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Fine English Paperback. Pbo. Fine. Small 4to. (27 x 20 cm). 583 p. Vol. 1, all published. Ills. Rare. Galatasaray tarihi.
31 pages. Charlotte is a spoiled girl who always gets what she wants. That is until she goes to Miss Gallopoff's Riding School. Then she discovers a horse with a will to match her own and finds out she can not always have her own way! Beginning readers will love these bright, colorful, and entertaining books. Young children will develop their reading skills with these easy-to-follow stories, encouraged by the lively text and engaging illustrations. No marks. Moderate signs of wear. Book
59 one-sided pages. Provides instructions for dozens of great games and dances for community schools, in addition to several interesting pages of discussion on recreation in the community, written in consideration of the end of WWII. Above-average external wear. Binding and contents sound. Few markings to front cover. A worthy copy of this very informative and nostalgic reference. Book
xii, 147, 2 [ads] pp. Index. "Beitrage zur Konjunkturforschung - Herausgegeben vom Osterreichischen Institut fur Konjunkturforschung nr. 1" - front cover. Text in German. In 1933 this work appeared for the first time in English as "Monetary Theory and the Trade Cycle". Hayek went on to share the Nobel Prize in Economics in 1974. Moderate wear to original brown paper wrappers. Binding sound. Small chip from top of backstrip. Top corners of last five leaves were folded. Several mostly imperceptible pencil erasures in first 66 pages. A well-preserved example of the first edition of this, Hayek's first book. Masui p.1277, Cohen 184, Cody & Ostrem B-1. Book
As New Turkish Paperback. Roy. 8vo. (24 x 17 cm). In Turkish. 166 p., ills. Gelenekselden çagdasliga bir egitim kurumunun öyküsü: Kabatas Erkek Lisesi.
Very Good English Paperback. Pbo. Demy 8vo. (22 x 15 cm). In German. 40, [1] p. Geliebter Naher Orient. Istanbul, Ephesus, Patmos, Galiläa. Judaas Berge. Unvergleichliches Jerusalem.
pp. 62, (10) [Illustrated publisher's catalogue]. Title page and text illustrated with small woodcuts. All edges gold. 12mo. Original full green cloth binding, decorated and lettered in gold. Beveled edges. Extremities slightly rubbed. Inked ownership of L. Jennie Coates, awarded at Avondale Spelling Bee, May 4, 1875. Avondale is in Chester County, PA. Hardbound. Very good. LITERATURE BOX 1
372 pages including index and abundant black and white photographs and diagrams. Widely accepted as a basic textbook in metalworking. Covers: bench and wrought metal, sheet metal, art metal and jewelry, forging, heat treating, foundry, welding, machine shop, and more. Number written upon spine and three school stamps upon front endpaper else unmarked. A well-used copy yet contents remain in decent shape. A solid working copy with binding intact. Book
Acquaforte. Lastra mm 160x245, foglio 350x500 mm. Firma e data in lastra in basso e in alto a sinistra Bartolini 1957. Tiratura a matita in basso al centro 9/50. Firma a matita in basso a destra Luigi Bartolini Altri titoli: Vaso di fiori, Fiori, I fiorellini. Le genziane, insieme alle fonti marchigiane, sono uno dei soggetti più amati da Bartolini. Dagli anni del confino politico meranese fino alla fine degli Anni Cinquanta, l’artista ne ha inciso almeno una ventina di versioni, dieci delle quali solo nel 1934. Il presente soggetto riprende, con alcune modifiche e un tratto diverso, una lastra del 1934 dal titolo Genziane. Luigi Bartolini è considerato uno dei maggiori incisori italiani del Novecento, insieme a Giorgio Morandi e Giuseppe Viviani. Oltre ad essere un prolifico incisore (al suo attivo oltre mille acqueforti), fu anche pittore e scrittore. Partecipò sia come pittore che come incisore a diverse edizioni della Biennale di Venezia dal 1928 al 1962. Presente a varie manifestazioni artistiche, sviluppò diverse maniere definite: ‘maniera bionda’, ‘lineare’ e ‘nera’. Ricordiamo soprattutto le acqueforti della serie Marche e della serie Sicilia. Iniziò la sua produzione grafica nel 1914 e il suo stile si rifà alla tradizione naturalistica dell’Ottocento. Molte sue incisioni si possono ricollegare ad alcune opere del Goya, di Telemaco Signorini e di Giovanni Fattori. Eccellente nella rappresentazione della natura morta e del paesaggio, spesso il Bartolini rappresentò dolcemente le cose e gli oggetti più umili, i soggetti di natura più dimessi. In essi ritroviamo il sentimento che diviene