Language: English
Published by University of Maryland, 1977
Seller: Resource for Art and Music Books, Ivoryton, CT, U.S.A.
First Edition
Hardcover. Condition: Good. Dust Jacket Condition: Good. First Edition. Firm binding, bumping/creasing along bottom edges of first 20 pages, bumping to top fore-edge corners of pages, no ownership markings. DJ chipped with small closed tears, not clipped. ; Well packaged in a box, ships with tracking.
Published by University of Maryland (1977), College Park, Maryland, 1977
Seller: Ray Boas, Bookseller - Established 1980, Walpole, NH, U.S.A.
HC. B&W and color illustrations (illustrator). 207pp Catalogue to an exhibition of French Water Landscapes at University of Maryland Art Gallery, Art Department, College Park, October 26 to December 4, 1977; J.B. Speed Art Museum, Louisville, January 9 to February 19, 1978; University of Michigan Musuem of Art, Ann Arbor, April 1 to May 14, 1978. good+ w/lightly chipped dustjacket (hardcover) author inscribed.
Language: English
Published by South Bank Centre, London, 1987
ISBN 10: 1853320021 ISBN 13: 9781853320026
Seller: David Bunnett Books, London, United Kingdom
First Edition
US$ 44.30
Quantity: 1 available
Add to basketSOFTCOVER. Condition: Fine. 1st Edition. 1st printing. Square 4to in colour printed stiff card covers, 96pp on stiff art paper, plates etc . [CONDITION: A well preserved near FINE clean and tight unmarked copy (speck of shelf rub to cover corner tips, hint of tanning) ] . . . . . . . . . . . . . To see more of our Art Monographs etc type DbbARTIST in the Keywords search box . . We always ship in STRONG PROTECTIVE CARD PARCELS.
Published by Paris: Editions de la Revue Verve, 1954
Seller: Wittenborn Art Books, San Francisco, CA, U.S.A.
Condition: Good. Small foliio. 26.5 x 36cm. Original boards with design by Picasso. Tiny tears on spine edge. Slight crack inside the gutter.omplete with the 180 plates, some in color printed by Mourlot and Draeger. Very good. OCLC Number / Unique Identifier: 23431099. This edition features accompanying words by Rebecca West and the Surrealist writer and poet Michel Leiris.In September 1954, Tériade published a double issue of Verve dedicated to Picasso and illustrating one hundred and eighty drawings by the master, the present work included, which were drawn in Vallauris that winter between 28 November 1953 and 3 February 1954. The rich publication reproduced each work in the exact size and chronological order of the original drawings, so as to preserve the integrity of the suite. Tériade remarked that this collection of drawings was Picasso's "finest, boldest, [and] most poignantly human of all he has produced in the course of his long and brilliant career" (E. Tériade, ed., op. cit., n.p.).At the time Picasso began this series in November 1953, Françoise Gilot had just deserted him, taking their two children with her and leaving him alone as an abandoned man. Deeply hurt, he shut himself away in his vacant villa in Vallauris and frantically produced the 180 drawings which represent ". the diary, not verbal but visual, of a detestable 'season in hell,' a crisis in his personal life which led him to question everything." (ibid.).These works address the central theme of the painter and his model, of a man and a woman, of the subject and the object, handled in a style which is burlesque, comic, grotesque, even caricatured. Some ironically incorporate subjects linked to the world of the circus, the monkey, the acrobat, the clown.The year of this publication, 1954, marked the death of Picasso's artistic rival but great friend Henri Matisse and his passing considerably affected Picasso, who in some way relied on their competition as a catalyst. With this new absence of living rivalry, Picasso was inspired to interact with the artists of the past more than ever, continuously holding conversation with historical masters through his own new, bold interpretations.
Published by Paris: A.C. Mazo, 1972, 1972
Seller: Wittenborn Art Books, San Francisco, CA, U.S.A.
Condition: Good. Complete with 11 full page color lithographs plus the lithograph on the dust-jacket. Catalogues nos. 1-122.In -4, Complère avec toutes les lithographies originales Pleine toile de l'éditeur, jaquettes illustrées.Fine.
Published by Paris: Maeght Editeur, 1966
Seller: Wittenborn Art Books, San Francisco, CA, U.S.A.
Condition: Good. Folio. 5 lithographs after Bacon including the triptych. 26pp. Untrimmed. 28 x 38cm.Derrière le Miroir édité en 1966 pour accompagner l'exposition BACON à la Galerie Maeght. Textes originaux de LEIRIS et SYLVESTER. Format 38 x 28 cm, 34 pages avec 5 illustrations en lithographie et 13 reproductions. Derrière Le Miroir n°162.
Publication Date: 1954
First Edition
Paris: Editions de la Revue. 1954. Folio. Original illustrated boards designed by Picasso depicting the profile of his lover Genevieve Laporte with title lettering in purple; 16 full-page original colour lithographs and 164 black and white reproduction heliogravures; encased in glassine wrapper; near fine.First edition. Double number edition of the Verve art revue showcasing only the works of Pablo Picasso.Verve, the modernist Parisian art magazine at the forefront of the radical creative aesthetic of its time, was first published in 1937 with famous cover artwork by Henri Matisse. Subsequently, it was responsible for showcasing the most distinguished characters of the Parisian art scene of the 20th century, including textual contributions by prominent transgressive authors such as James Joyce. This edition features accompanying words by Rebecca West and prolific Surrealist writer and anthropologist Michel Leiris.Its founder Teriade (pseudonym of the Greek, Stratis Eleftheriades), made the statement, "Verve was born in December 1937. In times of agony, such things happen, when there are big crises, when we are really desperate and we do have nothing to lose, or rather, we are afraid that everything will be lost while waiting for disaster . Then at this precise moment everyone is able to act, even to act with passion".The year of this publication, 1954, marked the death of Picasso's artistic rival but great friend Henri Matisse and his passing considerably affected Picasso, who in some way relied on their competition as a catalyst. With this new absence of living rivalry, Picasso was inspired to interact with the artists of the past more than ever, continuously holding conversation with historical masters through his own new, bold interpretations.