Category Archives: Acquisitions

new acquisitions

The Army of Cloud Cuckoo Land


The Graphic Arts Collection recently acquired a very rare set of twelve etchings and engravings with the manuscript title, Dienstversuche der Nationalgarde von Wolkenkukuksheim = Attempted Service by the National Guard of Cloud Cuckoo Land, printed by Johann Christian Benjamin Gottschick (1776-1844) after drawings by Christian Georg Andreas Oldendorp (1721-1787).

Each comic member of the guard is attempting to perform military drills. The soldier seen below carries a medicine cabinet with drawers marked with potions for battered nerves, bear fat, and a potion for pregnant women, among other medicines. His dog carries the enema syringe.

Both Gottschick and Oldendorp were based in Dresden and listed in this directory of Germany and Swiss artists, along with the set of etchings: Johann Georg Meusel, Teutsches Künstlerlexikon; oder, Verzeichniss der jetztlebenden Teutschen Künstler (Lemgo: Meyerschen Buchhandlung, 1808-1814). Marquand Rare Books N6887 .M57

Several individual sheets are held in European collections, including this hand colored etching [below] at the Stadtgeschichtliches Museum Leipzig.



Johann Christian Benjamin Gottschick (1776-1844) after drawings by Christian Georg Andreas Oldendorp (1721-1787), Dienstversuche der Nationalgarde von Wolkenkukuksheim [Attempted Service by the National Guard of Cloud Cuckoo Land] ([Dresden, for Rittnersche Kunsthandlung, 1806]). Set of 12 etchings and engravings. Graphic Arts Collection GAX 2018- in process

La découverte australe par un homme

Eighteenth-century artists, writers, and engineers shared a fascinating with travel, faster and further than humans had gone before. In 1781, James Watt perfected his Watt steam engine; William Herschel discovered a seventh planet, Uranus; and the balloonist Jean-Pierre Blanchard built an unsuccessful flying machine with four wings for the pilot to flap using levers and foot pedals. Also that year Rstif de La Bretonne (1734-1806) published La découverte australe par un homme. Michael Lynn writes,

“Numerous authors speculated about the possibility of human flight in the period before the Montgolfier brothers demonstrated their invention [1783]. These include flight as a peripheral notion in a larger work as well as books in which flight provided a convenient device for travelling to distant lands (or even the starts, moons, and planets). Cyrano de Bergerac, for example, attached bottles of dew to himself; when heated, he claimed, the dew would vaporize and rise up… Such fanciful descriptions abounded in the eighteenth century including Voltaire’s Micromégas and less well-known books such as Joseph Galien’s L’Art de naviguer dans les airs or Donimgo Gonsales’s The Man in the Moone. …Jean-Jacques Rousseau, in Le Nouveau Dédale, suggested the use of compressed air, judiciously released, would, along with a rudder, allow someone to fly through the air. Restif de la Bretonne goes back to the idea of human wings in his book, La Découverte australe. –Michael Lynn, The Sublime Invention: Ballooning in Europe, 1783–1820 (2015).

Rstif de La Bretonne (1734-1806), La découverte australe par un homme-volant, ou, Le Dédale français: nouvelle très-philosophique: suivie de la Lettre d’un singe, &ca. …. [Southern Discovery by a flying man or the French Daedalus; Very philosophical news: Followed by the Letter of a Monkey] preface by Jacques Lacarrière (Paris: Leïpsick, [1781]). Provenance: M. Lemoyne.

For many, it is the engravings by Louis Binet (1744-ca.1800), the official illustrator of Rétif, that make this tale of fantasy and fiction so appealing. Princeton has finally acquired a first edition with Binet’s wonderful plates, depictions the hero Victorin as he sweeps his beloved, Christine, up into his arms and flies her away to a place where their romance is not forbidden.

