Category Archives: Medium

mediums

The Second Royal Exchange

bartolozzi view of the inside detail Detail

bartolozzi view of the insideFrancesco Bartolozzi (1727-1815), after Philip James de Loutherbourg (1740-1812) and John Chapman (active 1792-1823), View of the inside of the Royal Exchange in London, 1788. Etching and engraving with hand coloring. GC094 Italian Prints Collection. Gift of William Thorpe, Class of 1969.

In 1777, several drawings were made of the interior and exterior of the second Royal Exchange, built in 1674 by Edward Jarman after the Great Fire of 1666. The drawings were engraved by Francesco Bartolozzi and published on August 12, 1788 in both colored and uncolored versions. The Graphic Arts Collection has the interior scene with a tower rising above the arcade on the left.

We use the title View of the Inside of the Royal Exchange but the complete inscription reads: “To the Right Honorable William Pitt, first Lord Commissioner of the Treasury, principal secretary of state, and Chancellor of the Exchequer, this accurate perspective View of the inside of the Royal Exchange, in London, is by permission humbly dedicated, by his most Grateful, Obedient and most Obliged humble Servant.”

Chapman and Loutherbourg worked together on this scene, with Chapman concentrating on the buildings and Loutherbourg on the pedestrian traffic. Unfortunately, this building was also destroyed by a fire in 1838 and rebuilt for a third time, opening in 1844.

Venice

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Giovanni Battista Brustolon (1712-1796), after Canaletto (1697-1768), Dextrorsum Theresiani sinistrorsum S. Simeon Parvus atq. Fullonium, 1700s. Engraving. Graphic Arts Collection GC094 Italian Prints.

brustoloni vocte detailTeresa Shawcross, Assistant Professor of History, will be teaching a class entitled “Venice and the Mediterranean World,” beginning next Monday. “Venice,” she writes, “from unpromising beginnings on a marshy lagoon, succeeded in becoming a major commercial and territorial power that by the late Middle Ages and early Renaissance sought to rival the Byzantine and Ottoman Empires and dominate much of the Mediterranean world.”

In browsing through the Graphic Arts collection, we find a limited number of Italian prints and even fewer focused on Venice. There are a handful of reproductive prints after the paintings of Canaletto (born Giovanni Antonio Canal, 1697–1768), engraved by Giovanni Battista Brustolon (sometimes written Brustoloni, 1712-1796).

Graphic Arts also holds two prints by Michele Giovanni Marieschi (1696-1743) from the book Magnificentiores selectioresque urbis Venetiarum prospectus (Venetiis: Venduntur … apud eumdem Auctorem, 1741). A complete volume can be found in Marquand Library (SAX): Rare Books Oversize ND623.M22 A3e.

brustoloni vocte Giovanni Battista Brustolon (1712-1796), after Canaletto (1697-1768), Vocte Festum Sanctae Marthae praecendente Piscatorum Navilia facibus ornata, eodem favente Austro, huc, illuc per aequora discurrunt, 1700s. Engraving. GC094 Italian Prints Collection

brustoloni qua late Giovanni Battista Brustolon (1712-1796) after Canaletto (1697-1768), Qua late patet S. Marci area major S. Jeminiani Templum, [1763]. Engraving. GC094 Italian Prints Collection

Marieschi plateaMichele Giovanni Marieschi (1696-1743), Platea ac Templum D: D: Joannis et Pauli et proxime magnum Sodalitium D from the book Magnificentiores selectioresque urbis Venetiarum prospectus (Venetiis: Venduntur … apud eumdem Auctorem, 1741). Engraving. GC094 Italian Prints Collection

Marieschi forumMichele Giovanni Marieschi (1696-1743), Forum minus D: Marci ab asteruariis conspectum, cum carceribus, et Curia ad dexteram from the book Magnificentiores selectioresque urbis Venetiarum prospectus (Venetiis: Venduntur … apud eumdem Auctorem, 1741). Engraving. GC094 Italian Prints Collection.

