Published by Alberta College Of Art Gallery, Calgary, Alberta, Canada, 1982
Seller: Alexander Books (ABAC/ILAB), Ancaster, ON, Canada
First Edition
Soft cover. Condition: Near Fine. 1st Edition. 60 Pages Illus. Book.
Published by Alberta Art Foundation, Southern Alberta Institute of Technology, Alberta, Calgary, CANADA, 1993
Seller: ABC Books, Panama, NY, U.S.A.
Magazine Binding. Condition: Good. Color and B&W Photographs, Color and B&W Illustrations (illustrator). First Thus. 64 pgs. Very Rare title SC book has a red border around a color stylized giant cowboy hat on the front cover with orange font. Good condition with some shelf wear and rubbing, corners softly bumped and folded, some crease lines on covers near spine. Otherwise, completely unmarked inside and out, tight, clean, square, and odor free. The 14 Artist's Works who are featured are; Lionel Bevan III, Robert Bourdon, David P. Bradley, Stefan Czernecki, 'Cactus' Dan Kiacz, Edward Poitras, Bill Schenck, Juane Quick-To-See Smith, Bob 'Daddy-O' Wade, Willard 'Texas Kid' Watson, Randy Lee White, Gary Williams, Joan Zalenski, and Jand Zednik. Size: 8vo - over 7¾" - 9¾" tall.
Published by Alberta College of Art, rumkin & Struve Gallery, 1985
Seller: ANARTIST, New York, NY, U.S.A.
Softcover staple bound, 28 pages, good condition, 1-inch crease to all pages at upper right corner, no internal marks.
Published by Art Gallery of Brant, Brant (ON), 1979
Seller: McCanse Art, Toronto, ON, Canada
Softcover. Condition: Very Good. Dust Jacket Condition: No Dust Jacket. Quarto. Illustrated paper wraps, staple-bound. 40 pp. Published on the occasion of the touring exhibition organized by the Art Gallery of Brant in 1979. Illustrated in colour and black-and-white. Very good example; some rubbing to extremities, creasing to spine, interior lightly toned else clean.
Published by Alberta College of Art Gallery, 1983
Seller: ANARTIST, New York, NY, U.S.A.
Softcover, staple-bound, 28 pages, very good condition, light rubbing to covers; no internal marks.
Published by The Art Gallery of Brant, Brantford, Ontario, Canada, 1978
First Edition
Paperback. Condition: Good. First Edition. 68 pages. Profusely illustrated in black and white. Printed on glossy stock. Average wear. Unmarked. A sound copy.
Published by BROOKLYN NEW YORK NYC USA, 1947
Seller: Katz Fine Manuscripts Inc., Cochrane, AB, Canada
Condition: Very Good. On offer is a charming, original 1947 manuscript diary handwritten by Miss 'Val Greenfield Age 14-15' an active, hardworking student, sister and daughter who details her life and that of her brother Stuart and her parents in Brooklyn New York just after World War II. Val is a very dedicated diarist, using her page-a-day diary daily save for a break from late April through late June, and again the last week in August through the first week of September. Her life is a never ending carousel of work: at school she is an 'A' student rarely getting any marks below 90 in French, Latin and a host of other subjects - at one point she receives what she feels is a terrible mark of 80 in a subject. At home she and her brother work helping the parents, from washing floors, cleaning the bathroom etc. Her slightly older brother who she obviously adores suffers physically and has Grand Mal seizures but together they study and even work shovelling snow for extra money. Endearingly they write out business contracts and pledges for working together or sharing. She writes of going shopping and buying sugar, which is 'terribly scarce.' She also writes about school and her social life, attending Dodgers games, going to the movies, etc. One night when she and mom go to a show they leave "the house lights as 10 gangsters escaped from Bklyn jail." She is a brilliant student with high marks all around: 100% in biology, 100 in Physics, 95% in French, her description of pledging with a fraternity is wonderful, running out of oil in the winter and much, much more detailing a good but tough life in post War New York. Her folks are not without resources as Dad does inspections of some sort on fences, trucks, tires, knitting machines, etc. with 4 men working for him and some out of state so we can safely assume it is more technical and substantive than her basic observations. This girl is in many ways a typical Jewish-American girl but her ambition in school and her love of her family makes this diary a true testament to a spirited but level headed bright young woman. Researchers and historians of the era will find the sum and soul of this intriguing young lady in a simple quote from the diary: "We all got up late but dad who is as constant as the North Star." The 6 x 3½ inch diary is VG. Size: 16mo - over 5¾" - 6¾" tall.