Together, they found the utopian society of Megapatagonia, where language is backwards French (the capital is Sirap) and clothes are topsy-truvy (note the shoe-hats posted further down). There are frogmen, sheepmen, hairymen, elephantmen, dogmen, snakemen, and even a few odd women. Their motto: everyone is equal. The inter-marriage between their children and various animals is reminiscent of Guillermo del Toro’s recent film The Shape of Water (2017).

Here are a few more plates designed by Binet in his Paris studio at rue Aubry le Boucher 34.

 






See also: https://translate.google.com/translate?hl=en&sl=fr&u=http://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/btv1b22000982&prev=search

North Drive Press

Founded by Matt Keegan and Lizzy Lee in 2003, the North Drive Press published its 5th and final issue in 2010. All except one of the annual publications are out-of-print and so, it was a wonderful surprise when #3 and #5 were donated to the Graphic Arts Collection by James Welling. Both issues include work by current and former Princeton University instructors.

The first issue was distributed in a brown vinyl sleeve but when Susan Barber joined the team, the container was switched to a cardboard box. Many texts are now also available online at: http://www.northdrivepress.com/home.html

“…North Drive Press has provided hundreds of artists and arts practitioners with the opportunity to produce and cheaply distribute new works in multiple form. The annual publication has included 7″ records, posters, books, ready-mades, soap, temporary tattoos, photographs, perfume, and more. Interviews and texts—a core part of the project—are conversational, experimental, and available on our website for free download.

For NDP#3 and NDP#4, Sara Greenberger Rafferty, another artist committed to collaboration and artist-produced publications, joined North Drive Press as co-editor. Sara and Matt expanded North Drive Press to include exhibition and print publishing programs—separate from but complementary to the annual NDP publication.

They organized an evening at New York’s performance venue The Kitchen, published a suite of Exquisite Corpse prints, and exhibited at NADA and various other venues.

NDP #5 is a great note to end on: we’ve helped produce a dynamic assortment of artists’ multiples, from temporary tatoos to custom-made soap; and published a varied and compelling collection of interviews, panel discussions, and texts. We hope North Drive Press has added to the long, rich history of innovative, artist-made publications, and we hope our readers will be inspired to continue to investigate the exciting possibilities that non-traditional formats have to offer.”

North Drive Press #3. Work by Matt Keegan; Sara Greenberger Rafferty; Su Barber; Domenick Ammirati; Leslie Hewitt; Fia Backström; Kelley Walker; Frank Benson; Matt Johnson; Walead Beshty; James Welling; AA Bronson; Paul O’Neill; Pablo Bronstein; Anna Craycroft; Champion Fine Art; Lauren Cornell; Lillian Schwartz; Sarah Crowner; Paulina Olowska; Shannon Ebner; Arthur Ou; Lia Gangitano; Lisa Kirk; Sabrina Gschwandtner; Dara Birnbaum; Rebecca Cleman; Ed Halter ([Brooklyn]: North Drive Press, 2006). Gift of James Welling. Graphic Arts Collection GAX 2018-in process

North Drive Press #5. Work by B’L’ing; Kenneth Goldsmith; Fia Backström; Joseph Logan; Kathrin Meyer; Andreas Bunte; Ann Craven; Amy Granat; Trinie Dalton; Francine Spiegel; Roe Ethridge; Eve Fowler; A.L. Steiner; Luke Fowler; Matt Wolf; Martha Friedman; Heather Rowe; Georg Gatsas; Norbert Möslang; Sam Gordon; B. Wurtz; Matt Hoyt; Jay Sanders; Melissa Ip; Cary Kwok; Matt Kegan; Su Barber ([Brooklyn}; North Drive Press, 2010). Gift of James Welling. Graphic Arts Collection GAX 2018- in process

Quaestio Theologica


Pièrre-Etienne Maillard, respondens. Quaestio Theologica. Quis fecit hominem ad imaginem suam? Paris: Printed by Hecquet for the Sorbonne, 1768. Large double-sheet engraved broadside, upper sheet with engraving, lower sheet with engraved cartouche containing letterpress text. Graphic Arts Collection GAX 2018- in process

The Graphic Arts Collection recently acquired two spectacular, previously unrecorded Sorbonne thesis broadsides, one from 1768 and the other 1769. Both are published by Robert Hecquet (1693-1775) announcing the defense of two doctoral dissertations at the Faculty of Theology of the Sorbonne. These monumental engravings would have been posted on the walls of the school to announce the pubic defense of the student’s thesis.

