Yearly Archives: 2014

Souvenir de l’exposition universelle, 1867

souvenir fan
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The Exposition universelle opened in Paris on April 1 and continued until the end of October 1867. One of the many souvenirs the nine million visitors could bring home was a fan printed with the plan of the fair’s buildings and gardens. The image was wood-engraved by the French printer Charles Maurand (1824-1904), who worked primarily for L’Univers Illustré (1875) and Le Monde Illustré (Paris: Imp. de la Librairie Nouvelle, 1857-1948). Recap Oversize 0904.648q.

Note below at scene showing the men and woman cutting and assembling the fans in one of the many exhibit halls.
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See also: Henri de Parville (1838-1909), L’Exposition universelle de 1867: guide de l’exposant et du visiteur: avec les documents officiels, un plan et une vue de l’Exposition (Paris; Londres: Librairie de L. Hachette et Cie, 1866). Rare Books (Ex) 2012-0322N

Frezouls. Plan général du Palais et du parc de l’Exposition universelle de 1867 [map] par Frezouls, architecte, et Bousquel, ingénieur civil (Paris: Imp. Lith. Briet & Perrée, [1867]) Click here to: See the map. Rare Books: Historic Maps Collection (MAP) HMC01.4510

 

John Wilkes Booth altered

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The charismatic stage actor John Wilkes Booth (1838-1865) had his portrait made by various photography studios during the 1860s. Thanks to Donald Farren, Class of 1958, the Graphic Arts Collection has acquired two of these carte-de-visite portraits. The earlier view was taken around 1863 by the photographer Charles Deforest Fredricks (1823-1894), whose elegant studio on lower Broadway, opposite the Metropolitan Hotel, was a destination for celebrities and politicians. Booth’s portraits were widely distributed, such as the one seen here distributed by E. Fehrenback in London.

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After the assassination of Abraham Lincoln on 15 April 1865, there was a succession of altered photographs transforming the handsome actor into a villain. Using double exposures, knives, guns, fellow conspirators, and other devious attributes were added to Booth’s portraits. Our CDV, titled on the verso “J. Wilkes Booth, The Assassin,” was published by the New York firm of Macoy & Herwig. A devil has been added on the right, whispering into Booth’s ear.
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Las Antillas Letradas by Antonio Martorell

Las Antillas LetradasPosted with thanks to Fernando Acosta Rodriguez, Librarian for Latin American Studies

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Princeton’s Graphic Arts Collection is delighted to announce that it has acquired the first copy of Puerto Rican graphic artist Antonio Martorell’s most recent work, Las Antillas Letradas.  Combining to create a massive map of the Antilles when placed in alphabetical order, the 27 prints in the portfolio juxtapose digital prints originating in a 19th century map, texts of the selected authors in their original languages, and woodcuts of the letters of the alphabet and the corresponding names and faces of the letrados or lettered authors.

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Our islands spread over the Caribbean Sea as a deck of cards fanned out on a game table.  Perilous is our order, and an alphabet pretending to be literary does not have to obey in its creation the rules of dictionary or compass. 

The increasingly stingy Spanish alphabet, dispensing with the beloved “Chs” and “Lls”, has hindered an already tormenting and exclusionary selection, forcing me to unravel names and surnames in order to find the nearly drowned letter and rescue it from the wreck of oblivion.  I have dared to transform an X into a W in an effort to include voices from the main literary languages of our islands, Spanish, English and French.

In its elaboration, the map of the Antilles configured itself as echo of a colorful patchwork quilt or of nautical pennants crossing land and sea borders without visa or passport.  Anchored on words, provoking images, echoes of dreams and nightmares, our letters are not so different from our islands, subject to hurricanes and earthquakes, to invasions and exiles, saved from capsizing by their irrepressible will to be and to make.” –Antonio Martorell

 

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Las Antillas Letradas was printed in 2014 on Okawara paper in a Hewlett Packard printer at the Playa de Ponce Workshop in Puerto Rico with the assistance of Milton Ramírez.  The edition consists of 100 numbered copies signed by Antonio Martorell.

