Category Archives: Medium

mediums

Last Photograph of General Grant

general grant2

John G. Gilman, of Canajoharie, New York, photographed Ulysses S. Grant (1822-1885) at his summer home at Mount McGregor on July 22, 1885. The photographer came back a few days later, after Grant’s death and photographed Grant’s home inside and out. These photographs were collected and published as Gilman’s Series of Grant Views Taken at Mt. McGregor.  The Graphic Arts Collection owns only one print from the series, labeled Last Photograph of Gen. Grant, Four Days Before Death.

A death mask was made of Grant’s face and Princeton University is fortunate to have one plaster pulled from the mould. https://blogs.princeton.edu/graphicarts/2013/03/grant.html
general grant4
general grant
general grant3John G. Gilman, Last Photograph of Gen. Grant, 1885. Albumen silver print. Graphic Arts Collection GAX 2009.00835

 

Missing photograph from Willats Album

willats There are several pages in the 19th-century photo-album assembled by the London optician Richard Willats that are missing the photographs. http://arks.princeton.edu/ark:/88435/k930bx11x

It turns out several were removed from the album some years ago (or were already loose) and were matted separately.

salt printThis dark, rich photogram was at the top of p. 45 in the Willats album, clearly indicated by the trimmed corners. A note on the page says “Energiatype by John Croucher” but this is not an iron-based print and the note must refer to the missing photograph at the bottom right. The photographer of this photogram remains unknown.

Portraits of Helen Keller

helen keller5William M. Notman (1857-1913), Helen Keller and Miss Sullivan, 1897. Gelatin silver print. Graphic Arts Collection GA 2009.00892. Gift of Laurence Hutton.

During the two years I spent in New York I had many opportunities to talk with distinguished people whose names I had often heard, but whom I had never expected to meet. Most of them I met first in the house of my good friend, Mr. Laurence Hutton. It was a great privilege to visit him and dear Mrs. Hutton in their lovely home, and see their library and read the beautiful sentiments and bright thoughts gifted friends had written for them. It has been truly said that Mr. Hutton has the faculty of bringing out in every one the best thoughts and kindest sentiments. One does not need to read “A Boy I Knew” to understand him–the most generous, sweet-natured boy I ever knew, a good friend in all sorts of weather, who traces the footprints of love in the life of dogs as well as in that of his fellowmen.

Mrs. Hutton is a true and tried friend. Much that I hold sweetest, much that I hold most precious, I owe to her. She has oftenest advised and helped me in my progress through college. When I find my work particularly difficult and discouraging, she writes me letters that make me feel glad and brave; for she is one of those from whom we learn that one painful duty fulfilled makes the next plainer and easier.

Mr. Hutton introduced me to many of his literary friends, greatest of whom are Mr. William Dean Howells and Mark Twain. –Helen Keller, The Story of My Life, chapter 23

helen keller4Augustus Marshall (died 1916), Helen Keller, no date. Gelatin silver print. Graphic Arts Collection GA 2009.00891. Gift of Laurence Hutton. Blind stamp on mount: “A. Marshall 16 Arlington St. Boston”. Dedication in pencil: “For Mrs. Hutton, With dear love, From, Helen Keller.”
helen keller3Augustus Marshall (died 1916), Helen Keller, no date [ca. 1899]. Gelatin silver print. Graphic Arts Collection GA 2009.00890. Gift of Laurence Hutton. Dedication in pencil: “Your loving friend, Helen Keller, Easter 1899.”
helen keller2Benjamin J. Falk (1853-1925), Helen Keller, no date. Platinum print. Graphic Arts Collection GA 2009.00831. Gift of Laurence Hutton. Dedication in pencil: “Lovingly yours, Helen Keller.” Signed in imprint: “Print in Platinum – Falk, N.Y.”
helen keller1Benjamin J. Falk (1853-1925), Helen Keller and Anne Sullivan, [no date]. Platinum print. Graphic Arts Collection GA 2009.00832. Gift of Laurence Hutton. Signed by sitter in pencil: “Helen and Teacher.” Signed by sitter in ink: “Annie M. Sullivan.”