 

 

Last Paintings of the Week

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Sakari Suzuki, American, born Japan, 1899-1995. [Street Scene] 1937. Oil on canvas. Rare Books and Special Collections, Firestone Library

During the 1930s, Sakari Suzuki was living in New York City and working for the Federal Art Project under the Works Progress Administration. Most of his time was spent painting a mural entitled “Preventive Medicine” at the Willard Parker Hospital on East 16th Street along the East River. His figurative designs for the Hospital were exhibited at the WPA Federal Gallery, alongside Moses Soyer, Arshile Gorky, and other artists. Unfortunately, the hospital was demolished in 1958, along with Suzuki’s mural. Although he was an active member of the American Artist Congress, this painting of an unidentified street corner is one of the few works by Suzuki that survives.

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More paintings will be hung in March and another group over the summer. This will continue for several years until the renovation of Firestone Library is complete.
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Chamber of Genius

small class13Thomas Rowlandson (1756 or 1757-1827), The Chamber of Genius, April 2, 1812. Etching with hand coloring. Graphic Arts GC112 Thomas Rowlandson Collection

Beginning on Monday, 3 February 2014, one of the new classes being offered at Princeton University is  ART 349 / HUM 349 / VIS 345 “The Artist at Work” taught by Prof. Irene V. Small. “What are the environments, fictions, fantasies, and ideologies that condition the artist at work?” asks the course description, “This course takes as its investigative locus the artist’s studio, a space of experimentation and inspiration, but also of boredom, sociability, exhaustion, and critique.”

This led to a quick look through the graphic arts collection to see how many artists’ studios are represented in our prints and drawings. Here are a few examples.

small class14Raphael Soyer (1899-1987), In the Studio [copy 2], no date [1944]. Lithograph. Graphic Arts Collection GA 2012.02707.

small class12William Heath (1795-1840), The Artist, 30 August 1812. Etching with hand coloring. Graphic Arts Collection GA 2013.00001.

small class11Benoit-Louis Prevost (1747-ca. 1804) after design by Charles-Nicolas Cochin, II (1715-1790), Untitled [Art school], [1763]. Etching. Graphic Arts Collection GA 2012.00295.

small class10Jean Duplessis-Bertaux (1750-1818), Suite des 6 pieces epreuves d’artists, [ca. 1810]. Etching and engraving. Graphic Arts Collection GA 2012.00499

small class9Jean Duplessis-Bertaux (1750-1818), Suite des 6 pieces epreuves d’artists, [ca. 1810]. Etching and engraving. Graphic Arts Collection GA 2012.00499

small class5Michael McCurdy, Self Portrait, no date. Wood engraving. Graphic Arts Collection GA 2007.01841

small class3Gebbie & Husson Co. after a design by Paul Mathey (1844-1929), The First Trial [Felicien Rops in His Studio], 1893. Photogravure. Graphic Arts Collection GA 2007.04037.

small class2Jacob de Geyn (1565-1610), Jacobus de Geyn, Antverp Pict. et sculpt. 1610. Engraving. Graphic Arts Collection

small class16Philip Galle (1537-1612) after designs by Jan van der Straet (1523-1605), Color Olivi [The invention of Oil Painting], plate 14 from Nova Reperta, 1500s. Engraving. Graphic Arts Collection.

small class15Harry Brodsky (1908-1997), Studio Interior, no date. Lithograph. Graphic Arts Collection GA 2007.00899.

 

A Trip along Tokaido Road

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Okamoto Ippei, Maekawa Sempan, Hiratsuka Un’ichi, et al. Tōkaidō gojūsantsugi manga emaki . Jô Ge. [Tōkyō : Chūō Bijutsu Kyōkai, 1920s. In wooden box, title on box: Manga Tōkaidō, nikuhitsu 2 scrolls, each over 30 feet long and 10″ high. Graphic Arts collection GAX 2014- in process

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This Tokaido scroll set was hand-painted in an edition of approximately 250-300 copies by 18 members of the Tokyo Manga Association. The images are based on a trip probably made in 1920-1921 and the paintings must have been finished soon after.

The artists involved include some famous names: Mizushima Nihou, Kondô Koichiro, Sempan and Un’ichi, among others. For Princeton University Library, it is significant that Okamoto Ippei (1886-1948) was involved because we know that Albert Einstein met him in 1922 and admired his work enough to purchase his book. The artist reciprocated by drawing a portrait of Einstein inside the volume (See: Ando Hiroshige’s Fifty-Three Stations on the Tokaido (1852). GAX Oversize 2009-0496Q).