For each, two large sheets have been pasted together with the individual plate marks approximately 53 x 68 cm at the top and 54 x 70 cm at the bottom. The top print features an allegorical scene and the bottom the text of the thesis, so the size varies according the the length of the text.

The first from 1768 was created for Pièrre-Etienne Maillard, responding to the question: “Quaestio theologica: Quis fecit hominem ad imaginem suam? Gen. c. 1. v. 27 “So God created man in His own image; in the image of God He created him; male and female He created them”. The second from 1769 lists Augustin Maillard as the respondent, with his subject “Quis de tenebris nos vocavit in admirabile lumen suum? from Peter c. 2.v. 9 “But ye are a chosen generation, a royal priesthood, a holy nation, a peculiar people”.

 

We are fortunate to have the name of the artists responsible for the second engraving inscribed: “Boucher pinx,” and “Hecquet excudit,” at the bottom of the top sheet. This refers to the extraordinarily talented painter and printmaker François Boucher (1703-1770), who was to the end of his illustrious career. Only four years earlier, he had been appointed to the two highest positions in the French arts establishment: first painter to the king and director of the Royal Academy.

Unfortunately, the inscription on the 1768 engraving is cut-off: “à Paris chez Hecquet place de Cambray à l’Image St. Maur.” One might assume it is also the work of Boucher, but there is no proof.


In her paper “Disputatio and Dedication: Seventeenth-century thesis prints in the southern Low Countries,” Gwendoline de Mûelenaere writes,

“In early modern institutions of higher education, academic dissertations to be defended
in public were published in the form of decorated broadsheets summarising the student’s conclusions. The aim of these engraved posters was mainly to advertise the disputation and to introduce the theses in question. They also presented a visual programme of its unfolding, and could be collected as a souvenir after the ceremony. This practice was common mostly in Catholic countries: Italy, France, the Southern Netherlands, Germany and Austria. From the early seventeenth century onwards, thesis prints developed into abundantly illustrated documents accompanied by a dedication, and they were meant to affirm the laureates’ position in society and to glorify their patrons. Artists created elaborate communicational devices to convey scientific as well as rhetorical messages to the spectators of the defence and to subsequent readers of the poster.”

François Boucher (1703-1770), artist. Augustin Maillard, respondents. Quaestio Theologica. Quis de tenebris nos vocavit in admirabile lumen suum? Paris: Printed by Robert Hecquet for the Sorbonne, 1769. Large double-sheet engraved broadside, upper sheet with engraving, lower sheet with engraved cartouche containing letterpress text. Graphic Arts Collection GAX 2018- in process

 

Grand jeu de l’histoire

No publisher is credited with this or any of the other sets of French playing cards featuring twenty-five monarchs or literary scenes or fairy tale characters. Princeton’s newly acquired set features English royalty from Egbert (771/775–839), King of Wessex to George III (1738–1820), King of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland. Three historical figures are engraved on each card with biographical details and stencil coloring.

Other known titles within the same series include
Grand jeu des Aventures de Robinson avec figures coloriées (1810)
Grand jeu des Aventures de Gil Blas avec figures coloriées (1800)
Grand jeu des Aventures de Don Quichotte avec figures coloriées (1800s)
Grand jeu des fables choisies avec figures coloriées (1810)
Grand jeu des Fables D’Ésope avec figures coloriées (1809)
Grand jeu des Fables de la Fontaine avec figures coloriées (1810)
Grand jeu de l’Histoire de Paul et Virginie: avec figures coloriées (1815)
Grand jeu de La petite cendrillon avec figures coloriées (1800s)

Grand jeu de l’histoire d’Angleterre depuis Egbert jusqu’à George III = Great Game in the History of England from Egbert to George III ([Paris?, ca. 1810]). Graphic Arts Collection GAX 2018

 

 

Pen and Ink Drawings by Donald Corley

“Here is one who from personal emotion can construct a house of beauty wherein his mind and soul may dwell and wherein his friends may find refreshment. A garden of phantasy where the flowers are never plucked.”—”Donald Corley,” The Arts, 1921.