 

helen keller6Emily Stokes, Helen Keller with Her Terrier, Phiz, 1902. Albumen silver print. Graphic Arts Collection GA 2010.01663. Gift of Laurence Hutton. Dedication in pencil: “To Uncle Laurence, with the dear love of Phiz and his mistress, May 1902, Helen Keller.”

helen keller8Unidentified artist, Helen Keller in Academic Attire, 1903. Gelatin silver print. Signed in negative: “Copyright 1903 by Whitman” Graphic Arts Collection GA 2010.01794. Gift of Laurence Hutton. Signed in pencil: “Helen Keller.”

 

helen keller7Unidentified artist, Helen Keller, no date [ca. 1899]. Albumen silver print. Graphic Arts Collection GA 2010.02226. Gift of Laurence Hutton.

 

Captain Henry Brewster’s Self-Portrait

brewster5Henry Craigie Brewster (1816-1905) was the youngest son of Sir David Brewster (1781-1868). Henry first practiced photography in 1842, while on leave from the 76th “Hindoostan” Regiment of Foot. This might be a self-portrait from around that time, when Henry was 26 years old. It is among the earliest paper photographs.

The digital image at the top is a truer copy of the dark print. The image below has been lightened with PhotoShop to provide a clearer portrait. It is signed on the verso in several places “Capt. Brewster.”

 

brewster3

Henry Craigie Brewster (1816-1905), Self Portrait, no date [ca.1842]. Salted paper print. Graphic Arts Collection GC137

brewster2 brewster

“Another member of the St. Andrews group, Henry Craigie Brewster (1816-1905), was Sir David’s fourth and youngest son. A captain in the 76th Regiment of Foot, he was named an honorary and corresponding member of the Literary and Philosophical Society in November 1840. In a letter written to Talbot in July 1842, Sir David mentions that his youngest son was on leave from his regiment at Newry.  During this leave Henry Brewster participated in the group’s photographic activities; Sir David mentions his work with that of the Adamsons and Major Playfair in an article on photography published in the Edinburgh Review in January 1843. A quarter of a century later, in The Home Life of Sir David Brewster, Mrs. Gordon recalled that her brother practiced photography under his father’s “superintendence” when home on leave, adding that “it was one of his father’s means of relaxation from heavier work to take positives from the negatives of his son and others.” Henry Brewster continued to practice photography after his return to his regiment in October 1842, and in May 1843 Sir David exhibited a group of his calotype portraits at the Literary and Philosophical Society.”– Graham Smith, Disciples of light (Graphic Arts Collection (GA) 2014-0693Q)

Brighton Panorama

panorama hand4

panorama hand
panorama hand6
To her most gracious majesty the Queen, this panorama is by permission most gratefully and humbly dedicated by W.H. Mason … and W. Mason [also called Panoramic view of Brighton] (Brighton: W. H. Mason; Cambridge: W. Mason; London: Ackermann & Co., 1833). 11 cm. Hand colored aquatint. 6 sections total 15 feet, aquatinted by A. Edington, after a drawing by the architect Amon Henry Wilds (1784 or 1790-1857), in original boxwood drum with Royal coat of arms. Graphic Arts Collection. Gift of Leonard L. Milberg, Class of 1953.

William Henry Mason and his (?) father William Mason published this 15 foot panoramic view of Old Brighton, seen from the sea front, extending from Saunders’s Belle Vue Mansion to the Athenaeum. The drawing was made in at least six parts by the architect Amon Henry Wilds (1784 or 1790-1857), later aquatinted by A. Edington.

Numerous figures are depicted in the costume of the period, civil and military carriages, and riders on horseback. Many of the streets and buildings are identified, including The Anthaeum, Adelaide Terrace, Brunswick Terrace, Lansdowne Place, Brunswick Square, Waterloo Street, Western House, Western Street, Kings Road, Norfolk Hotel, and many others.

