Showing posts with label Chromolithography. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Chromolithography. Show all posts

Thursday, May 31, 2012

Europe's Favorite Nineteenth Century Turkish Delight

By Stephen J. Gertz


Harem scene.

In 1842, Amadeo Preziosi (1816-1882),  from a noble and wealthy Maltese  family  and a graduate of the Paris Academy of Fine Arts, packed up his paints and brushes and journeyed from Malta to Istanbul, the Gateway to the East and capitol of the Ottoman Empire.

Coffee House.

The lure of the Orient was no less compelling to Preziosi than it was for Eugene Delacroix, Alexandre Decamps,  Eugene Fromentin, and many other painters. European artists, writers, scholars and the simply curious few, entranced by the city's exotic reputation, flocked there. Istanbul was a theme park for tourists, right on Europe's doorstep.

In Sweet Waters, a park along the Bosphorus.

Most artists stayed for a few months, or perhaps a few years, to immerse themselves in Istanbul's vivid daily life, customs, people and architecture. Preziosi visited and never left. He married a Turkish woman of Greek extraction, had four children, and lived comfortably, with a vacation home in the countryside.

In a Bazaar.

Though known for his private commisisons he introduced his Istanbul to the European public at large with his extravagantly beautiful series of chromolithographs Stamboul Souvenir d'Orient (Lemercier, 1858, reissued by Lemercier in 1861, and published in a second edition by Lemercier in 1865). Containing twenty-eight stunning plates, a fine copy of the second edition has just some into the marketplace.

Turkish Ladies Walking.

Preziosi "notes in his memoirs that his original intention had been to stay for two years, but so absorbed did he become in the sights and bewitching atmosphere of this city that it held him like a magnet, and he hardly noticed the passing of the years. Sketchbook under arm he wandered its streets, caught up in an increasing love for the city and its people. Istanbul returned Preziosi’s affection, and he was welcomed everywhere, in tiny back street shops, coffee houses, hamams (Turkish baths), and places of worship. In his canvases he immortalised the humdrum sights of daily life: a street seller, a dancing bear, a woman filling her water jar at a street fountain. Through his eyes we also see the blue waters of the Bosphorus with caiques gliding along, pavilions and palaces. His paintings sold well among local and foreign customers alike, who hung them on the walls of their grand houses and palaces" (A Maltese Painter Of Istanbul Scenes: Amadeo Preziosi).

Mevlevi Dervish.

French art historian and critic Victor Champier (1851-1929), in his Forward to the third edition, retitled  Stamboul, Moeurs et Costumes (Canson: 1883), wrote of Preziosi and Istanbul:

"Istanbul… This word sounds to the ear like a battle cry or a song of victory. Istanbul is the name given by the Turks to this glorious city, once known as Byzantium and today also as Constantinople. It is Istanbul, with its winding streets, markets, picturesque excursion places and curious sights, whose life and true substance Monsieur Amadeo Preziosi presents to us in his watercolours. Certainly one rarely encounters an artist who has left his homeland at a young age, and made a home for himself in the bosom of a civilization little known even in Europe. This is an artist whose eyes have been rinsed in the splendid light of the Orient, enabling him to capture the depth of its meaning and enjoy the happiness of sensing the strength and capacity of its spirit."

Druggist's Shop.

From the 15th through the 18th centuries, Turquerie was an Orientalist style imitative of Turkish culture and art. Increased diplomatic and commercial ties to the Ottoman Empire, Turkey its center, created a passionate fascination with Eastern exoticism. An English translation of The Arabian Nights appeared in 1706 and stoked the fire. By the nineteenth century, Romantic Orientalism had developed into a distinct literary genre with writers such as Coleridge, Byron, and Shelley captivated by the  region's perceived sensuous rhythms and color. The mysteries of veiled women and the harem stirred the senses. Europe's fascination with the Orient would continue to grow throughout the century.


Given this attraction, with its distinct sensual undercurrent, which Preziosi so keenly captured in his portraits of the women of Istanbul (featured in over half of the chomolithographs), it is no surprise that a genre of erotic literature developed to satisfy the European man's desire to learn what went on behind the harem's doors when the veils were removed. Thus The Lustful Turk (1828) and  A Night in a Moorish Harem (c. 1900), bookends to the height of Europe's fascination and grand amour for the exotic Orient and the Muslim world.

The West's distorted perspective of the Orient wrought by the Romantics haunts our relations with the East to this day.
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PREZIOSI, [Amadeo]. Stamboul. Souvenir D'Orient. Paris: Imp. Lemercier, 1865. Second edition. Folio. Tinted pictorial title page, engraved list of plates, twenty-eight (28) chromolithographed plates mounted on card.