Emery College graduate Donald Corley (1886-1955) completed advanced training as an architecture in Europe before returning to New York City in 1909. Working with McKim, Mead, and White, he assisted with the construction of Pennsylvania Station and contributed to the design of the central post office now called The James A. Farley Building.

During the summer of 1916 Corley joined other artists and writers gathering in Provincetown, MA, where he spent most of his time building sets for the Provincetown Players and acting in their plays. His first role was “a Norwegian” [Corley was born in Georgia] in Eugene O’Neill’s Bound East for Cardiff, performing alongside Bror J.O. Nordfeldt, Harry Kemp, and O’Neill himself, who played the second mate. That fall, they brought the company back to New York City, where Corley was instrumental in the design and construction of their theater.

With the war in Europe intensifying, many of the original members of the company left, including Jack Reed and Louise Bryant. Corley remained active with the Provincetown Players for several years as a writer, artist, and actor along with Charles Demuth, Susan Glaspell, Alfred Kreymborg, Harry Kemp, O’Neill, Mary Heaton Vorse, Marguerite and William Zorach, among others. The company survived, in part, thanks to the art collector Dr. A.C. Barnes who enjoyed their plays and handed them a check for $1,000.

Through his friendships with Demuth, Nordfeldt, and Marsden Hartley, Corley was introduced to the Whitney Studio Club and received a show of his pen and ink drawings in March 1921.

“Donald Corley . . . protests against two things,” wrote one reviewer, “architectural limitations and the lack of precision in art—against both, because he has been an architect (for eight years with McKim, Mead & White), and because he is an artist. He has designed the scenery for the movie production of “Thaïs” and for the present production at the Greenwich Theatre. He has also written fairy tales. He shows delightful drawings in ink with color applied with a ruling pen. Mr. Corley has a keen sense of rhythmic design and the daintiest of imaginations.”

This resulted in the publication of his first book, 22 Drawings in Black and White (Marquand Library Oversize NE539.C7 A3f,  seen below right), reviewed in The Arts magazine:

“Here is a world of phantasy and paradox and ironic humor, where disillusion has not extinguished hope; where, in a spirit of unbelief, eager curiosity explored the universe of ideas; where life is full of wonder but possibly not worth while. Worth while only in abstractions and impersonal sublimations and wonderful only in delicate personalities that vanish in expression. Wherefore the symbolic form, symbols which are in some strange way the things they symbolize.

…Those there are who ask, “Why is it considered good form to make a tower look as if it would fall over sideways?” or this or that. Such questions amaze; they seem to have no connection with the real issue. Here always it is the idea that is the chief concern. Its expression is two-fold, the drawing and the text. Which is the more intricate and elusive is hard to decide. To Mr. Corley they are of equal importance and are as the words and music of a song. Apart or together they are as direct and emotional an expression of the idea as the music which might be written for them. This is the modern spirit.”

Corley’s ink drawings also appeared regularly in the little Greenwich Village magazine, The Quill, where he was listed as a contributing editor, and in The Dial. Eventually, he gave up architecture completely in favor of writing and illustrating.

When The New York Times published a brief obituary on December 14, 1955, they failed to mention any of his work with theater or film, commenting only that he “wrote The House of Lost Identity, published in 1927. The Fifth Son of the Shoemaker his best-known work, came out two years later. He also wrote The Haunted Jester and illustrated many magazine articles and books.”

The Graphic Arts Collection recently acquired 28 pen and ink drawings attributed to Donald Corley, ca. 1921. These are not signed and we haven’t yet found them reproduced in a published book or magazine. Here are a few samples.