immagine e la forma che si sviluppa in espressione. Con Bartolini l’incisione torna ad essere un mezzo di espressione poetica libera dal simbolismo e dal vedutismo allora in voga presso le accademie. Nelle sue acqueforti prevale ora un tratteggio leggero (genere biondo), ora una ricerca del chiaroscuro alla Rembrandt (genere nero). Magnifica prova, con margini, in ottime condizioni. Bibliografia L. Palumbo Scalzi, Luigi Bartolini Incisioni, Galleria Flaviostocco, Castelfranco Veneto, 1998, pag. 69 (variante tirata a 30 esemplari). Etching. Plate 160x245 mm, sheet 350x500 mm. Signature and date on plate at bottom and top left Bartolini 1957. Pencil print run at bottom center 9/50. Signature in pencil at lower right Luigi Bartolini. Other titles: Vaso di Fiori (Vase of Flowers), Fiori (Flowers), I Fiorellini (The Little Flowers). The gentians, together with the Marche sources, are one of the subjects most loved by Bartolini. From the years of political exile in Merano until the end of the 1950s, the artist engraved at least twenty versions, ten of which in 1934. The present subject is taken, with somechanges, from a 1934 plate entitled Genziane. Born in Cupramontana near Ancona, Luigi Bartolini was the twentieth century Italian etcher, who came closest to the stature of his great rival, Morandi. As a teenager, he saw the collection of etchings, including work by Callot, owned by the Corradi family in Iesi. From 1907 to 1910 Bartolini studied at the Istituto di Belle Arti in Siena, and started to etch c. 1909. He moved to Rome in 1910, where until 1912 he frequented the Accademia di Belle Arti, while also attending lectures on literature and the history of art, and courses on anatomy at the University in Rome. Bartolini studied the etchings of Goya and took lessons on drawing at the Accademia di Spagna. From there, he went to Florence in 1913, where he attended the Scuola del nudo. Bartolini continued his anatomical research, as well as studying architecture, making himself the most assiduous student of all Italian twentieth century printmakers. He also visited the Uffizi and Florentine print dealers to look at the etchings of Rembrandt and Fattori. Bartolini painted his first oils just before the outbreak of the First World War. Although he painted pictures throughout the rest of his career, and was awarded the Premio Marzotto for them in 1956, they have been far eclipsed in fame by his etchings and writings. During the First World War, Bartolini published his first collection of poetry. A very prolific and accomplished writer, in this field he is best known today as the author of the novel, 'Ladri di biciclette' (Bicycle thieves), of 1946, which was quickly turned into a celebrated film by Vittorio de Sica and Cesar Zavattini. After the First World War, Bartolini held a series of minor teaching posts in Macerata, Sassari, Avezzano, Pola, and Caltagirone, while he continued to etch, and started a long career as a polemical journalist and critic of art and architecture. From 1923 to 1929, he wrote for the Naples periodical, 'Cimento', but he also contributed to 'Il Selvaggio', 'Quadrivio', 'Italia letteraria', and 'L'Ambrosiana'. Bartolini's 1924 exhibition of etchings at the Casa d'Arte Bragaglia in Rome was a great success, and later that year he showed 70 etched landscapes of the Marches at the Casa Palazzo di Roma. The following year he visited Paris, where he paid particular attention to the paintings of Van Gogh. Bartolini's political convictions led him to being assaulted by Fascists and hospitalised in 1928. Two years later, he won a prize at the Venice Biennale, where he had exhibited a portfolio of etchings. In 1930, the Turin publisher, Buratti, began to issue a series of portfolios of etchings by contemporary Italian artists under the editorship of Cipriano Oppi, selecting Bartolini for the first album. The following year, Buratti published 'Le carte parlanti', a portfolio of 10 of Bartolini's etchings, which was published in an edition of 20. In 1932, Bartolini shared the first prize at the Prima mostra dell'incisione moderna at the Uffizi with Morandi and Boccioni. His close friend, the leading anti-Fascist art historian, Lionello Venturi, acted as his agent selling his etchings in Paris. Bartolini's correspondence with his compatriots in exile led to his imprisonment, from which he was released on Mussolini's personal intervention. He was then placed under political surveillance. From 1933 to 1938, Bartolini taught in Merano, wh...