For more information on the many prints, drawings, and books about the Tokaido Road, see the Princeton University Art Museum exhibition:

http://www.princetoninfo.com/index.php?option=com_us1more&Itemid=6&key=03-16-2011Art

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Paper Icons Made for the Monastery of Saint Catherine, Sinai

stamp of the monastery of saint Catherine

Nikodimos, The Stamp of the Monastery of Saint Catherine, 1696. Woodcut with hand coloring. Graphic Arts Collection GAX 2014- in process. Acquired with matching funds provided by the Program in Hellenic Studies with the support of the Stanley J. Seeger Hellenic Fund.matching funds provided by the Program in Hellenic Studies, and the Valerie Brackett and Nikolaos Monoyios Charitable Fund, in memory of Dimitrios and Kalliopi Monoyios.

“Greek scholars agree in emphasizing the role played by engravers active in [Lwow] in the late seventeenth century,” writes Waldemar Deluga. “Their work had a tremendous impact on changes in the Orthodox religious iconography of later centuries. It was in one of the biggest towns of the old Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth that engravings were being made for the Greek market.”

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“The artists working on commissions from the stauropegion brethren and from Hatzikyriakis Vourliotis [Chatzēkyriakēs], envoy of the St Catherine monastery in the Sinai, included Nikodém Zubrzycki and Dionizy Sinkiewicz. Their views of the monasteries and images of St Catherine of Alexandria, Moses and Aaron were copied frequently by Greek printmakers. In 1706, the hieromonk Matthaios from Sinai executed a woodcut copy of a view of the Sinai, presumably in a workshop in Crete.” –Waldemar Deluga and Iwona Zych, “Greek Church Prints,” Print Quarterly 19, no. 2 (June 2002): 123-35.

general view of mount sinai detail

Detail from General View of Mount Sinai, 1727-36. Engraving. Graphic Arts Collection 2014- in process. Acquired with matching funds provided by the Program in Hellenic Studies with the support of the Stanley J. Seeger Hellenic Fund.

Thanks to the hard work of Dimitri H. Gondicas, Director, Stanley. J. Seeger ’52  Center for Hellenic Studies, and to matching funds provided by the Program in Hellenic Studies with the support of the Stanley J. Seeger Hellenic Fund, and the Valerie Brackett and Nikolaos Monoyios Charitable Fund, in memory of Dimitrios and Kalliopi Monoyios, the graphic arts collection has acquired sixteen early religious woodcuts and engravings made for the Monastery of Saint Catherine, Sinai. The prints, which have been dated from 1688 to the early 18th century, are among the earliest known religious prints produced for circulation in the Orthodox East.

The woodcuts were printed mainly in Lwow, Poland, under the patronage and at the expense of the Greek trader Hatzikyriakis Vourliotis. This collection is unique in many ways, not the least of which is the very presence of such early prints from wood, a technique abandoned in the early 18th century and replaced by copper engraving.  As Deluga notes, “Few have survived to our day, and they are generally considered a rarity; many are known in a unique impression.”

general view of mount sinai

Unidentified artist, General View of Mount Sinai, 1727-36. Engraving. Graphic Arts collection 2014- in process. Acquired with matching funds provided by the Program in Hellenic Studies with the support of the Stanley J. Seeger Hellenic Fund.

“The Monastery of St. Catherine at Mount Sinai is one of the best-known early monastic establishments. Situated in the barren wilderness of the Sinai Peninsula, the monastery is dominated by the mighty massif of Mt. Sinai (Jebel Musa) where, according to the Biblical tradition, Moses received the Tablets of the Law from God.”

This text was written in the spring of 2006, for an exhibition conceived in conjunction with a graduate seminar entitled “Juncture of Heaven and Earth: The Monastery of St. Catherine on Mount Sinai” taught by Slobodan Ćurčić. To see more: http://web.princeton.edu/sites/Archaeology/rp/sinaiexhibit/

The exhibition commemorated Kurt Weitzmann (1904-93) and the Princeton-Michigan expedition to Mt. Sinai. Weitzmann, professor of art and archaeology at Princeton (1945-72) and his colleague George Forsyth, then professor at the University of Michigan (Ann Arbor), organized a series of expeditions (1956-65) to Mount Sinai, with the aim of studying the Monastery of St. Catherine and its treasures.