Bobins III, 1098. Blackmer 1353. Cf. Atabey 999 (1861). Cf. Colas 2422 (1858). Cf. Lipperheide 1440 (1858, 1861).
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Images courtesy of Shapero Rare Books, currently offering this item, with our thanks.
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Thursday, October 20, 2011

The Children's Circus & Menagerie Comes to Town (1882)

by Stephen J. Gertz

Ladies and gentlemen and children of all ages, now draw your attention to the center ring and feast your eyes upon a beautifully produced circus book for children and a minor masterpiece of chromolithography published in 1882.


Cue the calliope, the Children's Circus and Menagerie Picture Book is here.


Let the Grand Procession begin!


See large, strange, flightless birds pull the magnificent coach of the Pet of the Arena!


Witness Leo the Flying Lion soar while his brother, Leonard, eats the last lion tamer to trespass!


Espy the consequences when horses play with matches, and the equestrian-infatuated young girls who enable them!


Apprehend classical chicks racing chariots, Nikes without wings!

The Juggler.

Behold the Eighth Wonder of the Modern World, Mandrake the Amazing Multi-Tasker!

Shot out of a cannon.

Get an eyeful of unregulated firearms and the women who love them!

Circus horse act.

Get a load of Cassandra the Flying Hatton and her death-defying gymnastic feats upon horseback while a clown in a tutu and toe-shoes atop a kosher dill pickle barrel mugs for the audience!

Or, just sit back and enjoy a book that rarely comes into the marketplace in decent condition. Children read and played with this book until it turned to smithereens.

Its illustrator, Robert Talbot Kelly (1861-1934), was an English orientalist landscape and genre painter, author and illustrator known primarily for his illustrations to books on Egypt and Burma for A&C Black. and for Slatin's Fire and Sword in the Sudan (1896).
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[BALMIRE, Joseph L. (editor) and Robert Talbot Kelly (artist)]. The Children’s Circus and Menagerie Picture Book. London: George Routledge & Sons, (1882). First edition. Small folio (10 x 13 in; 260 x 330 mm). 64 pp. Fifteen chromolithographed plates (two double-page) "drawn on stone & printed in colours" by Wemple & Co. of New York, miscellaneous b&w plates. Pictorial cloth.

Osborne Collection of Early Children's Books 1476-1910, p. 625.
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Images courtesy of the Toronto Public Library online.
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Wednesday, September 14, 2011

Say Hello to the First Talking Book

by Stephen J. Gertz


No one likes a book that talks back:

"Dog-ear my leaves and die!"

"How'd y'like it if I scribbled in your margins?"

"You said you couldn't put me down. Flat-leaver!"

Perhaps I should adjust my meds.

Be that as it may, all books speak to us on some level. It doesn't get more basic, however, than that found in The Speaking Picture Book, a movable book considered to be the first of its kind and magnificent.

"The piece de resistance of any collection of movables, or toy-books for that matter, is surely The Speaking Picture Book (c. 1893), an item of such charm and fascination that even the most blasé modern parents or their children can hardly fail to be captivated by it. Stored in an ordinary brown cardboard box, this 'Special Book with Picture, Rhyme and Sound for Little People' is a delight to handle, eye-catching in appearance, and quite remarkably authentic in the sounds it produces.


"The book, manufactured in Nuremberg by a firm unknown to most experts, is yet another example of German ingenuity. In addition to the main German edition, there were also translations of the text into English, French, and Spanish. In Britain, H. Grevel & Co, who had scooped the market with the Meggendorfer titles, handled this new masterpiece with similar success, while the famous New York toy shop, F.A.O. Schwartz, cornered the American trade.

Internal mechanism.

"…At the front of the book are eight full-page colour illustrations, each faced by a page of text in verse. At the side of each of these is a small arrow pointing at one of the nine little ivory tassels which are attached by strings through the side of the book to the mechanism concealed inside.

Mama and Papa.

 "The titles of the pictures are self-explanatory: a cock, donkey, lamb, some birds, a cow, cuckoo, goat, and Mama and Papa. As the respective tassels are pulled out, and then allowed to slide back, they operate different miniature bellows inside which produce the sound of a cock crowing, the birds chirping, and so on, in a most life-like sound which issues from the gilded wooden top and bottom edges of the book. Perhaps the greatest triumph of all is the last 'speaking picture' when two tassels produce the sound of children crying for their Mama and Papa.

