19th Century French Book on Russian Customs
As
the Sochi Winter Olympic Games focuses world attention on the future of Russia,
Dreweatts & Bloomsbury Auctions offer the opportunity to explore the
country’s vivid history with a 19th century French book on Russian
customs in their Thursday 6th March 2014 sale of Printed Books and Manuscripts.
Les Peuples de la Russie is a celebrated work on the customs and costumes of the peoples of the Russian empire including Tartars, Caucasians and Mongols. This first edition, by Charles Rechberg and George Bernhard Deppin, was printed in Paris in 1813 and beautifully illustrated with 47 hand-coloured plates as well as nine original illustrations. It is estimated to sell for £6,000-8,000. [Lot 191]
A run of important illustrated magazines, The USSR in Construction, provides a focus on Russia’s modern history. Positively promoting the industrialisation and collectivisation of Stalinist Russia, they feature electric power plants, regional capitals, metals, agriculture and copper-mining. Printed in Moscow in 1930 at the beginning of Joseph Stalin’s tyrannical leadership of the Soviet Union, the magazines are estimated at £300-400.
The USSR in Construction was a photographic propaganda magazine published in the Soviet Union for foreign distribution that proclaimed to “reflect in photography the whole scope and variety of the construction work now going on in the USSR”. Employing the top writers, playwrights, photographers and graphic designers of the day, it was predominately designed as a foreign relations tool to promote the Soviet Union. [Lot 139]
The most expensive work in the sale is Histoire Générale des Insects de Surinam et de Toute l’Europe by Maria Sibylla Merian, estimated to achieve £25,000-35,000. This third edition was printed in Paris in 1771.
Merian, a German botanical artist, arrived in Surinam, South America, in 1699 and stayed until 1701 recording the plants and insects of the Dutch colony. The results of her research can be found in the Metamorphosis insectorum Surinamensium, published in 1705 with 60 plates. Later editions included 23 additional plates by Merian’s daughter Johanna in the first volume, while the second volume recorded her later studies of European plants and insects.
The present work was produced by Desnos after he discovered the printing plates in a Paris auction. The plates display remarkable accuracy and include several species of plants and fruit new to Europeans. A third volume Des plantes bulbeueses, liliacées, caryophyllées with 69 plates was also published, but this is often found separately to those on insects. [Lot 215]
A second edition of Johann Jacob Scheuchzer’s Herbarium Deluvianum Collectum, shares a preoccupation with the natural world. An important early work of paleobotany and the study of fossilised plants, it includes four additional plates not present in the first edition. It is estimated at £600-800. [Lot 210]
The oldest work in the sale, Elementa, by the Greek mathematician and ‘Father of Geometry,’ Euclid, is described by Politian Sir Charles Thomas-Stanford as “possibly the most remarkable of all printed editions of Euclid.” The famous work is one of the most influential books on modern geology and mathematics and this first edition of the Arabic translation is ascribed to Nasir al-Din al-Tusi. Euclid was a Greek mathematician active in Alexandria, Northern Egypt, during the reign of Ptolemy I (323-283 B.C.) his influential work remains in use by students today. This Arabic edition of the book has an extra chapter, ‘The Privilege of Sultan Murad III’, which was added for its release in the Ottoman Empire. The work was printed at the press founded by Ferdinando de’ Medici under Pope Gregory XIII to disseminate works in oriental languages. [Lot 18]
A copy of Salvador Dalí’s Biblia Sacra, 1967-69, in five volumes, number 394 of 1499 ‘luxus’ copies, includes 105 colour lithographs by Dalí which form a magnificent set, in fine condition. The illustrated book was conceived by Dali’s friend and patron Dr. Giuseppe Albaretto as a new and entirely illustrated edition of the Bible. It is estimated to sell for £6,000-8,000. [Lot 141]
The auction will be held at Dreweatts & Bloomsbury Auctions Maddox Street saleroom in London’s Mayfair and will be on public view from Sunday 2nd – Thursday 6th March and the catalogue is available online .
Dreweatts & Bloomsbury Auctions will also be holding a sale of the Library of a Gentleman on 27th February 2014. The sale will include a fine selection of books on natural history as well as literature, travel and Sussex topography. Of note is Eleazar Albin is A Natural History of English Insects, 1749. The important work on British entomology features 100 hand-coloured engraved plates and is estimated at £2,000-£3,000. [Lot 132]
Les Peuples de la Russie is a celebrated work on the customs and costumes of the peoples of the Russian empire including Tartars, Caucasians and Mongols. This first edition, by Charles Rechberg and George Bernhard Deppin, was printed in Paris in 1813 and beautifully illustrated with 47 hand-coloured plates as well as nine original illustrations. It is estimated to sell for £6,000-8,000. [Lot 191]
A run of important illustrated magazines, The USSR in Construction, provides a focus on Russia’s modern history. Positively promoting the industrialisation and collectivisation of Stalinist Russia, they feature electric power plants, regional capitals, metals, agriculture and copper-mining. Printed in Moscow in 1930 at the beginning of Joseph Stalin’s tyrannical leadership of the Soviet Union, the magazines are estimated at £300-400.