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Nikodimos, Saint Catherine, 1698. Woodcut with hand coloring. Graphic Arts Collection gax 2014- in process. Acquired with matching funds provided by the Program in Hellenic Studies with the support of the Stanley J. Seeger Hellenic Fund.
This is the earliest known ‘paper icon’ of Saint Catherine.

Beside the article in Print Quarterly, one of the best sources of information on these prints, and topic in general, is: Dore Papastratou, Paper Icons: Greek Orthodox Religious Engravings, 1665-1899 (Athens: Papastratos; Recklinghausen: A. Bongers, 1990). Marquand Library (SA) Oversize NE655.2 .P3713 1990q

Mount Sinai and the Monastery of St. Catherine; an exhibition based on the expedition sponsored by the University of Michigan, Princeton University, and the University of Alexandria (Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Library, 1960). Marquand Library (SA) BX387 .M68
seven branched lamp moses and aaron

Please note that since this post was written, we have made a correction. We had attributed some works to a certain monk Nikodimos Rokou. This is a mistake, due to a misunderstanding of an inscription that interpreted the polish word Rokou or better Roku as the painter’s last name, whereas in fact the word “roku” in Polish language stands for “during” and usually accompanies a date. Thus the inscription reads: IER[O]DIAKON NIKODIM / ROKU 1688 etc. which means “[made by] priest Nikodim, during the year 1688”. In light of this evidence, the catalogue entry has be updated and the painter’s name be changed from Nikodimos Rokou to plain Nikodimos (ιεροδιάκονος Νικόδημος). Thanks to Dr. Margarita Voulgaropoulou for her help in this attribution.

Julio Cortázar and Julio Silva

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Photograph by Laure Vasconi at Silva’s workshop (Paris, 1992).

In trying to understand contemporary artists’ books, we often ask which came first, the text or the images? For one of Latin America’s most acclaimed 20th -century writers Julio Cortázar (1914-1984) and his fellow Argentine Julio Silva (born 1930), that process evolved over time.

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Print on Japan paper accompanying artist’s proofs of Discours du Pince-Gueule.

Chronologically, the first book that brings them together is Les Discours du Pince-Gueule, as Peter Standish notes in his book Understanding Julio Cortázar, “Not only was this the first such combination essayed by Cortázar, it was also the first of what would become many collaborative ventures with his friend….” [Peter Standish, Understanding Julio Cortázar (Univ of South Carolina Press, 2001)].  Published in Paris in 1966, the first edition of their book had a limited run of only 100 copies. This has become a very rare volume, with most libraries only collecting the 2002 edition.

It may not be obvious to those who are not fluent in French that the title is a neologism. Standish points out that Cortázar “made the Pince-nez flip down from the nose to the mouth (for which gueule is a vulgar slang word) and no doubt he also had in the back of his mind the term pince-san-rire, meaning a person with a dry humor.”

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Detail of a photograph by Colette Portal (Saignon, 1979)

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Portrait of Julio Silva by Julio Cortázar at the Place du Général Beuret house (Paris, 1965).

  In the case of this first collaboration, Silva provided lithographs to complement text that Cortázar had already written for Les Discours du Pince-Gueule (1966). This later changed when Silva’s designs came first with the two collage books, La vuelta al día en ochenta mundos (1967) and Último round (1969) and then Territorios (1978). With Silva and other collaborators, Cortázar preferred to let them take the lead, writing that he had “a wish to walk alongside friends who are painters, creators of images, and photographers” (Territorios, 107). According to Standish, “by the seventies he was saying that he was writing because of the existence of their art, and pointing out that critics had paid a great deal of attention to literary influences upon him but not enough to a long list of artistic and musical ones.”

 

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Opening from Discours du Pince-Gueule.

BIO 219_ JULIO ET JULIO  SAIGNON PRES DE APT  1971

Photograph by Colette Portal (Saignon, 1979).

We are fortunate to have acquired not only the 1966 limited edition artists’ book but also many drawings and proofs that led to the first edition. We also acquired several albums of personal photographs from Silva and Cortázar, providing views of their friends and collaborations. The photographers include Pierre Boulat; Colette Portal; Yan Voss; and Cortázar himself. We are extremely grateful to Julio Silva for making this acquisition possible, which will undoubtedly inspire and inform generations of researchers.