Geography textbook for Grade 3 Greek students.140p. illus (some col.) maps. Book
Geography textbook for Greek high schools.. 372p. illus (some col.) maps. Crisp tight copy.[NO location found in WorldCat] Book
96p. Minnie Sayler's book with her notations. 16mo. Original leather spine over printed paper boards. Boards stained. Hardbound. Scarce first edition. PA71 REAR
Small stamp on end paper, Very Good condition; 12mo (small) ; x, 100, [4] pages; "Four Jewish songs" (with music) : [4] pages at end. Holocaust-era book designed for teachers of non-Jewish youngsterson how to engender appreciation and respect for Jews. Interesting item. (HOLO2-98-18)
Sul nastro, al contrario: VA˙INLA˙CA...NEVA Copia, nello stesso verso, di un niello della collezione Durazzo (n. 2834), di cui una impressione originale è ora a Parigi, Louvre, collezione Cabinet Rothschild. Questa stampa può essere approssimativamente assegnata all'Italia settentrionale, e in particolare a Bologna. Zanetti e Dutuit ritengono che il dialetto dell'iscrizione sia quello di Venezia e, di conseguenza, attribuiscono l'opera alla scuola veneziana. Le parole Va inla caneva sono probabilmente emiliane invece. Il soggetto è enigmatico. I nielli della collezione Durazzo vennero fatti riprodurre in incisioni proprio dal proprietario, tra fine XVIII e inizio XIX secolo, a Venezia - come specificato anche dal Malaspina nel suo catalogo del 1824 - costituendo una serie che venne diffusa e collezionata dagli amatori. Bartsch descrive queste copie nel suo volume edito nel 1811, data che quindi costituisce il terminus ante quem per l'esecuzione. On the scroll, in reverse: VA˙INLA˙CA…NEVA Copy, on the same verso, of a niello print formerly kept in the Durazzo collection (n. 2834), now in Paris, Louvre, Cabinet Rothschild collection. This print can be tentatively assigned to northern Italy, and specifically to Bologna. Zanetti and Dutuit believed the dialect of the inscription to be that of Venice and accordingly attributed the piece to the Venetian school. The words Va inla caneva are probably Emilian instead of, or in addition to, being Venetian. The subject is enigmatic. The nielli of the Durazzo collection were reproduced in engravings by the owner himself, between the end of the 18th and the beginning of the 19th century, in Venice - as also specified by Malaspina in his catalog of 1824 - constituting a series that was circulated and collected by amateurs. Bartsch describes these copies in his volume published in 1811, a date that therefore constitutes the terminus ante quem for the execution. TIB 2401.021; Duchesne, p. 266, n. 326; Zanetti, pp. 102-103.
Acquaforte stampata ad inchiostro bruno, 1763, firmata e datata in lastra in basso a destra.Da un disegno di Baccio Bandinelli.Magnifica prova, impressa su carta vergata coeva, con margini, in perfetto stato di conservazione.L'opera è parte della raccolta di Charles Rogers, 'A Collection of Prints in Imitation of Drawings. To which are annexed lives of their authors', edita a Londra da John Boydell e altri nel 1778. Le tavole che sono contenute nell'opera riproducono a grandezza naturale e con gli stessi colori, una serie di disegni antichi nella collezione del Rogers. Etching printed in brown ink, lettered below the image "In the Collection of Mr. Reynolds. CR edidt. Baccio Bandinelli delt. W.W. Ryland sct. 1763".After a drawing by Baccio Bandinelli.A fine impression, printed on contemporary laid paper, with margins, perfect condition. The work is part of Charles Rogers, A Collection of Prints in Imitation of Drawings. To which are annexed lives of their authors. printed by J. Nichols in London, and sold by John Boydell, Benjamin White, and Peter Molini, 1778. The plates, which use a wide variety of techniques, show some old master drawings in Rogers's own collection. His preface states: “That these prints may be faithful imitations, they are engraved the same way as, as well as the same size, as the Originals are drawn; and printed, as nearly as possible, in the same colours”. A fine impression, printed on contemporary laid paper, with margins, perfect condition. R. Weigel, Die Werke der Maler in ihren Handzeichnungen p. 77 no. 122.