Georg Hulbe, leather artisan

Georg Hulbe (1851-1918), Chronika Haus Heimatfreude [Cover words, Chronicle House Homeland]. Book-shaped box with embossed leather decor ([Hamburg], circa 1890/95). 33 x 42 x 10 cm. Graphic Arts Collection GAX 2018- in process

We all know there are many objects that look like books but aren’t books thanks to Mindy Dubansky’s 2016 Grolier exhibition and catalogue. Here is another. It is a box with an elaborately tooled leather cover by the Art Nouveau craftsman George Hulbe (1851-1918).

If you go to Hamburg today, you will certainly visit the Hulbe-Haus on Mönckebergstraße. The jewel-like building was designed in 1910 by Henry Grell for Hulbe, to serve as his studio, gallery and shop. This was the culmination of a long series of workshops run by Hulbe, beginning in 1884 and growing into one of the largest firms in the country, employing more than two hundred workers.

 

We know this piece is the work of Hulbe by the two stamps worked into the leather: the first are the words “Georg Hulbe / Hamburg Berlin” on the lower front edge and on the back cover is the artist’s chop mark on the lower right.

The leather cover is beautifully worked with the central figure of an angel holding a crown bearing the initials H and J  gilded with a brush. Two clasps open to reveal a simple box with a leather strap and green linen covering.

 

 

Hulbe’s workshop designed and sold embossed leather furniture, wall treatments, bookbindings, and many other decorative arts products. His fame was so great that he was chosen to create the “Golden book of the city” as well as the leather wall coverings in the Hamburg town hall. Today, Hulbe designs can found at the Reichstag in Berlin, the Victoria and Albert Museum in London, and the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City. And now, Princeton University Library.

A Paper Calculator

Peter Bleich, Anweisung zum Gebrauche der allgemeinen Rechentafel, wodurch die vier Rechnungsarten auf vierfache Weise fest und sicher erlernet werden (Vienna: Mayer, 1838). [issued with]: A calculator consisting of 34 tables printed on thick paper strips & kept in a “calculating” box of blue paste-paper measuring 119 x 184 mm., with five cut-out panels for the calculations, preserved in the orig. marbled paper slipcase. Graphic Arts Collection GAX 2018- in process

 

“Napier’s bones” was a manually-operated calculating device created in 1617 by the Scottish mathematician John Napier of Merchiston (1550-1617). His numbered rods–made of ivory, wood, metal, or heavy cardboard–could perform all types of mathematics. During the 18th and 19th centuries, many variations of Napier’s invention were tried, leading up to 1838 when Peter Bleich (1798-1871) published his own paper ‘bones.’

Bleich’s device was used by hundreds of young students to add, subtract, multiply, and divide in the classroom. The paper calculator had thirty-four movable strips or bones that fit into five panels with vertical windows to read the calculation. Princeton’s device is housed in the original marbled paper slipcase.


From 1831 until his death, Bleich lectured and taught at the Zollersche main school of Vienna, which is described in the 1851 essay Die Michael von Zoller and Franz Aloys Bernard’sche Hauptschule. His most noted publication was the 1846 educational booklet Nur Ruhe! (Silence), in which he gives 300 suggestions and hints to help keep children calm in the classroom without resorting to spanking. Unfortunately, there is no copy of Nur Ruhe! in any American library.

 

See also: Peter Bleach (1798-1871), Nur Ruhe! oder 300 einfache Mittel, die Ruhe in der Schule zu erhalten : ein Noth- und Hülfsbüchlein für angehende Schulmänner, denen es darum zu thun ist, die Ruhe in der Schule auf zweckmäßige Weise, ohne irgend einer Strenge, herzustellen (Wien: Meyer & Companie, 1846).

Peter Bleach (1798-1871), Die Michael v. Zoller- und Franz Aloys Bernard’sche Hauptschule im Bezirke Neubau in Wien; eine geschichtliche Darstellung dieser Lehranstalt von ihrem Entstehen im Jahre 1743, bis zum jetzigen Bestande im Jahre 1851 (Wien: Gedruckt bey L. Grund, 1851).