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Photograph by Pierre Boulat at Julio Silva’s home at the Rue de Beaune, Paris with Julio Cortázar and Olivier Silva (Paris, 1969).

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Julio Cortázar, Les Discours du Pince-gueule. Illustrations by Julio H. Silva (Paris: M. Cassé, 1966). Edition of 100. Graphic Arts Collection. Purchased with the generous support of Stanley J. Stein, the Walter Samuel Carpenter III Professor in Spanish Civilization and Culture, Emeritus, in honor of Barbara H. Stein, Princeton University’s first bibliographer for Latin America, Spain and Portugal.

 

 

Henry James

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Alvin Langdon Coburn (1882-1866), Henry James, ca.1905. Gelatin silver print. Graphic Arts Collection GA 2014- in process

When Henry James (1843-1916) returned to New York City in 1905 after living in Europe for twenty years, Century Magazine sent a photographer to document the occasion. The artist they sent was twenty-three year old Alvin Langdon Coburn (1882-1866).

Although Century never ran a story or published the portrait, James was so pleased with the result that “their chance acquaintance would eventually produce twenty-four frontispieces that were not only a desirable but a salient feature of the New York Edition.” –Charles Higgins, “Coburn’s Frontispieces to James’s New York Edition” in American Literature (1982)

According to Higgins, “James was photographed in the same month by Alice Boughton who captured the author in a classic Daumier pose. Early in May, James also sat for Katherine Elizabeth McClellan, the Smith College photographer.” Although he had many options, he was charmed by Coburn and the following year, invited him to England where the author was photographed once again.

If the signature on this mount is read as 1905, the print would be from the first New York City photo-shoot and not the more often attributed sitting in 1906. The inscription may be directed to Florence Ethel Mills Young, who was on a book tour with The War of the Sexes, released in 1905.
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The Washington Elm

poe moving5This glass plate negative depicts the Washington Elm, a tree that grew on the Cambridge Common until 1923. A granite tablet, seen in these photographs, stood at the foot of the tree, inscribed with a text written by Henry W. Longfellow: Under this tree / Washington / first took command / of the / American Army / July 3d, 1775.

When the tree died and was removed in 1923, the plaque was replaced with a circular panel of cement that read: Here stood / the Washington Elm / under which / George Washington / took command of  / the American Army / July 3 1775

The photographer was Henry Ewing Hale, Jr. (1869-1946, Princeton Class of 1892). In the summer between his freshman and sophomore year, Hale took a vacation to Cambridge, Massachusetts. He made the exposure for the glass negative on site at the Cambridge Commons and later, probably back in Princeton, made two positive prints, one in albumen and one in cyanotype. There are several other examples of Hale’s photography of Princeton buildings at Mudd Library.
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On Stuffed Animals Hanging from the Ceiling

cook hogarth hudibras2This post is in honor of William H. Helfand’s wonderful article in the Gazette of the Grolier Club, new series number 63 (2012 but just released) entitled “On Stuffed Animals Hanging from the Ceiling.” Helfand quotes Anthony Grafton when he notes that visitors to the workrooms of the pharmacies and physician’s offices “gaped at their magnificent collections, the shelves stocked with shells, fossils, monstrous fish, and Siamese-twin animals, the ceilings hung with everything from starfish to crocodiles.” (from “the Moonstruck Tuscan” in Bookforum Feb/March 2011).

“So, why were the stuffed animals hanging from the ceiling in the pharmacies, doctor’s offices, dentist’s operating rooms, and alchemist’s laboratories?” writes Helfand. To find the answer, you will have to read his article.

cook hogarth hudibras

Thomas Cook (1744-1818) after William Hogarth (1697-1764), Hudibras beats Sidrophel and his man Whacum, plate 8 from Hudibras, no date [1800]. Graphic Arts Collection GA 2005.01365

For Hogarth’s original book illustrations, see Samuel Butler (1612-1680), Hudibras: in three parts, written in the time of the late wars; corrected and amended, with additions, to which is added annotations, with an exact index to the whole; adorn’d with a new set of cuts, design’d and engrav’d by Mr. Hogarth (London: Printed for B. Motte … , 1726). Rare Books (Ex)  3660.5.34.135

Anthony Grafton’s article is available to Princeton full-text through Proquest at: http://search.proquest.com/docview/853755745/142D2D35D4F9122DC1/1?accountid=13314