"Copies of these remarkable books which have survived youthful hands, damp and dust, not to mention the ravages of time, are now justifiably worth hundreds of pounds on the rare occasions when they come up for sale" (Haining, Movable Books An Illustrated History, pp. 136-137).

The first edition in English was published (and manufactured?) by Theodore Brand, this moveable's inventor, of whom little is known. Based in Sonneberg (Thüringen), Germany, on October 15, 1879 he filed an application with the British Patent Office to patent "a speaking picture-book"' that was originally patented in Germany December 3, 1878 (Commissioners of Patents' Journal, January 27, 1880, p. 286, item #223,108).

An amazingly fine and fully functional copy has just come to market. If movable books move you The Speaking Picture Book will speak your language (Urdu, Swahili, and Tagalog iffy).

Just don't talk back to it. It's sensitive and easily cries. Nobody likes a lachrymose book; damp stains are an ever present danger.  And beware: it'll tug at your heartstrings when you pull the cord for Mama and Papa, turning from Moo-Moo to Boo-Hoo on a dime. 'Just what everyone needs,  emotionally labile literature. It's a tear-jerker in a book that's a box. But what a box.
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[MOVABLE BOOK]. The Speaking Picture Book. A Special Book with Picture, Rhyme and Sound for Little People. New York: F.A.O. Schwartz, n.d.  [c.1893-95]. Sixteenth edition. Folio (298 x 225 mm). Book-form box, enclosing nine printed leaves. Eight chromolithographed plates. Original red cloth. Upper board elaborately color decorated. Gilt title to spine. Nine pull-cords to fore-edge. All edges gilt. In original storage box. Made in Germany.
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Title page and external images courtesy of Peter Harrington Rare Books, currently offering this title, with our thanks.

Image of interior mechanical works courtesy of FlickR, with thanks.
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Monday, May 23, 2011

A Pop-Up Book of "Exquisite, Sentimental Beauty"

by Stephen J. Gertz

The Land of Long Ago (1898).

It's rare when  a 113 year old pop-up book in pristine condition lands my desk. It's even rarer when a 113 year old pop-up book in pristine condition lands on my desk, jumps into my lap, and opens to reveal  eye-popping pop-up tableaus that dazzle with the quality of their color printing, and warm with their lovely vintage charm.

Beauty and the Beast.

I am beholding what is regarded as among the most beautiful achievements of the genre, an Ernest Nister production.



Mister Nister was a printer and publisher based in Nuremberg, Germany. He established a London office in 1888 under the direction of the writer Robert Ellice Mack and, specializing in children's literature, soon issued pop-up, movable, transformation, and panorama books, as well as standard children's fare, operating until c. 1917.

The Old Woman Who Lived in a Shoe.

"Though primarily involved with his successful color-printing business, publisher and printer Ernest Nister (1842-1909) specialized in colored toy and movable picture books. Operating in both Nuremberg and London in the 1890s, this entrepreneur developed a distinctive style firmly lodged within nineteenth-century aesthetics.




"However, Nister's images outshine those of his contemporaries by epitomizing an exquisite, sentimental beauty. His artistic vision guides all the works regardless of pop-up mechanics and even of illustrator. In fact, we are uncertain to what extent Nister contributed his own illustrations to these books. In many cases, he imposed his own monogram on images in his imprint, dropping the artist's signature in the course of the production process."

Puss In Boots.

Detail: Note the finely granulated texture to the print, the hallmark of lithography.

"Nister used a wide range of movable techniques to intrigue children. The popular late nineteenth-century blind format of Changing Pictures, for example, capitalizes on a child's fascination with peek-a-boo. We are surprised to find Jack climbing the beanstalk behind Little Bo-Peep. Nister also animates his pages with simple slats, dimensional scenes, and remarkable pinwheel mechanics. With these basic paper tools, he creates fantastic transformations.

Sleeping Beauty.


"The 'long ago' of [The Land of Long Ago] speaks to a 'never never' land of fairy tales. The casting of such stories into a remote historical past cuts them loose from any connection to reality" (University of Virginia, Pop Goes the Page: Movable and Mechanical Books from the Brenda Forman Collection).

Little Red Riding Hood.

The pop-up plates were printed via chromolithography, a multi-color printing process originally developed in Germany in the nineteenth century that used heavy oil-based inks, devoted one stone for each color, and layered the colors to achieve a rich, textured effect that is easily confused with an actual oil painting, unless you look very closely and observe the finely granulated imprint of the stone's surface upon the paper.