Peter Bleach (1798-1871), Tagesordnung eines Kindes : oder: Anleitung, wie sich ein Kind vom frühen Morgen bis in die Nacht zu verhalten hat (Wien: Mechitharisten-Congregations-Buchhandlung, 1862)

 

Game of the Great Exhibition of 1851

The Graphic Arts Collection recently acquired this unabashedly politically incorrect board game, in which people from around the world meet in London at the 1851 Great Exhibition. Caricatures of all races, creeds, and occupations are encountered as players make their way around this ‘game of the goose’ published by William Spooner.

For some reason, this game has 76 squares rather than the typical 63. The central winning square is the Crystal Palace itself with international visitors mingling outside the building.

**Note, square 34 representing the Americans holds a gun that can even shoot around corners. This is a reference to the Hartford inventor Samuel Colt (1814-1862), who brought 500 of his new Colt revolvers to display in the Exhibition.

No artist is identified on the board but the figures are redolent of Richard Doyle’s work, such as his comic An Overland Journey to the Great Exhibition, published the same year.

Artistic skits of the Great Exhibition of 1851: There were, doubtless, many of these— separate publications—in addition to the illustrations in Punch and other journals. I can mention two by distinguished men. 1. Overland Journey to the Great Exhibition, showing a few Extra Articles and Visitors, by Richard Doyle. These sketches were in nine panoramic plates in oblong quarto. 2. The Great Exhibition “Wot is to Be “; or, Probable Results of the Industry of All Nations, by George Augustus Sale. This was a folding panorama, eighteen feet in length, the designs, about 350 in number, being coloured, oblong octave. Not very long since I saw a copy of this, priced 385., in a London catalogue of second-hand books.” –Notes and Queries (March 16, 1889): 206.



Comic Game of the Great Exhibition of 1851 (London: William Spooner, 1851). Graphic Arts Collection GAX 2018- in process.

See also: Richard Doyle (1824-1883), An Overland Journey to the Great Exhibition: showing a few extra articles & visitors (London: Chapman and Hall, [1851]) Graphic Arts Collection Oversize NE910.G7 D7 1851q

The Historiscope

The Historiscope: a Panorama & History of America (Springfield, Mass.: Milton Bradley & Co., [1868?]). Graphic Arts Collection GAX 2018- in process

Lithographer Milton Bradley (1836-1911) marketed his first game “The Checkered Game of Life” in 1860 and went on to produce hundreds of educational toys and books. Princeton is fortunate to own several copies of the Bradley Company’s paper panorama: The Myriopticon: A Historical Panorama of the Rebellion (American Civil War). We now add a new edition of its complement: The Historiscope: A Panorama and History of America (Springfield, Mass.: Milton Bradley & Co., ca. 1868), offering a less elaborate model than Cotsen’s.

Cotsen Library, South East (CTSN) Toys 30665

The chromolithographic scroll is made up of eight conjoined strips resulting in an image measuring 14 x 221 cm ( ~7 1/3 feet long). It rolls across the printed proscenium of a paper theatre box, thanks to a winding mechanism that is cranked by hand. Ours comes with its original crank.

The Historiscope provides a rolling journey through the history of the United States of America, from its discovery by Columbus, through the War of independence and the age of the steam engine. There are twenty-five scenes, including Columbus arriving in America; the Spanish conquest; the baptism of Pocohontus; Pilgrim Fathers; early settlement; treaties with Native Americans; the battle between the English and the French; the American War of Independence; the opening of transcontinental railway celebration; the new Capitol building, Washington D.C.; cotton farming; a steam threshing machine; and several more.

For more, see “The Historiscope and the Milton Bradley Company: Art and Commerce in Nineteenth-Century Aesthetic Education” by Jennifer Lynn Peterson https://www.journals.uchicago.edu/doi/full/10.1086/675800