135 résultats
199336746Syracuse: State Univ. of New York 1993. First edition. Stapled paper wrappers. A fine copy. 48 pp. Illus. with b/w reproductions. 8vo. One of 500 copies. State Univ. of New York unknown books
1964146015Washington DC: National Institutes on Rehabilitation and Health Services 1964. 35p. wraps 5.5x8.25. National Institutes on Rehabilitation and Health Services unknown books
1997261364New York: GMHC 1997. Forty-five issue broken run various pagination 8.5x11 inches articles reports drug information events services and resources some three-hole-punched issues a few pen marks light wear else good newsletters in stapled wraps. Includes two issues AIDS Medical Glossary. Numbers included are 3:6; 6:17; 7:4-12; 8:26-11; 9:1-12; 10:1 & 2 two versions 3-11; 11:1-3 & 6 a Glossary issue. GMHC unknown books
199427071Macon: Hacienda Publishing. Near Fine in Very Good dust jacket. 1994. Hardcover. 0964107708 . First printing. Near fine in a very good minor shelf wear dust jacket. . Hacienda Publishing hardcover books
6021This item is currently on reserve; please contact dealer for more details. <p>Etching 285mm x 390mm. Trimmed to neatline with insignificant restoration to the upper right corner. Generally very good.<br /><br /></p><p>Very rare no US copy fascinating illustrated broadside sold in Rome during the pandemic of 1656-57 presenting through a series of "snapshots" of the city at this dramatic moment in time a rich and varied iconography of its response to the plague. Printed by Giacomo Molinari and sold in the Strada Nuova behind the church of the Giesu close to Piazza Navona the print is composed of 15 vignettes of different sizes and perspectives along with 20 short explanatory captions alphabetized from A to X at the base of the print keyed to guide the reader to a fuller grasp of the situation. Taken together these scenes were meant to capture the city through the measures taken to contain the spread of the disease cure the afflicted and dispose of the dead.</p><p>Eight are views of civic religious and private resources- some bird's eye encompassing a panorama others close up of specific recognizable buildings- depicting basilicas churches a convent a prison and private residences to give the viewer the scope of the city's repurposed infrastructure. Medieval and modern structures were converted into lazarettos used as temporary quarantine and purgation centers for the afflicted according to the seriousness of their contamination. Two of the views depict the<i> lazaretto brutto </i>leper colony dedicated to the worst cases: the Isola Tiberina and the Convent and Hospital of Santa Maria della Consolazione run by the brothers Hospitallers of Saint John. The Isola Tiberina one of the poorest areas of Rome and close to the Trastevere district with its Jewish ghetto has gates and fences at its perimeter capturing the isolation of the seriously contaminated within its bounds. A depiction of a special boat to ferry the dead Jews and the domestic animals which were tossed live in the Tiber add dramatic macabre details. Three other views are of the <i>lazaretto netto </i>the churches of San Pancras San Eusebio and the private residence of Pius V dedicated to patients with milder cases. In addition there is a representation of a <i>lazzaretto netto e pulito</i> located at the new jail recently built by Pope Innocent X which was used as a <i>stufa</i> something between a Roman bath and a modern sauna where those who were in quarantine in San Pancrazio and San Eusebio were washed and sterilized. The Villa Sandesio is dedicated to the burning of the contaminated clothing. The Basilica of San Paolo le Mure which in fact was the last stop for the afflicted where the deceased received their last sacraments and buried in the mass graves close by is prominently illustrated in the upper left corner.</p><p>Beneath the views 7 smaller vignettes vividly render social scenes during the pandemic: the images include ecclesiastical dignitaries confessors doctors surgeons all actively moving around the city to alleviate the physical and psychological burden of the sick. Guards omnipresent in the images were responsible for transporting the infected by carriage or by foot to their assigned destinations as well as disposing of the dead and of the contaminated clothing and furniture -- often tossing them in a bonfire in the street as shown by the image in the lower right of the print. Such images recorded and served to emphasize the severe laws of "social distancing" between the sick and the healthy then in place. Additionally along the bottom of the print are 20 short explanatory captions alphabetized from A to X and keyed to the views and vignettes to guide the reader to a better understanding of the situation.