The USSR in Construction was a photographic propaganda magazine published in the Soviet Union for foreign distribution that proclaimed to “reflect in photography the whole scope and variety of the construction work now going on in the USSR”. Employing the top writers, playwrights, photographers and graphic designers of the day, it was predominately designed as a foreign relations tool to promote the Soviet Union. [Lot 139]
The most expensive work in the sale is Histoire Générale des Insects de Surinam et de Toute l’Europe by Maria Sibylla Merian, estimated to achieve £25,000-35,000. This third edition was printed in Paris in 1771.
Merian, a German botanical artist, arrived in Surinam, South America, in 1699 and stayed until 1701 recording the plants and insects of the Dutch colony. The results of her research can be found in the Metamorphosis insectorum Surinamensium, published in 1705 with 60 plates. Later editions included 23 additional plates by Merian’s daughter Johanna in the first volume, while the second volume recorded her later studies of European plants and insects.
The present work was produced by Desnos after he discovered the printing plates in a Paris auction. The plates display remarkable accuracy and include several species of plants and fruit new to Europeans. A third volume Des plantes bulbeueses, liliacées, caryophyllées with 69 plates was also published, but this is often found separately to those on insects. [Lot 215]
A second edition of Johann Jacob Scheuchzer’s Herbarium Deluvianum Collectum, shares a preoccupation with the natural world. An important early work of paleobotany and the study of fossilised plants, it includes four additional plates not present in the first edition. It is estimated at £600-800. [Lot 210]
The oldest work in the sale, Elementa, by the Greek mathematician and ‘Father of Geometry,’ Euclid, is described by Politian Sir Charles Thomas-Stanford as “possibly the most remarkable of all printed editions of Euclid.” The famous work is one of the most influential books on modern geology and mathematics and this first edition of the Arabic translation is ascribed to Nasir al-Din al-Tusi. Euclid was a Greek mathematician active in Alexandria, Northern Egypt, during the reign of Ptolemy I (323-283 B.C.) his influential work remains in use by students today. This Arabic edition of the book has an extra chapter, ‘The Privilege of Sultan Murad III’, which was added for its release in the Ottoman Empire. The work was printed at the press founded by Ferdinando de’ Medici under Pope Gregory XIII to disseminate works in oriental languages. [Lot 18]
A copy of Salvador Dalí’s Biblia Sacra, 1967-69, in five volumes, number 394 of 1499 ‘luxus’ copies, includes 105 colour lithographs by Dalí which form a magnificent set, in fine condition. The illustrated book was conceived by Dali’s friend and patron Dr. Giuseppe Albaretto as a new and entirely illustrated edition of the Bible. It is estimated to sell for £6,000-8,000. [Lot 141]
The auction will be held at Dreweatts & Bloomsbury Auctions Maddox Street saleroom in London’s Mayfair and will be on public view from Sunday 2nd – Thursday 6th March and the catalogue is available online .
Dreweatts & Bloomsbury Auctions will also be holding a sale of the Library of a Gentleman on 27th February 2014. The sale will include a fine selection of books on natural history as well as literature, travel and Sussex topography. Of note is Eleazar Albin is A Natural History of English Insects, 1749. The important work on British entomology features 100 hand-coloured engraved plates and is estimated at £2,000-£3,000. [Lot 132]
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University of South Carolina
University of South Carolina
A
theology book, dating to 1471 and the earliest printed book owned by the
University of South Carolina, is currently on display at the university in
Columbia, S.C. USA. The university is, for the first time in one exhibit,
displaying its collection of early printed books that provide a glimpse of the
era when printed books were replacing hand-copied manuscripts.
Works on display include everything from bibles and volumes on law to architecture, the works of authors from ancient Greece and Rome and volumes with early printed maps.
The oldest item, the Breslauer Bible, a manuscript Bible dating to about 1240 and the only complete English medieval Bible in the South is on display next to a similar one from the early days of printing so visitors can examine them side-by-side.
Works on display include everything from bibles and volumes on law to architecture, the works of authors from ancient Greece and Rome and volumes with early printed maps.
The oldest item, the Breslauer Bible, a manuscript Bible dating to about 1240 and the only complete English medieval Bible in the South is on display next to a similar one from the early days of printing so visitors can examine them side-by-side.
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Business as usual.
Business as usual.
Major
renovation work has started at the National Library of Scotland at the George
IV Bridge building in Edinburgh. The 18-month repair and maintenance programme
is essential to ensure the Library's world class collections are housed in the
best conditions possible. It will also allow improvements to be made to storage
facilities producing long term savings on the Library's energy bills.
All the Library's services will operate as normal during the renovation programme and every effort will be made to minimise disruption to visitors, readers and near neighbours.
All the Library's services will operate as normal during the renovation programme and every effort will be made to minimise disruption to visitors, readers and near neighbours.
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Beautiful Science runs from now until 26 May 2014
Beautiful Science runs from now until 26 May 2014
In
an age of rapidly advancing technologies 'Beautiful Science', in The Folio
Society Gallery at the British Library, shows that the challenge of presenting
big data in innovative ways is not a new one. From 17th century illustrated
diagrams to contemporary interactive visualisations, the exhibition explores
how advances in science alongside changes in technology have allowed us to
visually interpret masses of information.
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To Contact Ibookcollector
Ibookcollector © is published by Rivendale Press
To Contact Ibookcollector
Ibookcollector © is published by Rivendale Press
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