Rare Books Special List for New York Antiquarian Book Fair April 11 – 14, 2013

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Rare Books Special List for New York Antiquarian Book Fair April 11 – 14, 2013 Priscilla Juvelis – Rare Books Special List for New York Antiquarian Book Fair April 11 – 14, 2013 Architecture & Photography 1. Bickham, George. The beauties of Stow: or a description of pages a bit age toned at top edge but no the pleasant seat and noble gardens of the Right Honourable Lord spotting or foxing and the images clean Viscount Cobham. With above Thirty Designs, or drawings, and beautiful on vellum paper, a quite engraved on Copper-Plates, of each particular Building. London: collectable copy of a key book in early photography. E. Owen for George Bickham, M.DCC.L [1750]. $5,500 P. H. Emerson (1856-1936), born First edition complete with all 30 copperplate engravings of the gardens in Cuba to an American father and at Stow[e]. Page size: 3-7/8 x 6-½ inches; 67pp. + 3 pp. ads for other books British mother, earned a medical de- printed for George Bickham. Bound: brown calf with paneled spine, gree at Clare College, Cambridge. A lacking label on second panel, double gilt rule along all edges of front and keen ornithologist, he bought his first back panel, early ownership signatures on front pastedown, front cover camera to be used as a tool on bird- detached, pages a bit sunned and brittle but no foxing watching trips. He was involved in the at all, leaf F3 with ½ inch tear at fore edge, housed in formation of the Camera Club of Lon- marbled paper over boards slipcase with title printed don and soon after abandoned his ca- on brown leather label (probably originally on spine). reer as a surgeon to become a A quite good copy of an extremely scarce book. photographer and writer. Influenced American Book Prices Current shows no copies of by naturalistic French painting, his books reflect this regard for the out- doors. His first album of photographs was published in 1886 and he followed this with seven more books of photographs. MARSH LEAVES, the last of the East Anglian fenlands series, is considered his best. Emerson printed the photographs himself, using photogravure. In THE TRUTHFUL LENS, exhibition catalogue and key survey published The Grolier Club, Emerson’s images are described thus, “These studies of softly rendered details from nature are ‘THE CULMINATION OF EMERSON’S ARTIS- TIC DEVELOPMENT’ (Grolier). ‘Certainly, the 16 photo-etchings take his art this 1750 edition being sold at auction; only the 1753 edition is listed with to where it could probably appearances in 2006 and 2003. OCLC lists only 13 copies of this first go no further, and as a fusion edition. of text and imagery the book Stowe Gardens is considered one of the most remarkable creations of is entirely successful... It is Georgian England. It has evolved from an English Baroque garden into a one of the most beautiful pioneering landscape park, now part of the National Trust. The handsome books about isolation and engravings in THE BEAUTIES OF STOW illustrate the garden’s famous solitude, perhaps death, ever buildings by John Vanburgh, William Kent, and James Gibbs and pastoral made, and Emerson’s spare, views designed by gardeners Charles Bridgeman followed by Lancelot evocative pictures were sel- ‘Capability’ Brown. (10626) dom equalled by the later Pictorialists’ (The Photobook). Grolier, The Truthful Lens 54; The 2. Emerson, P[eter] H[enry]. Marsh Leaves with Sixteen Photo- Photobook, Vol. I, p.72. (10628) Etchings from Plates Taken by the Author. London: David Nutt in The Strand, 1895. $10,500 3. Gibbs, James. Bibliotheca Radcliviana: or, a Short Description First edition, one of 300 copies. Page size: 7-1/8 x 11-¼ inches; 165pp; + of the Radcliffe Library, at Oxford. Containing Its several Plans, 16 original photogravures Uprights, Sections, and Ornaments, On Twenty three Copper each with printed tissue Plates, neatly engraved engraved, With the Explanation of each guards. Bound: original publisher’s white pictoral Plate. London: Printed for the Author, MDCCXLVII 1747). $1,750 cloth printed in black with First edition, complete with 2 engraved portraits of John Radcliffe and black sheep spine, title, au- James Gibbs by Fourdrinier after Kneller, and 21 engraved plates of the thor, and publisher stamped building. Folio, 12pp; +23 plates, handsomely rebound in ¾ tan calf and in gold gilt on spine, black marbled paper over boards, blind tooling at foredge and tips in tiny floral ribbon marker, spine rubbed, swag, red morocco label on front panel with title and author and date gilt covers soiled as are top and stamped within rule of same floral swag, here tooled in gilt; early ownership fore edges, corners bumped, signature on titlepage, ex-library with faint round stamp on title page about Priscilla Juvelis, Inc. (207) 967-0909 [email protected] 1 inch in diameter, stamp re- from the collection of the Earl