</p><p>"The management of the Rome plague of 1656-57 was a great success. Its mastermind was the cleric Girolamo Gastaldi who at the start of the outbreak was serving both as the Commissario Generale dei Lazzaretti the Chief Administrator of the epidemic hospitals and the Commissario generale di Sanità per lo Stato della Chiesa… Only 4500 died in Rome about 8% of the population compared to the 150000 who died in Naples and 50000 in Genoa representing over half of their respective populations."—See Michael Widener's comments on Gastaldi's <i>Tractatus</i>… Bologna 1684: https://library.law.yale.edu/news/epidemics-and-quarantines-17th-century-rome. "The well-thought-out measures devised by Cardinal Gastaldi for the control of the plague of 1656 in the Eternal City represent the most logical development of eradicative anti-contagionist practice before the twentieth century and could still serve as a model for action against any truly contagious disease" Hirst pp. 408-9 .</p><p>The print was engraved by Giovan Battista Gallestruzzi 1615-1669 a painter and engraver member of the Accademia di San Luca in Rome. For more on this artist see https://www.treccani.it/enciclopedia/giovanni-battista-galestruzzi_Dizionario-Biografico/ It is very rare: Both OCLC and ICCU list only one copy at the Biblioteca Nazionale Centrale in Rome under Gallestruzzi. Rose Marie San Juan in her book<i> Rome a city out of print </i>p. 233-34 attributes the print also illustrated in her book to Johann Friedrich Greuter active in Rome at that time. Nevertheless the monogram of Gallestruzzi illustrated in his Benezit entry vol. IV p. 588 is identical to the one on the print and all indications lead us to believe that the designer of the print is Gallestruzzi.</p>L. F. Hirst The conquest of the Plague pp.408-09: Rose Marie San Juan Rome a city out of Print p.233-34: Benezit vol. IV: p.588: Laura Volpe for the DSB vol. 51. Rome, Giacomo Molinari, n. d. books
2001WRCLIT72924New York: Phaidon 2001. 128pp. Small octavo. Pictorial wrappers. Frontispiece. 5 color and 50 black and white photographs. Remainder mark on lower fore edge faint smudging to upper wrapper else near fine. First edition. A major influence on documentary photography Walker Evans 1903- 75 is one of photography's outstanding artists. This compact book features his famous photographs that documented the effects of the Great Depression on the rural population and images that record the everyday details of urban life. Phaidon unknown books
2013296277Philadelphia: The Print Center 2013. paperback. fine. Emma Wilcox. Exhibition catalog with an essay by Luc Sante and an interview with the artist by John Caperton. 28 pages. Slim 4to paper wrappers. Philadelphia: The Print Center 2013. Fine.<br/><br/> Signed by both Wilcox and Sante on title page.<br/><br/> The Print Center unknown books
193150934NY: Century 1931. First Edition. 8vo pp. xi 365. Green paper over boards. A few markings in margins o/w a VG tight copy. Century unknown books
1982135134Harare: Ministry of Health 1982. 14p. 23p. 20p. 19p. and 39p. 8.25x11.75 inches tables cheap paperstock construction paper stapled in faded blue report covers. First five issues. Ministry of Health unknown books
1963182419Northhampton Mass: Gehenna Press 1963. Signed and numbered. Hardcover. VG/VG rubbed spot to leather spine & edge. slipcase has scuffing to back & side panels; rubbing to to lower corner; small black pen-like mark to front; illustration & signature unaffected. quarter leather spine w/ grey paper boards. unpaginated w/ 13 leaves. back cover pastedown pocket of 13 engravings. illustrated slipcase signed by the artist. A wonderful copy of this limited set produced by Leonard Baskin's Gehenna Press. This is copy 4 of 30 with quarter leather binding. Back cover pastedown has a pocket with 13 additional wood engravings printed on Japanese Moriki hand made paper. Each copy is signed by Sante Graziani. Slipcase illustrated is also signed by Sante Graziani. Sante Graziani was known for his public building murals. Gehenna Press hardcover books