahi metua no tehamana de Paul Gauguin par Georges-Daniel de Monfreid. Tirage sur vergé crème fin, annotation de l'artiste au crayon en marge gauche. Le bois définitif servira
45 Skizzen (einige laviert) auf 23 Bll. Originaler Halblederband mit Deckeltitel "F. Gauermann's Skizzenbuch v. J. 1830". Das Skizzenbuch enthält Baum- und Figurenstudien, Skizzen von Kühen in Ställen sowie Landschaftsskizzen. Einige davon sind datiert und beschriftet, u. a. "vom Ausflug mit Höger 1831. Oktober", "Mit Pollak und Höger 1831 im September", "mit Höger am 14. Oktober 1831 auf dem Rabenstein", "mit Höger im Thiergarten am 3. Dezember 1830". - Friedrich Gauermann unternahm mit seinen Schwägern, den Landschaftsmalern Joseph Höger (1801-77) und Wilhelm Pollak (1802-60), zahlreiche Reisen durch Österreich, wo Skizzen und Studien für spätere Ölgemälde angefertigt wurden. - Der Einband berieben und bestoßen, die Skizzen teils braun- und fingerfleckig und mit Klebeband im Mittelfalz fixiert.
FIRST EDITION of this groundbreaking catalogue of livres d'artiste. 324 items fully described. Profusely illustrated in color and black & white. Large 4to. Publisher's cloth. Light general wear, but still very good in a very good dustjacket.
8 litografie originali in nero, numerate e firmate di Garelli (cm 35x25). Un testo dell'A. riprodotto litograficamente al risvolto della copertina Copertina originale dell'A. Stampa curata dall'A. eseguita con torchio a mano dal maestro Corsino. Pietre distrutte dopo la tiratura. Cm 25x35. pp. 8. . Molto buono (Very Good). Fioriture leggere alla copertina (Some light yellowing at the covers). Edizione originale di 75 es. numerati. .
Acquaforte originale Firma a matita. Certificato di autenticità rilasciato dall'Inclub. Esemplare 7/40. cm 29 x 19,7 (Foglio 70 x 50). pp.. . Ottimo (Fine). . 40. .
Acquaforte originale Firma a matita. Esemplare 7/40. Cm 29x18,5 (Foglio 70x50). pp.. . . . Tiratura 40. .
Contains b&w plates. 205x155mm. 63 pages. Hardcover. Gilt lettering. Front cover slightly bent. Cover corners slightly bumped. Spine edges slightly worn. Stamp and sticker on front inner cover. Binding visible between pages 32-33. Pen inscription on first whitepage. Stamp on second whitepage. Pages slightly yellowing. Else in good condition.