 

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Antonio Martorell, Las Antillas Letradas, 2014. 27 multi-media prints. Copy 1/100. Graphic Arts Collection GAX2014- in process. Purchased with funds provided by the Program in Latin American Studies.
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Bridge on the Delaware at Trenton, New Jersey

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William Constable (1783-1861, active in the United States 1806-1808), Bridge on the Delaware at Trenton, New Jersey, September 10, 1807. Pencil and wash drawing. Gift of Leonard L. Milberg, Class of 1953. Graphic Arts Collection GC023

Twenty-three year old William Constable (1783-1861) arrived in the United States at the end of June 1806 and spent the summer sketching the waterfalls of New Jersey and New York. For the next two years, he and his brother Daniel traveled across the United States with a dog named Benjamin Franklin.

Constable kept a series of sketchbooks, recording the exact date and location that he painted. Thanks to this, we know he circled back to New Jersey the second year to create this view of the Trenton bridge, only in its second year of operation. The innovative structure was the first bridge across the Delaware and of particular interest to Constable, who returned to England to become a civil engineer and surveyor.

His career took a turn in 1841, when Constable taught himself to make daguerreotypes and opened the first photographic portrait studio in Brighton. To read more about his years in the United States, see Early topographical views of North America by William Constable (1783-1861) (New York, N.Y.: Wunderlich, 1984). Graphic Arts Collection (GA) 2004-0712N

Constable also created the view below of the Mill at Parkman Town, on the Head Water of Grand River in 1806.

constable millWilliam Constable (1783-1861), Mill at Parkman Town on the Headwater of Grand River Emptying into Lake Erie-New Connecticut State Ohio, October 31, 1806. Watercolor. Gift of Leonard L. Milberg, Class of 1953. Graphic Arts Collection GC023

Toover-Schijf

phenikistoscope2A trade card for the Amsterdam microscope salesman Abraham van Emden (1794-1860) described him as a physical, mathematical, and optical instrument maker. He also handled thermometers, barometers, lenses, compasses, and other scientific devices.

In the 1830s, van Emden manufactured Toover-schijf [magic or enchanted disks], an early hand-held variation of the phenakistoscope. The Graphic Arts Collection recently acquired one of his marbled boxes of toover-schijf, which includes 9 lithographic disks with sequential images, one guide disc with viewing slots, and a wood handle. Standing in front of a mirror, the user spins the disk while looking through the moving slots and sees a moving image.

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According to van Emden, “one will be surprised by the floating enchantment, bringing to the eye of the beholders, the alternating movement of the figures.” On most, there are figurative images on one side and geometric on the other, with a separate sequence around the center hole.

The invention of the fantascope or phenakistoscope is usually credited to Joseph Plateau (1801-1883), taking the name from the Greek word phenakizein, meaning to deceive or cheat. The eye of the viewer is deceived into thinking it sees a moving image. The Costen Children’s Library has one of Plateau’s devices: Joseph Antoine Ferdinand Plateau (1801-1883), Fantascope invented by Prof. Plateau (London: Ackermann, [1833]). CTSN Opticals 2282.

See also: Peter de Clercq in A History of Science in the Netherlands (Leiden; Boston: Brill, 1999). Firestone Library (F) Q127.N2 H58 1999
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John William Hill’s Boston

hill boston drawingJohn William Hill (1812-1879), Boston, 1853. Watercolor on paper. Graphic Arts Collection GA 2013.00858. Gift of Leonard L. Milberg, Class of 1953.

 

In 2002, Leonard L. Millberg, Class of 1953, donated a group of drawings and watercolors to the Princeton University Art Museum and to the Graphic Arts Collection in Firestone Library. Among the twenty-three works were a pair by the American artist John William Hill (1812-1879), the son of the British aquatintist John Hill (1799–1836). Thanks to Mr. Milberg, the Graphic Arts Collection has a number of J.W. Hill’s most important birds-eye view cityscapes, several of which have already been posted.

The first work [seen above] is a finished watercolor on a grand scale and the other [seen below], the steel engraving after that painting. Within the view of Boston and its harbor, we see the statehouse dome rising in the center background and the Bunker Hill Monument at far right.

hill boston printCharles Mottram (1807-1876) after a watercolor by John William Hill (1812-1879), Boston, 1857. Steel engraving. Graphic Arts Collection GA 2013.00859. Gift of Leonard L. Milberg, Class of 1953.