The panorama is dedicated to Queen Adelaide (1792-1849), who married William, Duke of Clarence, the third son of King George III. Adelaide became the Queen consort in 1830 when her husband was crowned King William IV.

See also J.R. Abbey, Life in England (Rare Books (Ex) Oversize NE90 .A12q) and R. Hyde, Gilded scenes and shining prospects (Marquand Library (SA) Oversize NE628.H92q)

panorama hand5

panorama hand3

panorama hand2

Picasso and Iliazd

picasso13Iliazd (Ilya Zdanevich, 1894-1975), Pirosmanachvili 1914 (Paris: Le Degré 41, 1972). Original vellum binding, with yellow dust-wrapper and preserved in publisher’s beige cloth chemise and slipcase. Presentation copy from Iliazd’s last wife to Chota Takaishvili. One of 78 copies printed on Japon ancien paper, signed in red pencil on the colophon by Iliazd and with the original etching signed by Picasso, printed by Atelier Lacourière Frélaut. Graphic Arts Collection GAX in process

picasso11“It was something of a secret after World War II that one of the most rewarding people in Paris was a man who liked to be addressed simply as Iliazd,” wrote John Russell for the New York Times. “He was known—when known at all—as the architect, designer and publisher of illustrated books in which, one after another, the great surviving names of the School of Paris played a part.” Russell goes on to assert that Iliazd excelled “as poet, geographer, book designer, mountain climber, printer, publisher, fabric designer for Sonia Delaunay and Coco Chanel, pioneer dismantler of language, idiosyncratic stage performer and organizer in the early 1920’s of some of the last of the great classic artists’ balls.” All true.

picasso

picasso3

picasso2Born Ilia Zdanevitch in Tiflis, Georgia, Iliazd (1894-1975) was a founding member of the Russian Futurists. Like many of his contemporaries, the artist eventually made his way to Paris where he designed and published extraordinary livres d’artistes, including several with his own prose and poetry under the imprint Le Degré 41 (41 degrees refers to the latitude of his hometown, the alcoholic content of brandy, and the Celsius measure of the point at which fever leads to delirium).

From 1940 to 1974, Iliazd produced 20 extraordinary books, including 9 with Pablo Picasso (1881-1973). None have been collected by Princeton University until now.

picasso10

According to Bookvica, a rare book shop from Iliazd’s hometown of Tiflis, “Iliazd returned to his homeland in 1912 and with his brother, artist Kirill Zdanevitch, he met Georgian painter Niko Pirosmani (1862-1918). They became very enthusiastic about him.

Iliazd was alarmed by the difficult economic straits that the painter was in and wrote a manifesto to promote his art; it was published in a local paper Zakavkazskaya Rech’ in 1913 under the title “Khudozhnik-samorodok” (A natural-born artist). It was Iliazd’s first publication. In June 1914 the journal Vostok published his article “Niko Pirosmani,” in which he mythologized the biography of the older artist, linking him with the Silver Age and the Russian avant-garde.”

picasso9

picasso8In the summer of 1971, Iliazd decided to reprint the article and to help promote it, he asked Picasso to etch the frontispiece. His friend agreed and produced a beautiful drypoint, which was printed at the Atelier Lacourière Frélaut (originally the studio of Roger Lacourière, who passed it on to his collaborator and successor Jacques Frélaut in 1957).