Some objected to chromolithography because it could reproduce a painting so well as to be deceptive. But artists were pleased; the process was the finest for reproducing their original color images as accurately as possible.

Cinderella.
Little is known about the artist, E[velyn] Stuart Hardy (b. 1870). She was the sister of illustrator Paul Hardy, a writer and illustrator of children's books in color and black and white, military subjects in black and white, and various editions of English classics, including Jane Eyre.

The books of Ernest Nister were extremely popular in America, published, heavily promoted, and sold by E.P. Dutton. Edward Dutton kept a close eye on publishing trends in Europe and, recognizing their profit potential, contracted with Nister to exclusively distribute and sell his books in the United States.


High production values and comely imagery withstanding, what remains most impressive about this copy is that it was never, apparently,  enjoyed by the child it was originally designed for; an untouched copy sitting under someone's bed or in their closet for over a century. Movables of this vintage are generally found in various stages of destruction; the books were routinely played with by kids until they ended life as confetti  (the books, not the children).
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[POP-UP BOOK]. WEEDON, L.L. HARDY, E. Stuart (illustr.). The Land of Long Ago. A Visit to Fairyland with Humpty Dumpty. With Pen-and-Ink Illustrations by E. Stuart Hardy. London - New York: Ernest Nister - E.P. Dutton, n.d. [1898].

First edition. Oblong quarto. Six chromolithographed pop-up plates. Black and white text illustrations throughout.

Quarter red cloth over full color pictorial boards.
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Images courtesy of David Brass Rare Books, with our thanks.
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Of related interest:

Waldo Hunt and Pop-Up Books: A Brief Overview.

Movable Books Pop-Up at the Smithsonian.
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Tuesday, January 4, 2011

Fun-O-Rama with Late 19th Century Cycloramas

Low-tech home theater entertainment was all the rage in the late 19th century.

by Stephen J. Gertz


Voyage en Afrique. Cyclorama en 22 tabeaux.
Paris, c. 1890 - 1900.
39 x 33 x 10 cm.
Manual crank at rear of box.

In the second half of the nineteenth century the development of photography and animated imagery stimulated the creativity of game and toy makers. With Magic lanterns, dioramas, shadow theaters, praxinoscopes, phenakistiscopes, polyoramas panoptiques providing inspiration all manner of optical amusements fabricated with  paper, cardboard,  and wood, and operated with varying degrees of simple mechanics, were offered as home entertainment for children and adults to enjoy.

Cyclorama boxes were amongst the most spectacular of these during the era, featuring magnificent, often chromolithographed scenes on a single sheet of paper mounted on a spool with a mechanical crank that when manually turned unrolled the scenes, either vertically or horizontally, each appearing behind a static, chromolithographed proscenium which, in some examples, had fold-out wings that when opened up simulated a full, immersive theatrical  view.

Voyage en Afrique with extended wings.

The typical cyclorama box of the period featured subject matter involving exotic travels, fantastical or actual, always curious, and definitely outside of the average person's experience. Novelty was the overarching theme.


DACIER, Mauclair (editor). Voyage autour du monde
par un petit Français. Paris, 1905.
50.5 x 40.5 x 8.3 cm.
Twenty-two tableaux.
Note crank at lower left.



These rare cycloramas, each surviving in incredibly fine condition - most unusual with paper-built amusements that were heavily used - are being offered by Paris-based Librairie Thierry Corcelle, a specialist in rare books, games, and toys, in Catalogue No. 52, Winter 2010 - 1011.

Un Voyage au fond de la mer.
Paris: L. Saussine, Editeur, 1890.
50 x 38 x 9.5 cm.
Inspired by Jules Verne's
20,000 Leagues Under the Sea.
Cranks at left top and bottom.



Amongst the catalogue's other thirty-three "marvels to drive lovers of such wild" is a set of late-nineteenth century marionettes, each made in Sicily, Naples, Liège, or Brussels. In a stroke of delightfully sly and subversive humor or otherwise, Corcelle features one of the two Orlando furioso marionettes on the catalogue's rear wrapper.

("Succhiare me cazzo, stronzo!")

Furious, Orlando appears to sharply riposte an offense with an obscene gesture, an unintentional happy accident the result of the loss of the mad Italian cavaliere's accompanying sword.

For Booktryst readers who are devoted foodies Corcelle is making a gastronomic offer that can't be refused:

LORIOUX, Felix. Project menu (1830).
Watercolor heightened with gold, 20 x 18 cm.

Bon amusement et appétit à Booktryst loyalistes!
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All images courtesy of Thierry Corcelle, with our thanks.
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