187 pages. Index. Attractive gilt advertisement upon black front board. Few black and white illustrations. Contents secured to boards by original black cord. "Covers a three-years course in Household Science." - from Preface. Above-average but not excessive overall wear. Errata page at front and memo page at back very heavily worn. Many contemporary hand-written recipes upon nine memo pages at back. Minimal markings to contents, excepting pages 114-115 upon which are handwritten contemporary prices of dozens of grocery items. A worthy copy of this wonderful and very uncommon antiquarian British Columbia household science text. Book
Acquaforte, siglata in lastra con il monogramma di Salvato Rosa. Copia in controparte del lavoro del Rosa. Bellissima prova, impressa su carta vergata coeva, con ampli margini, in perfetto stato di conservazione. Etching, signed with Salvator Rosa monogram. A fine impression, with margins, in very good conditions.
vi, 309 pages. Index. Many photos in colour and black and white. Navy blue boards adorned with attractive gilt decoration and lettering. A supplement to "Pioneers and Progress", published in 1974. Clean, bright and unmarked with very light wear. Binding tight. A high-quality copy of this excellent genealogical reference. Book
pp. iii, 110 + Illustrations. 4to. Printed wraps. Memories and thoughts of teachers, students and family members who attended New Milltown (Amish) School, 1925-2000. Really a charming production from an Amish one-room school house that is still going strong.
8 pages. Features: L.I.P. (Local Initiatives Program); A Museum in 1905?; The Sioux in Exile; A Pioneer School Teacher. Black and white reproductions of archival photos. Average wear. Unmarked. A sound copy. Book
Acquaforte,1952. Lastra mm. 148x82. Firma a matita in basso a destra Luigi Bartolini. Dedica a matita in basso “Auguri per il 1954”. Tiratura a 20 esemplari, inserita nelle copie di testa del libro Ombre fra le metope, Schwarz Editore 1953, stampato da Luigi Maestri, Milano. Luigi Bartolini è considerato uno dei maggiori incisori italiani del Novecento, insieme a Giorgio Morandi e Giuseppe Viviani. Oltre ad essere un prolifico incisore (al suo attivo oltre mille acqueforti), fu anche pittore e scrittore. Partecipò sia come pittore che come incisore a diverse edizioni della Biennale di Venezia dal 1928 al 1962. Presente a varie manifestazioni artistiche, sviluppò diverse maniere definite: ‘maniera bionda’, ‘lineare’ e ‘nera’. Ricordiamo soprattutto le acqueforti della serie Marche e della serie Sicilia. Iniziò la sua produzione grafica nel 1914 e il suo stile si rifà alla tradizione naturalistica dell’Ottocento. Molte sue incisioni si possono ricollegare ad alcune opere del Goya, di Telemaco Signorini e di Giovanni Fattori. Eccellente nella rappresentazione della natura morta e del paesaggio, spesso il Bartolini rappresentò dolcemente le cose e gli oggetti più umili, i soggetti di natura più dimessi. In essi ritroviamo il sentimento che diviene immagine e la forma che si sviluppa in espressione. Con Bartolini l’incisione torna ad essere un mezzo di espressione poetica libera dal simbolismo e dal vedutismo allora in voga presso le accademie. Nelle sue acqueforti prevale ora un tratteggio leggero (genere biondo), ora una ricerca del chiaroscuro alla Rembrandt (genere nero). Bibliografia https://www.luigibartolini.com/gli_amanti_crucciati_74.html Etching,1952. Plate mm. 148x82. Signature in pencil at lower right Luigi Bartolini. Dedication in pencil at the bottom "Auguri per il 1954". Limited edition of 20 copies, inserted in the leading copies of the book Ombre fra le metope, Schwarz Editore 1953, printed by Luigi Maestri, Milan. Born in Cupramontana near Ancona, Luigi Bartolini was the twentieth century Italian etcher, who came closest to the stature of his great rival, Morandi. As a teenager, he saw the collection of etchings, including work by Callot, owned by the Corradi family in Iesi. From 1907 to 1910 Bartolini studied at the Istituto di Belle Arti in Siena, and started to etch c. 1909. He moved to Rome in 