The edition of 78 was completed and signed by December 1972, four months before Picasso’s death. Although this was also intended to be Iliazd’s last book, technical difficulties on another project, Courtisan Grotesque (which had been finished in 1974), caused it to be printed after Pirosmanachvili.

picasso7

picasso6The copy now in the Princeton University Library comes from the collection of Damian Alaniya. This collector once erased the owner’s stamp of the previous owner to whom this copy was presented by the Iliazd’s wife with signature on the front endpaper: “Eu souvenir de Ms Zdanevitch pour Chota Takaishvili avec les amitiés Ms Helene Zdanevitch. 1.7.82.”

picasso5

picasso12

picasso4

Johanna Drucker writes, “Drawing to the end of his energies, Iliazd had evidently wished this book to perform a double closure: as the end of the cycle of large books, and as the close of the full cycle of his life’s work. There was a mirroring effect between the beginning and the end, a deliberate, marked recognition of the self-consciousness which had dictated the construction of the oeuvre as a whole.” “Iliazd and the Book as a Form of Art,” The Journal of Decorative and Propaganda Arts 7 (Winter 1988): 36-51.

Postmaster General declares that it is illegal to paste photographs into a magazine

aristotypes
In July 1895, Edward L. Wilson, editor of Wilson’s Photographic Magazine, wrote to subscribers about “a new departure” for the journal. Every month since 1864, Wilson had been embellishing each issue with an original photograph pasted into the front. This meant printing up to 6,000 photographs from one or more negatives and then cutting, pasting, and binding them into the magazine by hand.

However by the 1890s, Wilson noted that “the processes of reproduction have grown without number, in such variety as to render the method we have so long employed [albumen silver prints] almost obsolete.” Wilson begins to substitute ink prints made from photographic negatives for the light-sensitive photographs that once embellished each issue of his magazine.

While this is a reasonable decision, the impetus behind the change really came from a letter written by the Postmaster-General of the United States determining that the addition of an original photograph was, in fact, against the law. Here is a transcription of the letter he sent to Wilson:

“Photographic and other matter pasted to printed paper sheets are additional to the original print prohibited by law, which reads that these shall contain no writing, print, or sign thereon or therein in addition to the original print, except as provided by Sec. 3 of Postal Regulations, which provides as follows, to wit: The name and address of the person to whom the matter shall be sent; index figures of subscription-book, either printed or written; the printed title of the publication and the place of its publication; the printed or written name or address without addition of advertisement of the publisher or sender, or both; and written or printed words or figures or both, indicating the date on which the subscription of such matter will end; the correction of any typographical error; a mark except by written or printed words to designate a word or passage to which it is desired to call attention; the words ‘sample copy’ when the matter is sent as such; the words ‘marked copy’ when the matter contains a marked item or article.”

While silver photography does continue to appear from time to time, Wilson focuses on photogravure, color halftone, and other variations of ink prints to embellish his magazine. By 1900, only halftone prints are published.aristotypes4

Specimen of Three Color Gelatine Print
aristotypes3
aristotypes2

Photogravure

 

Le faux satyrique puni

perachonMarc Perachon (1630-1709). Le faux satyrique puni, et le merite couronné, dans une lettre d’artiste, a l’un de ses amis, contenant L’Apologie de Mr. Perachon l’Avocat, contre les fausses Satyres du pretendu Poëte sans fard, & La Juste Critique des ses Satyres, & des faux Satyriques avec La Defense de Plusieurs personnes qu’il a Satyrisées: & Le Brevet du Roy (Lyon: Chez Claude Rey, [1696]). First ed., bound in 1800s chocolate calf by Koehler. Graphic Arts Collection GAX in process

perachon2C’est ainsi que les Dieux, pour Signaler leurs dons, Punissent les mechants, et couronnent les bon

perachon3

Quoting the dealer’s note, “Uncommon first edition of this somewhat pious attack on the satirical poetry of François Gacon (1667-1725) [Poëte sans fard] and, by extension, on the man himself, by the Lyonnais lawyer Marc Perrachon (or Perachon, 1630-1709). Perrachon, a protestant convert and “auteur de poésies passablement misérables,” was one of the many targets of the Oratorian Gacon’s pen, but not the best known; Gacon also satirized the likes of Jean-Baptiste Rousseau and Boileau, whom he initially took as a model.