 

Although Hill painted Boston in 1853, it took four years before the engraving by Charles Mottram was published jointly between Paul & Dominic Colnaghi & Company in London, Smith Brothers & Company in New York, and F. Delarue by in Paris. Due to the enormous popularity of the print, at least one other impression was published by the firm of McQueen.

For our students, this set offers the rare opportunity to study how a painting is translated into an ink print and the amazing ability of the engraver to capture details. Even the clouds in the sky are rendered with accuracy and depth.
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To read more about Mr. Milberg’s contributions to the Princeton University Library, see: http://tinyurl.com/mkzgrvm

 

Landscape with a Concealed Message

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David Claypoole Johnston (1799-1865), Landscape with a Concealed Message, 1837. Watercolor. Gift of Leonard L. Milberg, Class of 1953. Graphic Arts Collection GC023.

David Johnston loved to have fun with art. In the landscape above, the Boston artist embedded a text inside the mountainside and invited his viewers to decode the painting, titling the work “Landscape with a Concealed Message.”

johnston, claypoole2 It might help to remove the bright colors and focus closely on the lining in the rock. [spoiler alert, the answer is at the end of this post].

Best known for his cartoons and caricatures, another of Johnston’s paintings in the Graphic Arts Collection is a satire on the innocence of childhood (seen below), originally shown at the Boston Athenaeum annual in 1829.

When the painting was exhibited at the Princeton University Art Museum in 2002, William Zimmer of the New York Times, wrote, “The show offers only one droll moment in the bunch, and it belongs to David Claypoole Johnston, who is identified as an American born in England [he was actually born in Philadelphia]. ”Precocity” is an undated watercolor in which a gaggle of rowdy children imitate the behavior of rowdy adults, including smoking. The inspiration for the work could be the drawings of Hogarth and others, in which grownups often act childishly.”johnston precocity2

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David Claypoole Johnston (1799-1865), Precocity, no date [1929]. Watercolor. Gift of Leonard L. Milberg, Class of 1953. Graphic Arts Collection GC023

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Johnston’s landscape is signed in the rocks: “D. C. Johnston, Teacher of Drawing & Painting.”

 

William Sommer, Cleveland Secessionist

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William Sommer (1867-1949), Untitled [woman reading a newspaper], 1936. Watercolor on paper.
Graphic Arts Collection GA

sommer woman reading 2In the early twentieth century, a circle of modernist artists came together in Cleveland, Ohio, including William Sommer (1867-1949), Abel Warshawsky (1883-1962), William Zorach (1887-1966), Charles Burchfield (1893-1967), and others. Each spent time outside the city, but overlapped in the early 1910s.

Born in Detroit, Sommer spent a year studying in Munich and then, worked as a lithographer for the J. Ottmann Lithographing Company in the New York City (located in the newly constructed Puck building on Houston Street) before returning to Cleveland in 1907. The younger William Zorach also found the money to travel to Paris and New York before returning to Cleveland in 1911. At that time, both Zorach and Sommer worked at the Otis Lithography Company printing circus posters during the day, saving money to paint nights and weekends.

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William Sommer (1867-1949), Portrait of a boy in a green sweater, [1937]. Oil on board. Graphic Arts Collection GA

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Warshawsky, Notre Dame, no date

Around 1910, Warshawsky returned from his sojourn to Paris, bringing with him the vibrant colors of the Fauves (Wild Beasts). Zorach and Sommer quickly incorporated this aesthetic and began exhibiting in the local department store’s Taylor Gallery. The Cleveland ‘secessionists’ came to a  climax in 1914, when they were joined by Burchfield, studying at the Cleveland Institute of Art, as well as New York artists Marsden Hartley and Max Weber.

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William Zorach, Summer, 1914. (c) Art Institute of Chicago

 

While most of the others eventually left Cleveland, Sommer chose to remain in Ohio for the rest of his life, declining offers to promote his art on a wider scale (the poet Hart Crane being his most vocal supporter).