1910, where until 1912 he frequented the Accademia di Belle Arti, while also attending lectures on literature and the history of art, and courses on anatomy at the University in Rome. Bartolini studied the etchings of Goya and took lessons on drawing at the Accademia di Spagna. From there, he went to Florence in 1913, where he attended the Scuola del nudo. Bartolini continued his anatomical research, as well as studying architecture, making himself the most assiduous student of all Italian twentieth century printmakers. He also visited the Uffizi and Florentine print dealers to look at the etchings of Rembrandt and Fattori. Bartolini painted his first oils just before the outbreak of the First World War. Although he painted pictures throughout the rest of his career, and was awarded the Premio Marzotto for them in 1956, they have been far eclipsed in fame by his etchings and writings. During the First World War, Bartolini published his first collection of poetry. A very prolific and accomplished writer, in this field he is best known today as the author of the novel, 'Ladri di biciclette' (Bicycle thieves), of 1946, which was quickly turned into a celebrated film by Vittorio de Sica and Cesar Zavattini. After the First World War, Bartolini held a series of minor teaching posts in Macerata, Sassari, Avezzano, Pola, and Caltagirone, while he continued to etch, and started a long career as a polemical journalist and critic of art and architecture. From 1923 to 1929, he wrote for the Naples periodical, 'Cimento', but he also contributed to 'Il Selvaggio', 'Quadrivio', 'Italia letteraria', and 'L'Ambrosiana'. Bartolini's 1924 exhibition of etchings at the Casa d'Arte Bragaglia in Rome was a great success, and later that year he showed 70 etched landscapes of the Marches at the Casa Palazzo di Roma. The following year he visited Paris, where he paid particular attention to the paintings of Van Gogh. Bartolini's political convictions led him to being assaulted by Fascists and hospitalised in 1928. Two years later, he won a prize at the Venice Biennale, where he had exhibited a portfolio of etchings. In 1930, the Turin publisher, Buratti, began to issue a series of portfolios of etchings by contemporary Italian artists under the editorship of Cipriano Oppi, selecting Bartolini for the first album. The following year, Buratti published 'Le carte parlanti', a portfolio of 10 of Bartolini's etchings, which was published in an edition of 20. In 1932, Bartolini shared the first prize at the Prima mostra dell'incisione moderna at the Uffizi with Morandi and Boccioni. His close friend, the leading anti-Fascist art historian, Lionello Venturi, acted as his agent selling his etchings in Paris. Bartolini's correspondence with his compatriots in exile led to his imprisonment, from which he was released on Mussolini's personal intervention. He was then placed under political surveillance. From 1933 to 1938, Bartolini taught in Merano, where he painted and etched in the open air, finding subjects on the banks of the fast flowing Adige. Despite being under political suspicion, he was given a one - man show of 50 etchings at the second Rome Quadriennale in 1935, when he was awarded the first prize for printmaking. Bartolini still encountered political difficulties, and his ...
48 pages. Usual autographs. Minor warp to boards. A quality copy. Book
32 pages. "For thousands of years gold has been fashioned into beautiful ornaments. It has become a symbol of wealth and power too. What is it about gold that makes it so precious and so desirable?" - from front cover. Unmarked. Average wear. Sound working copy. Book
328 p. Pages 143/144 and 177/178 loss of margin and a few letters. Early manuscript ownership of Susan M. Happock, 1813 on first fly leaf. Foxed. 12mo. 185 mm. Original full leather binding. Lacks spine label. A scarce little edition for use in schools. Hardbound. Good. S&S/AI 20229. PAIMP 21
Cute elementary school text book. Orange cloth boards with black and green illustrations on cover. Wear to edges and corners. Lovely color illustrations. 320 pages.