PBA Galleries – August 28 – 11.00am
Sale
540
Fine Books – Manuscripts
Art – Ephemera – Golf
Among the highlights:
Fine Books – Manuscripts
Art – Ephemera – Golf
Among the highlights:
- The Edito Princeps
in Greek of the tragedies of Euripides, two volumes, the first edition in
the original Greek, printed by Aldus Manutius in 1503. Estimate:
$10,000/15,000.
- The first of A.A. Milne's Christopher Robin books, When We Were Very Young,
1924, one of 100 copies of the first edition, signed by Milne and
illustrator E.H. Shepard. Estimate: $8,000/12,000.
- Superb association copy of Peter Pan in Kensington
Gardens, signed and with a sketch by illustrator Arthur Rackham, also
signed by author J.M. Barrie, by the Royal Princesses Beatrice and Mary
Louise, and others. Estimate: $5,000/10,000.
- The Doll Doctor, original oil on canvas painting by the
Santa Monica, California artist Millie Greene, noted for her vibrant color
scheme and fanciful portraits. Estimate: $4,000/6,000.
- Exceptional copy of The
Cat in the Hat, first edition, first printing in the original
dust jacket, the most famous of the many books by Dr. Seuss and the first
specifically targeted for beginning readers. Estimate: $4,000/6,000.
- Very rare Russian language edition of The International Jew,
Henry Ford's infamous series of anti-Semitic articles demonizing the
Jewish people, published in Berlin in 1925. Estimate: $4,000/6,000.
- The rare second illustrated edition of the Martin
Luther translation into German of the Bible, published in Wittemberg in
1576. Estimate: $3,000/5,000.
- The Art of Fair Building, 1675, the second edition in English of Pierre Le
Muet's notable work, with 79 copperplates of architectural plans, drawings,
etc. Estimate: $3,000/5,000.
- "Autumn Moon at Tama River," original color
woodblock print by Hiroshige, the first printing, c.1837-38, of this
ukiyo-e print from the series Eight
Views of the Environs of Edo. Estimate: $2,000/3,000.
Each lot illustrated in the online version of the catalogue.
Bid directly from the site. Now available in the Bid Live Now section
Bid directly from the site. Now available in the Bid Live Now section
Please
visit our website to view Over 600 lots in a wide variety of themes, genres,
character and type, from early printed books to lovely livres d'artiste, original
paintings and prints to golfing memorabilia, with illustrated books, fine
bindings, old Bibles, landmarks of science, manuscripts and autograph letters,
scarce ephemera, fine press books, children's books, and much more.
———————————
Dickens was not Fooled
On
show at Peter Harrington’s bookshop in Dover Street, London in
its original
presentation binding and priced at £275,000 is A Tale of Two Cities, inscribed to George
Eliot by Charles Dickens. This is part of a wider correspondence between the
two authors where Dickens was intrigued enough to ask if he was in fact a she
in a letter.
Dickens had in fact read one of Eliot’s novels and wrote: “I have observed what seem to be to be such womanly touches, in those moving fictions, that the assurance on the title-page is insufficient to satisfy me, even now. If they originated with no woman, I believe that no man ever before had the art of making himself, mentally, so like a woman, since the world began.”
The inscription inside the first-edition copy reads: “Charles Dickens, To George Eliot, with high admiration and regard. December, 1859.”
Dickens had in fact read one of Eliot’s novels and wrote: “I have observed what seem to be to be such womanly touches, in those moving fictions, that the assurance on the title-page is insufficient to satisfy me, even now. If they originated with no woman, I believe that no man ever before had the art of making himself, mentally, so like a woman, since the world began.”
The inscription inside the first-edition copy reads: “Charles Dickens, To George Eliot, with high admiration and regard. December, 1859.”
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Ibookcollector © is published by Rivendale Press.
Ibookcollector © is published by Rivendale Press.
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