Language: English
Published by J. B. Lippincott Company, Philadelphia, 1956
Seller: Mountain Books, Kent, CT, U.S.A.
First Edition Signed
Hardcover. Condition: Very Good. Dust Jacket Condition: Fair. Illustrated (illustrator). First Edition. Red cloth hardcover is in nice condition. The dust jacket has nicks and tears and a piece missing. Still it's present and done it's job well of protecting the book. Signed by King on the first free page. We ship fast. Size: Tall. By Author.
Published by Manchester: Whitworth Art Gallery, 1964
Seller: Marcus Campbell Art Books, London, United Kingdom
Signed
US$ 44.36
Quantity: 1 available
Add to basket22 x 14cm. Softcover, 87pp + 24pp plates [together with] 7pp booklet of additions loosely inserted. Also includes letter to an art historian on Whitworth headed notepaper, signed by Keeper of the Whitworth collections, Francis W Hawcroft, dated 1975. Among the featured artists are Gwendolen Raverat, Joan Hassall, Ethelbert White, Noel Rooke, Robert Gibbings, Edward Burne-Jones, Edward Gordon Craig, Charles Ricketts, Leon Underwood, John Nash, Paul Nash, etc. Good condition.
Published by Lyre Bird Press, Townsville, 1994
ISBN 10: 0949840068 ISBN 13: 9780949840066
Seller: Arapiles Mountain Books - Mount of Alex, Castlemaine, VIC, Australia
First Edition Signed
Soft Cover. Condition: F. First Edition. Square 8vo. original printed paper wraps, in printed folder; pp. [24 (last blank)], with engraving illustrations. A fine copy. No. 97 of a limited edition of 250 copies signed by the author and artist, 'Tate Adams'. Signed by Author.
Published by London:: Published For the Associated Engravers, By John Pye, 42 Cirencester Place, Fitzroy Square; And May Be Had Of All Book And Printsellers., M.DCCC.XL.
Seller: Wittenborn Art Books, San Francisco, CA, U.S.A.
Signed
Condition: Good. Large folio. 3/4 red morocco and red roan boards, repaired. 59 x 45 cm.[62] p., [29] pl.; 606 mm. Some foxing. Tissue guards.OCLC Number: 1105189Each plate gives the name of the source-artist and is signed by its engraver. The engravers were H. Le Keux, George T. Doo, W. Bromley, J.H. Watt, E. Goodall, John Pye, William Miller, W. Humphrys, John Burnet, J. Stewart, W. Greatbatch, John H. Robinson, R. Golding, W. Finden and J. Le Keux. Each plate carries the publisher's imprint of John Pye, and the name of the printer, McQueen. The work is dedicated to King William IV by John Burnet, George Cooke, George T. Doo, William Finden, Edward Goodall, John Le Keux, Henry Le Keux, John Pye and John H. Robinson.The title page and plate [10] carry the date of 1840, but all other plates carry an earlier date - 1830 March 1 (nos. 5, 17, 24, 26, 28); 1832 March (1, 9, 11); 1837 March (1) (2, 14, 19, 20, 22, 29); 1834 Sep. 1 (6, 15, 16); 1836 July (1) (12, 13, 21, 25); 1837 July (3, 8, 18, 27); 1839 Aug. (4, 23); 1839 Nov. (7). The idea of publishing a series of engravings after paintings in the National Gallery (which had opened to the public in 1824) originated with John Pye, and was subsidised by John Sheepshanks. Seven instalments appeared by 1840. Pye was a leading advocate of the Royal Academy's opening full Membership to engravers. He had petitioned the Prince Regent for this in 1812; in 1826 he and other leading engravers vowed never to apply for Associateship; in 1836 and 1859 he published pamphlets attacking the Academy. Each plate is accompanied by one leaf of printed explanatory text (in English on the recto, in French on the verso); and each is captioned. They show: [1]'A view of Venice' by Canaletto; [2]'Christ appearing to St. Peter' by Ann. Carracci; [3] 'Silenus' by Ann. Carracci; [4] 'Susanna and the elders' by Lud. Carracci; [5] 'An Italian sea-port' by Claude; [6] 'The marriage-festival of Isaac and Rebecca' by Claude; [7] 'The embarkation of St. Ursula' by Claude; [8] 'A pastoral landscape' by Claude; [9] 'The Annunciation' (in text, ' . appearance of the angel to Hagar') by Claude; [10] 'The Holy Family' by Correggio; [11] 'Evening' by A. Cuyp; [12] 'The market cart' by Gainsborough; [13] 'The watering place' by Gainsborough; [14] 'Spanish peasant boy' by Murillo; [15] 'A landscape with figures representing Abraham preparing for the sacrifice' by Gaspar Poussin; [16] 'A Bacchanalian scene' by N. Poussin; [17] 'The adoration of the shepherds' by Rembrandt; [18] 'The Crucifixion' (in text 'Christ taken down from the Cross') by Rembrandt; [19] 'Portrait of a Jew' by Rembrandt; [20] 'The banished lord' by Reynolds; [21] 'Lord Heathfield' by Reynolds; [22] 'The rape of the Sabines' by Rubens; [23] 'Peace and War' by Rubens; [24] 'Gevartius' by A. Van Dyck; [25] 'The Emperor Theodosius refused admission into the church' by Van Dyck; [26] 'Portrait of Rubens' by Van Dyck; [27] 'The consecration of St Nicolas' by Veronese; [28] 'The village festival' by D. Wilkie; [29] 'Maecenas' villa at Tivoli' by R. Wilson.Ref: A. Dyson, Picture to print: the nineteenth-century engraving trade (1984); C. Fox, 'The engraver's battle for professional recognition in early nineteenth-century London', in London journal, 2 (1976), p.3-31.