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350x260mm. 8 plates laid in folder with unpaginated booklet. Folder worn, yellowing and slightly stained; folder corners and edges bumped. Woodcut pages yellowing, corners and edges slightly bumped. Few pages slightly age-stained. Else in good condition.
This is a very good softcover copy with almost no wear. Completely clean inside and out. Sale catalog for an exhibition of original 17th century prints by Jacques Bellange. 11 works catalogued and illustrated. Price list included. 11" high X 8" wide. This book will be securely packed and shipped with tracking.
The standard catalogue raisonne of Villon's prints. Over 1,000 items fully described and illustrated. Folio, publisher's cloth, dustjacket, cloth slipcase. Fine.
IN HEBREW AND ENGLISH. 27.5X21 cm. 29+142 pages. Softcover. Spine slightly yellowing. Else in good condition.
IN HEBREW AND ENGLISH. 27.5X21 cm. 29+142 pages. Softcover. Inner front cover page slightly stained. Library copy with usual signs. Else in good condition.
21x18 cm. Unpaginated. Softcover. Cover slightly stained. Else in good condition.
Book is an oversize paperback with dust jacket. D.J. shows a little edge wear and very light shelfwear only. Binding is solid and square, covers have sharp corners, exterior shows no other blemishes, text/interior is pristine and free of marking of any kind. Japanese art publication had rough-trimmed pages, some since hand-opened, so page ends are sometimes uneven. 198 pages, paginated from "back" to "front" with large color prints throughout, sometimes fold-out pages. Features work from many artists, including works of: pregnant women, erotica, including with peasants or villans, typical oversize vaginas and penises, fold-out war scenes, including in water with swastika flag insignia (pre WWII) floating demons, samuri, etc. Text is in Japanese.
Incudes 29 colour illustrations. 47 pages. Rubbing to cover surfaces.
A clean, unmarked book with a tight binding. 38 pages. 7 1/8"w x 10"h. Includes 75 color reproductions of works by 46 artists.
215 pages. Auction results mounted inside back cover. Items include: Japanese Prints, Illustrated Books, Manuscripts, Paintings, Screens, Netsuke, Tobacco Pipes, Inro Sword Fittings, Swords, Ceramics, Cloisonne, Shibayama, Bronzes, Metalwork, and Lacquer. Book clean, bright and unmarked with very light wear. Nice copy. Book
Catalogue de l'exposition présentée en 1988 au Musée Guimet, à Paris, par la conservatrice Christine SHIMIZU: sélection de 58 oeuvres japonaises représentatives de la féconde époque Meiji, époque d'ouverture au monde occidental et de renouveau artistique: estampes, albums photographiques, peintures à l'encre... avec reproductions (dont 15 en couleurs), notices, commentaires et notices sur les artistes; présentées au fil d'une étude historique: "prémices de l'occidentalisation" (rapports du Japon avec le Portugal puis la Hollande), "ouverture du Japon", "Japon nationaliste", "Japon impérial"; chronologie; glossaire; index des artistes; bibliographie. Français
- Lucien Vogel éditeur, Paris 1924, 18x24cm, une feuille. - Original color print heightened with palladium, 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 rehaussée au palladium, tirée sur papier vergé, signée en bas à gauche de la pla
- Lucien Vogel éditeur, Paris Juin 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, signée en bas à gauche dans la planche. L'une des plus belles et des plus
The catalogue raisonne of the prints of Jean Le Prince, the artist generally credited with inventing the technique of aquatint. 179 items described in detail. Extensive documentation, including an inventory of Le Prince's own art collection. Frontispiece portrait etching by A. Gilbert after Le Prince. From a total edition limited to 350 copies, this is one of 300 on fine Holland laid paper. 4to. Attractively bound in recent cloth, with morocco spine label. Entirely uncut. Fine.
270x220mm. 90 pages. Hardcover. Cover slightly yellowing, stained and scratched. Cover corners slightly worn. Spine yellowing and worn. Pages slightly yellowing and age-stained. Else in good condition.
Contains numerous b&w plates and illustrations. 280x220 mm. 200 pages. Gilt hardcover with dust jacket. Jacket edges slightly wrinkled. Spine edges slightly bumped. Else in good condition.
BILINGUAL HEBREW-ENGLISH EDITION. Contains detached b&w plate. 28x22 cm. 200 pages. Gilt hardcover with dust jacket. Few pages age-stained. Else in good condition. PLEASE NOTE: This item is overweight. We may ask for extra shipping costs.
Includes folding poster. 28x22 cm. 200 pages. Gilt Hardcover With Dust Jacket. In good condition. PLEASE NOTE: This item is overweight. We may ask for extra shipping costs.
27.5x22 cm. 195 pages. Softcover. Cover slightly rubbed. Cover wrinkled. Else in good condition.
22.5x19 cm. 7 prints. Hardcover. In good condition.
Contains b&w plates. 240X170 mm. 202 pages. Softcover. Cover corners slightly wrinkled. Spine slightly worn. Pages yellowing. Else in good condition.
RARE FIRST EDITION of Shin Shalom's poetry book IN HEBREW, illustrated with woodcuts by Jacob Steinhardt (1887-1968), the celebrated Israeli painter and woodcut artist. 230x170mm. Unpaginated (16 pages). Softcover with foil semi-transparent dust-jacket. Steinhardt's woodcut on front cover. Jacket edges slightly tattered. Jacket spine upper edge and rear bottom edge torn. Front cover edges slightly wrinkled and stained. Front cover coming loose. Rear cover detached. Ex-libris sticker on front endpaper. Page corners slightly wrinkled/rubbed. [SUMMARY]: This extremely rare first edition of poetry book with unique woodcuts of Jerusalem, a unique collaboration by renowned Israeli poet and artist, is otherwise in good condition.
IN HEBREW. SIGNED BY SHIN SHALOM with dedication to Prof. Andre Neher dated 1986. Alongside Shalom's poems, this unique edition contains woodcuts by Jacob Steinhardt (1887-1968), the celebrated Israeli painter and woodcut artist. 230x170mm. Unpaginated (16 pages). Softcover with Steinhardt's woodcut on front cover. Cover edge near spine slightly worn, rear cover upper corner slightly bumped. Spine edges slightly worn. Shalom's signed dedication on title-page. [SUMMARY]: This extremely rare signed copy of poems about and unique woodcuts of Jerusalem by renowned Israeli poet and artist is in very good condition.
IN HEBREW. 22.5x18 cm. Unpaginated. Hardcover. Cover corners and edges slightly worn. Spine slightly rubbed. Pages yellowing. Else in good condition.
28x22 cm. Unpaginated. Softcover with dust jacket. In good condition.