Verkäufer
Phillip J. Pirages Rare Books (ABAA), McMinnville, OR, USA
Verkäuferbewertung 5 von 5 Sternen
AbeBooks-Verkäufer seit 21. März 2000
247 x 152 mm. (9 3/4 x 6"). Five volumes. With "considerable additions" by the Rev. James Dallaway. LOVELY CONTEMPORARY MAROON STRAIGHT-GRAIN MOROCCO, GILT, LIKELY BY CHARLES LEWIS (note on front flyleaf attributing binding to him), covers with frame formed by four strapwork compartments richly tooled with volutes, acanthus leaves, flowers, and acorns, raised bands, spines gilt in compartments with leafy curling tools, gilt lettering, very broad turn-ins framed by multiple gilt rules and laurel wreath tools, glossy crimson endpapers, leather hinges, all edges gilt. WITH 164 ILLUSTRATIONS: 80 engraved plates printed on India paper and mounted on heavy stock, plus 84 in-text woodcuts as called for, all but two plates with tissue guards. A Large Paper Copy. â Spine evenly sunned to a reddish brown, just the slightest hint of wear to corners, but the original bindings very lustrous and virtually unworn. The majority of the tissue guards foxed (indicating they've done their job), just a handful of plates and adjacent pages affected, otherwise exceptionally fresh, clean, and bright internally, with notably ample margins. A VERY PRETTY SET IN ESPECIALLY FINE CONDITION. First printed between 1762 and 1771 at Walpole's Strawberry Hill private press, this is a beautifully bound set of a most useful guide to numerous English and immigrant artists, with engraved portraits of many of those discussed. Son of Prime Minister Robert Walpole, Horace (1717-97) had an unimpressive academic career at Eton and King's College, Cambridge, but thanks to his father's connections, he was granted three sinecures that, in DNB's words, left him "a young man of means and no duties." This financial securityâ "bolstered by a goodly fortune from his fatherâ "allowed him to devote his considerable energies to arts, letters, and architecture. Much engaged in writing and in the transformation of his Gothic revival house, Strawberry Hill, he combined these passions in 1757 by establishing a printing press there. Of the present work, DNB observes, "It had something in common with his 'Royal and Noble Authors,' offering list and commentary in accessible and amusing dress. But it was to live longer, mainly because it was based on materials which Walpole had purchased from the widow of the engraver George Vertue in 1758. He had known Vertue himself since 1743 and perhaps owed something of his evolving interest in English portraiture to [Vertue's] knowledgeable encouragement. The 'forty volumes of his MS. Collection relating to English painters, sculptors, gravers, and architects' amply justified Walpole's claim that they contained 'an infinite quantity of new and curious things'. Later in life he described the 'Anecdotes" as 'the only thing I ever published of any use'" (Walpole, Corr., 33.574). The bindings here have no signature or ticket, but, given the fine quality of materials and high level of execution, as well as the design and tools used, it seems very possible that the annotation attributing them to Charles Lewis is correct. According to Maggs Catalogue 1075, Lewis (1786-1836) "was the leading figure in English binding of the first years of the nineteenth century." The son of a Hanoverian immigrant, Lewis (whose German surname was "Ludwig") came to England with other German binders (Kalthoeber, Staggemeier, and Welcher being the most prominent) during the last part of the 18th century. He apprenticed under Henry Walther at age 14 and obtained his freedom in 1807. He set up a shop in Scotland Yard, had other addresses in the Strand, and then established himself in Duke Street, St. James's, in 1817. By 1823 he was employing 21 journeymen, a number of whom are illustrated in a watercolor of the bindery reproduced in Middleton's "A History of English Craft Bookbinding Technique" (p. 349). One of the journeymen was Francis Bedford, who eventually managed the business for five years after Lewis' death. Lewis was patronized by the great collectors of the day, incl. Bestandsnummer des Verkäufers ST18164
Titel: ANECDOTES OF PAINTING IN ENGLAND; WITH SOME ...