Today, two dozen of the artist’s paintings and drawings have made their way to the Graphic Arts Collection at Princeton University given by Joseph M. Erdelac (1914-2005) in honor of William M. Milliken, Class of 1911 (1889-1978). Here are a few examples.
sommer horse and farmWilliam Sommer (1867-1949), Untitled [Man with Horse], no date. Oil on board. Graphic Arts Collection GA
sommer two horses grazingWilliam Sommer (1867-1949), Untitled [Two Horses Grazing], October 15, 1933. Watercolor on paper. Graphic Arts Collection GA
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Walter Pach

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Walter Pach (1883-1958), Self-Portrait, 1936. Watercolor on paper. Graphic Arts Collection GA 2006.02469

This self-portrait by Walter Pach (1883-1958) includes the quote, “Qui vit sans folie n’est pas si sage qu’il croit” (Who lives without folly is not as wise as he thinks) by the French writer François de La Rochefoucauld (1613-1680). It is a reminder that the American painter was fluent not only in French but also in German and Spanish, and held a college degree in art history, which set him apart from most of his contemporaries.

Pach’s father was a photographer but the young man chose instead to study painting, first under Robert Henri in New York and abroad with William Merritt Chase. His familiarity with European artists and dealers led to his seminal role in the development and hanging of the 1913 Armory Show. In fact, his notebook recording the sales of the exhibition remains one of the greatest artifacts from that time: http://www.aaa.si.edu/collections/viewer/walter-pach-notebook-recording-sales-new-york-armory-show-14188/39060.

Pach’s writing and collecting eventual overshadowed the artist’s own work. Not surprisingly, the Graphic Arts Collection has only this one drawing and five additional prints.

Albert Bellows

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Albert Fitch Bellows (1829-1883), Flowers in Field, no date. Watercolor on paper. Koke, p. 37.
Graphic Arts Collection GA 2006.02364

The obituary for American landscape painter Albert Fitch Bellows (1829-1883) noted, “The life of Mr. Bellows was a rich, beatiful harmony. Into it there entered nothing sensational, nothing spasmodic. It was simple, quiet, beautiful He won his way gradually to the front rank of the American artists and maintained his position there by the conscientious work which was characteristic of him. His paintings were not obtrusive, never aggressive, but reflected the quiet, tender, sympathitic nature of the man, and were lovable as he was lovable.” The Art Union 1, no. 1 (January 1884).

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Albert Fitch Bellows (1829-1883), Park in Stratford, Conn., no date. Watercolor on paper.
Graphic Arts Collection GA 2006. 02365

The piece goes on to recognize that he was one of the early members of the American Water-Color Society and in 1868 was elected an honorary member of the Royal Belgian Society of Water Colourists—an honor which requires the unanimous vote of the members, and which is rarely conferred upon foreigners. Also that year, Bellows wrote a treatise on watercolor painting, published under the American Society: Water-color painting. Some facts and authorities in relation to its durability (New York: Printed by the American Society of Painters in Water-Colors, 1868). A copy of this rare volume has yet to be acquired by Princeton.

Bellows was also a talented etcher and thanks in part to gifts from Sinclair Hamilton, the Graphic Arts collection holds a number of books illustrated with his prints, including:

Clarence Cook (1828-1900), A Description of the New York Central Park (New York: F.J. Huntington, 1869) Graphic Arts Collection (GAX) Oversize Hamilton 1492q

Poets and etchers, Poems by T.B. Aldrich, W.C. Bryant, R.W. Emerson, J.R. Lowell, H.W. Longfellow, J.G. Whittier; etchings by A.F. Bellows, Samuel Colman, Henry Farrer, R. Swain Gifford, J.D. Smillie (Boston: James R. Osgood and Company, 1882), Graphic Arts Collection (GAX) Oversize 2006-0920Q

Washington Irving (1783-1859), Sketch book of Geoffrey Crayon, gent. … Illustrated with one hundred and twenty engravings on wood, from original designs (New York: G. P. Putnam, 1864). Graphic Arts Collection (GAX) Oversize Hamilton 662q

The Sunnyside book, with Bryant, Curtis, Stedman. . .  and artists Wm Hart, Hows, Darley, Nast, Casilear, Smillie, Shattuck, McEntee, Belows, Huntington (New York: G. P. Putnam & Sons, 1871) Graphic Arts Collection (GAX) Oversize Hamilton 673q

Alice Cary (1820-1871), Ballads, Lyrics, and Hymns (New York: Hurd and Houghton, 1866). Graphic Arts Collection (GAX) Hamilton 797.