of Pembroke, Wilton House, Wilts. only a peated at bottom of plate XXI, few miles from Longford Castle, then to Quaritch, then to private collector minor bit of soiling to edges, in the U.S. (10632) else a nice crisp, clean, full margined, complete copy and With Ex-Libris of Isaac Ware scarce thus. The Radcliffe Camera, 5. Ware, Isaac. The Plans, elevations, and sections, chimney- designed by James Gibbs was pieces, and ceilings of Houghton in Norfolk, the seat of the Rt. built in 1737-1749 and is the Honourable Sr. Robert Walpole, First Lord Commissioner of the earliest example in England of a circular library. James Gibbs Treasury, Chancellor of the Exchequer, and Knt. of the Most Noble (1682-1754) born in Scotland and trained in Rome, was one of Britain’s Order of the Garter. London: I. Ware, 1735. $7,500 most influential architects. Along with this iconic building at Oxford First edition, folio, 20-¼ x 14 inches, 4pp. including engraved titlepage, + University, he is noted for designing St. Martin-in-the-Fields. While his 35 numbered copper-engraved plates on 27 sheets, 9 of which are double- architectural style did incorporate Palladian elements, he was most page, engravings by Fourdrinier after drawings by Isaac Ware. Bound: influenced by the work of Sir Christopher Wren. This book is a handsome contemporary calf, raised bands, red morocco label with title stamped in documentation of his last major work in which the architect / author details gilt on spine, bordered in a list all the craftsmen employed in the spherical building’s construction. by seven tooled gilt or- (10630) naments within raised bands, each ornament Triangular House Designs 1 x ½ inch of stylized flower within four leaves, gilt double-rule 4. Jacobsen, Theodore. Plans, elevation and section of a borders on both pan- triangular house. London: ca. 1740. $6,000 els, engraved ex-libris Four engraved plates by Fourdrinier, the elevation and section plan (plates of I. Ware (the author / 1 and 2 and 3) measuring 14-3/8 x 20-¾ inches, plate 4, a slightly smaller publisher) on verso of plan measures 14-3/8 x 20 inches; The section plate has two old repaired titlepage, binding marginal tears and is rumpled on left edge, there are some frayed edges on rebacked with some strengthening to corners, some pages soiled, browned, the other plates, however all impressions are clean with large margins, a few small marginal tears, still a complete collectable copy, with the ex- housed in archival folders and all four in grey archival library box. Three libris of Isaac Ware, the author / publisher. of the plates have captions in English and Italian. The fourth plate, an Isaac Ware (1704-1766) was an English architect and translator of the alternative ground plan, has an English caption only. Theodore Jacobsen books of Italian architect, Andrea Palladio. In 1721 he was apprenticed to (1686-1772), heir to his brother Sir Jacob Jacobsen who died in 1735, was architect Thomas Ripley, while continuing in the aesthetic sphere of Lord a prosperous businessman running the London Steelyard on behalf of the Burlington from whos patronage and influence he benefited. Gaining work Hanseatic merchants. He spent much of his time on architectural projects, from private patrons, he built a number of country houses, including including his most important work, the Foundling Hospital, London, and Wrotham Park for Admiral John Byng and Clifton Hill House for Paul the main quadrangle of Trinity College Dublin. He is credited with the Fisher. design of East India House, among other important London buildings. He This book details the architectural plans by Colin Campbell, James seems to have been responsible for many public buildings over a thirty year Gibbs for the exteriors, and William Kent for the interiors, for Houghton period. His designs were executed by professional surveyors and builders. Hall, built for Britain’s first prime minister, Sir Robert Walpole. The triangular house designs may have been inspired by the remod- Houghton Hall is considered one of the key neo-Palladian buildings eling of Longford Castle (starting 1737) for Sir Jacob Bouverie. a Vice- in England. Three years after the publication of this book, he published his President of the Foundling Hospital in 1740-41 for whom the 1742 own translation of Palladio’s Four Books of Architecture, considered the Hogarth portrait of Theodore Jacobsen may have been done. (See descrip- best translation for the next 100+ years. (10631) tion of portrait now in the collection of Oberlin College’s Allen Memorial Art Museum.) In this portrait, Theodore Jacobsen is portrayed holding one of the images of the triangular house offered in this suite of engravings. This Terms of Sale: All items are subject to prior sale. Payment should is a rare set. One of accompany order unless credit has been established. Mastercard and Visa the original copper- accepted.
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