Verlag: Printed at the Shakspeare Press, by W. Nicol, for John Major, Fleet-Street 1826-28, London
Erscheinungsdatum: 1826
Anbieter: James Fergusson Books & Manuscripts, London, Vereinigtes Königreich
Hardcover. Zustand: Very Good. 5 vols. Contemporary calf, maroon and black labels. Some joints cracking, two joints strengthened, upper covers of vols i and iii rather marked, but a pretty set. With the armorial bookplates of Richard Board; later (Sebastian Carter) book-label of David J. Hall. Anecdotes first published at Strawberry Hill, 1762-71, Modern Gardening 1771. "For some years his stages were marked by noble encouragement, and by opportunities of pursuing his favorite erudition. He was invited whither he would have wished to make pilgrimages, for the love of antiquity is a kind of devotion, and Mr. Vertue had different sets of saints. In 1728 the duke of Dorset called him to Knowle. Humble before his superiors, one conceives how his respect was heightened at entering so venerable a pile, realizing to his eyes the scenes of many a waking vision. Here he drew several of the poets. But he was on fairy ground; Arcadia was on the confines; could he resist an excursion to Penshurst? One may judge how high his enthusiasm had been wrought, by the mortification he expresses at not finding there a portrait of Sir Philip Sidney. In 1730 appeared his twelve heads of poets, one of his capital works. Though poetry was but a sister art, he treated it with the affection of a relation. He had collected many notes touching the professors, and here and there in his MSS. are some slight attempts of his own. But he was of too timid and correct a nature to soar where fancy only guides. Truth was his province, and he had a felicity uncommon to antiquaries, he never suffered his imagination to lend him eyes. Where he could not discover he never supplied." Richard Board is conceivably Richard Board (1732-1782), apothecary, of the family of Board of Pax Hill, Sussex, but more likely his son the Revd Richard Board (1764-1859), for 67 years Vicar of Westerham, Kent. Bestandsnummer des Verkäufers 28M100565
Anzahl: 1 verfügbar
Anbieter: L'Oeil de Mercure, Paris, Frankreich
Couverture rigide. Zustand: Satisfaisant. Ensemble de 5 volumes petit in-4 en plein veau, filet doré en encadrant les plats, dos à nerfs ornés (reliure anglaise de l'époque). Accidents ; mors très fragiles, deux plats détachés et rousseurs. Quelques corrections manuscrites dans l'appendice. Edition originale, aux dates de 1762, 1762, 1763, 1763 & 1771. Chanque volume est un premier tirage et conforme à la collation de Hazen. Composé par un frontispice & 108 planches gravées par BANNERMAN d'un tirage estimé à 300 exemplaires (d'après Hazen). Exlibris manuscrit de Frederik Frankland sur quatre volumes (1685-1968), et Exlibris de la bibliothèque Earl of Chichester. Le Lord Horace Walpole, aristocrate excentrique disposant de moyens extrêmement importants créa dans sa fantasque propriété de Srawberry Hill, les premières « private press » de Grande Bretagne. Son ouvrage, « anecdotes » reprend en partie la vaste collection de peintures et gravures de Strawberry Hill. L'ouvrage orné de 108 planches gravées par Bannerman, d'une finesse remarquable, était offert dit on aux visiteurs du château qui ouvrait ses porte à un maximum de quatre visiteurs par jours. Horace Walpole, inventeur du concept de « fortuité » c'est à dire, de la découverte fortuite d'un élément majeur à la suite d'une recherche dans un domaine autre est également, l'inventeur du roman gothique et du style néo gothique anglais qui eu le succès que l'on connaît. Les exemplaires complets de ce catalogue sont d'une très grande rareté et furent rédigés à l'intérieure même de la propriété sur la base de plus de 40 volumes manuscrits qui faisaient partie de la collection du château. Exemplaire portant des traces d'usur mais dans une reliure anglaise strictement contemporaine. Hazen, Strawberry Hill, 10 ; Lowndes, 2819 (qui qualifie les planches de cette édition d' « infinitely superior »). Livre d'occasion. Bestandsnummer des Verkäufers 2684
Anzahl: 1 verfügbar
Anbieter: Jeffrey H. Marks, Rare Books, ABAA, Rochester, NY, USA
5 vols. Engraved frontispiece and 109 plates. 4to, full contemporary russia; sides with roll-tooled floral borders (those of Vol. IV not uniform), expertly rebacked with gilt spines; a.e.g. First edition. Rothschild 2487. A few corners a little rubbed or bumped; title and dedication a little loose in the first volume; one very small hole to one plate; a little browning or offsetting; a few manuscript annotations. Armorial bookplates on pastedowns; later engraved bookplates on front free endpapers. An attractive set. Bestandsnummer des Verkäufers 18111
Anzahl: 1 verfügbar
Anbieter: Sam Gatteno Books, Grosse Pointe, MI, USA