His attack on Perrachon . . .  in fact landed him in gaol for a few months, but this was not enough to discourage Perrachon from publishing the present work in response, and in his own defence; the caption to the engraved title (”C’est ainsi que les Dieux, pour signaler leurs dons, Punissent les mechants, et couronnent les bons”) shows on which side Perrachon considered himself to lie.

Perrachon, writing in the third person, describes the faults in Gacon’s writing, contrasting it with the true satires of the Greeks, and attacking his “mauvaises rimes, ses hemistiches d’un mesme son, ses mauvaises cesures, ses enjambemens, ses mauvaises constructions, ses transpositions, ses fausses cadences, ses mauvaises mots, ou barbarismes, ses fausses significations des termes,” and so on, giving examples of each.”

perachon6Note the use of engraved initials.

perachon5

 

See also below: François Gacon (1667-1725), Discours satiriques en vers (Cologne, 1696). Fictitious imprint; printed in Lyons by Boudet. Rare Books (Ex) PQ1985.G2 A7 1696
perachon8

perachon7

and François Gacon (1667-1725), Le journal satirique intercepté, ou, Apologie de Monsieur Arrouet de Voltaire, et de Monsieur Houdart de La Motte ([S.l. : s.n.], 1719). Rare Books (Ex) 3298.368

Osages, Peuplade Sauvage de l’Amerique Septentrionale

boilly3
boilly2
boillyFrançois Séraphin Delpech (1778-1825), after drawings by Louis-Léopold Boilly (1761-1845), Osages: peuplade sauvage de l’Amerique Septentrionale dans l’Etat de Missouri [Osages: Primitive Tribes of North America, in the State of Missouri]. 1827. From the series Recueil de Grimaces, no. 89. Lithograph with added hand color. Joint acquisition of the Graphic Arts Collection and Western Americana. GAX 2016 in process.

Between 1823 and 1828, Louis-Léopold Boilly (1761-1845) and his lithographer François Séraphin Delpech (1778-1825) created a series of genre portraits or caricatures of occupations under the title Recueil de Grimaces or Les Grimaces. The Getty Research Institute holds one copy of the portfolio with eight prints and the National Library of France holds another with 93 prints in 5 volumes. It is unclear whether there was one definitive set. The prints could be purchased together or separate, colored or uncolored.

Each sheet usually presents a cluster of three to five heads. Boilly was somewhat unique in caricaturing a whole profession, not an individual, targeting groups of writers, doctors, art critics, etc. However, as the series continued, the faces became less grotesque and more descriptive.

Numbers 89, 90, and possibly 91 in the series represent members of the Osages Tribe from the Ohio River Valley in Arkansas and Missouri, who traveled to France in 1827. No. 89, recently acquired jointly by the Graphic Arts Collection and the Western Americana Collection, depicts Kishagashugah or Little Chief (age 28), Minckchatahooh or Little Soldier (age 22), and Grétomih (age 18 and cousin to Kishagashugah’s wife). No.90, available at the Beinecke Library, presents Mohongo (Sacred Sun, ca. 1789–1836), Washingsabba (Black Bird, 1795–1829?), and Big Soldier (1773?–1844).

11142694_quarter(c) Beinecke Library

See also Marie-Claude Feltes-Strigler, Les indiens Osages: Enfants-des-eaux-du-milieu (Paris: O.D. éditions-Indiens de tous pays, [2016]) Firestone Library (F) E99.O8 F45 2016

Louis F. Burns, A history of the Osage people (Tuscaloosa; London: University of Alabama Press, 2004). Firestone Library (F) E99.O7 B85 2004

Illustrated Soviet Sheet Music

russian sheet music3

The Graphic Arts Collection along with Slavic, East European, and Eurasian Collections recently acquired a large group of illustrated Russian sheet music from the 1920s and 1930s for the Princeton University Library. We are in the process of transcribing, translating, and conserving the material but until that is finished, here is a taste of the wonderful lithographic covers. Don’t miss Douglas Fairbanks and Mary Pickford below.

 

russian sheet music6
russian sheet music5
russian sheet music4
russian sheet music2 russian sheet music