Hardcover. Zustand: Very Good. Quarto. Five volumes. I: xiii, [i], 168, [xxii]pp. - Appendix (xiv), Index (vi), Errata (i)] [1762]; II: [ii], 158, [lviii]pp. - Appendix (li), Index (vii), Errata - (i) [1762]; III: [ii], 155, [xi]pp. - Appendix (iii), Index (viii) and final leaf, often absent (per Hazen) and usually bound in volume II of advertisements of Vertue's catalogues of pictures [1763]; IV: x, 151, [ix] - Errata (i), Appendix (ii), Index (vi), Additional Lives to the First Edition of Anecdotes of Painting in England - 12pp., Additional Lives to the First Edition of Anecdotes of Painting in England - 4pp.; V: [iv], 128, 14 (Life of Vertue), 20 (List of Vertue's works), [viii] - Index (viii), [ii]pp - Final Advertisement Leaf [1763]. First edition, first impression of each volume printed in an edition of three hundred copies (per Hazen). In this copy of volume one, both p. 83 and 84 are numbered on the right, and the running head on p.127 is in the uncorrected state. Farmer departed from Walpole's service in the midst of the preparation of the second volume, and his name does not appear in the subsequent imprints. A second edition was soon called for, and when the fourth volume to ANECDOTES. was published in 1771, Walpole had its predecessors reprinted again. Contemporary calf, repaired. All edges gilt. With 110 full-page copper-engraved plates, plus two (of four) in the Additional Lives by Bannerman. I: 16 plates; II; 25 plates; III: 37 plates; IV: 23 plates, plus 2 in the Additional Lives; V: 9 plates. Hazen (Walpole) 14; Hazen (Strawberry Hill) 10; Lowndes 2819 (calling the plates of this edition "Infinitely superior"); Gibson's Library, p. 280; Rothschild 2487. Bestandsnummer des Verkäufers 003196
Anzahl: 1 verfügbar
Anbieter: Keel Row Books (ABA, ILAB & PBFA), Whitley Bay, Vereinigtes Königreich
Hard Cover. FIRST EDITIONS. 5 volume uniform set. Quarto in half-sheets, pp. xiii, [1], 168, [22] (including errata leaf); [2], 158, 12, 58; [2], 155, [3], 4, [8]; x, [2], 151, [9]; [4], 128, 14, 20, [8]. 104 engraved plates to "Anecdotes" and 9 to "Catalogue". Nineteenth century maroon morocco bound by Lewis, with 5 raised bands, gilt titles to spine and heavy floral decoration to compartments; double gilt fillet border to boards; gilt dentelles and marbled endpapers; all edges gilt. Spines sunned, and 3 boards partially sunned; a little minor scuffing to boards. Large armorial bookplate of Nathan of Churt to each front paste-down; no annotation or inscriptions. Some offsetting from plates, mainly to Vol III, otherwise contents clean and crisp. A Very Good set. The most ambitious of all the Strawberry Hill publications, at the press set up in 1757 by Horace Walpole at his celebrated gothic mansion. Walpole purchased the notebooks of antiquary George Vertue from his widow, and based this work on Vertue's collected notes on historic English artists and their subjects, the great and good from the earliest days of portrait painting including the Stuarts and the interregnum period, giving his own unique interpretation of Vertue's work. Walpole employed several noted artists to engrave the plates including Bannerman, Chambars and Grignion. The work is rare; Hazen states " HW says that 600 copies of the first volume were printed, and 600 of the second. Since no figures are given for the third or fourth volume and the 'Catalogue of Engravers' one must assume the size of the edition was planned to match the first two volumes". An important and influential text in the history of English arts. Hazen: Strawberry Hill, p. 55 -68. Bestandsnummer des Verkäufers 10143
Anzahl: 1 verfügbar
Anbieter: Voewood Rare Books. ABA. ILAB. PBFA, Holt, Vereinigtes Königreich
Five volumes. With a supplementary sixth volume The Works of Jonathan Richardson. 4to in half sheets. 228x175mm. pp. Vol. I: xiv, 168, [21, 1bl]. Engraved frontispiece and 15 further engraved plates. Vol II. [2], 158, [58]. 25 engraved plates (the plate of Henry Giles incorrectly bound in volume IV). Vol. III: [2], 155, [12, 1bl]. 37 engraved plates. Vol. IV: x, [2], 151, [9]; 12, 4. 26 engraved plates (including the portrait of Henry Giles). Vol. V: [4], 128; 14, 20, [10]. 9 illustrations. Vol. 6: vi, [2], 5-287 [1bl]. 11 illustrations. Handsomely bound in red full morocco, upper and lower covers with gilt borders constructed of fillets, a dotted line and and wave and tendril roll. Spine with raised bands, compartments lavishly decorated in gilt with green onlays decorated in gilt and a green label lettered in gilt. Turn-ins decorated in gilt with a greek key design. All edges gilt. Marbled endpapers. A loosely note reads "Binding - ? by Kalthoeber". The binding is unsigned and we would be reluctant to attribute it with any degree of certainty to Kalthoeber but it is nevertheless a fine late eighteenth century binding (so contemporary with the Supplement) with the characteristics of the German emigré work of this period. It is also in excellent condition with only very slight bumping to the corners and a little rubbing to the edges. Internally, there is some foxing and browning but overall it is a very nice copy of an important book from Horace Walpole's Strawberry Hill Press. The first volume has the inscription (in two hands) "To William Shakespear Childe-Pemberton on his marriage June 1894 from Lord Durnley". The improbably named recipient was a writer, best known as a biographer. Only 600 copies of the first two volumes were printed and Hazen assumes that the later volumes were printed in similar numbers so it is rare and especially so with the Supplement The Works of Jonathan Richardson of which this copy is the variant without the "Printed at Strawberry Hill" text above the illustration of the house and without "B.White" in the imprint. Volume IV is dated 1771 although, as Hazen notes, it was published in 1780. It had been planned in 1763 (the date of volume III) but Walpole was nervous about printing his scathing comments on Hogarth's Sigismunda ("no more like Sigismonda, than I to Hercules"). By the time of publication, Hogarth was dead and Walpole had made his peace with the painter's widow so he was able to complete his comprehensive survey, laced with typically sharp Walpolean aperçus, of English art taking in painting, engraving and garden design. Bestandsnummer des Verkäufers 4208
Anzahl: 1 verfügbar