Yeats Edition of Two


At a ceremony in the White House for St. Patrick’s Day last year, Taoiseach Enda Kenny presented President Barack Obama with a volume of William Butler Yeats’s poetry, hand-printed by Mary Plunkett, the grandniece of a 1916 Rising leader. The second copy of the edition of two was given to Vice-President Joe Bidden.

Although we will not be able to collect this special edition, we will acquire the fine press book 16, which was presented to the President yesterday, 3/15/2016. This volume will be released in April by Stoney Road Press in association with An Post and Poetry Ireland. Four contemporary poets were invited to present their own responses to the Rising and its aftermath including Harry Clifton, Vona Groarke, Paula Meehan, and Princeton University’s Howard G.B. Clark ’21 University Professor in the Humanities; Professor of Creative Writing in the Lewis Center for the Arts; and Director, Princeton Atelier Paul Muldoon. In addition, Stoney Road Press has commissioned four limited edition prints by four Irish artists: Michael Canning, Alice Maher, Brian O’Doherty, and Kathy Prendergast.

16 will also be featured on the RTE Radio 1 Arena Arts Show tomorrow, Thursday, at 7:00 p.m. The hour-long show will be devoted to interviews with the artists, poets, and contributors of the project and can be heard at http://www.rte.ie/radio/utils/radioplayer/rteradioweb.html#!rii=b9_-2_83_16-03-2016_
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Portraits of George Cruikshank

cruikshank port4Charles Gillot (1853-1903), People of the Period. –George Cruickshank. [sic] (The Champion of Temperance.) in The Period: An Illustrated Quizzical, Satirical, & Critical Review of What Is Going On, Sept. 17, 1870. Hand colored relief etching. Graphic Arts Collection GC022

 

cruikshank port8Daniel John Pound (active 1850-1860) after a photograph by John Watkins (1823-1874) and Charles Watkins (1836-1882), George Cruikshank, Esq., between 1858 and 1870. “The Drawing Room Portrait Gallery of Eminent Personages Presented with the Illustrated News of the World.”
Graphic Arts collection GC022

 

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R. Taylor & Company, A broadsheet “In memoriam” of George Cruikshank with a large central portrait of the artist. Wood engraving. London: Curtice & Co, 1878. Graphic Arts Collection GC022

 

cruikshank port1Unidentified artist after a photograph by Ernest Edwards & Cyril Mangin Bult, George Cruikshank AEtat 76, ca. 1868. Etching. Graphic Arts Collection GC022

 

cruikshank port7Alfred Croquis (pseudonym for Daniel Maclise 1806-1870), Geo Cruikshank. Author of ‘Illustrations of Time'” (London: James Fraser, [ca. 1832]). Note: British Museum incorrectly attributes this to Alfred Crowquill (pseudonym for Alfred Henry Forrester). Etching. Graphic arts Collection GC022

 

cruikshank port6Unidentified artist, The Venerable George. He painted in oils the virtues of Water from The Hornet, December 6, 1871. Lithograph. Graphic Arts Collection GC022

 

interior view2 interior view

George Cruikshank (1792-1878), Cruikshank’s self-portrait in the frontispiece “Interior View of the House of God” published in The Scourge or Monthly Expositor of Imposture and Folly (London: W. Jones, November 1, 1811). Graphic Arts Collection (GA) Cruik 1811.2.

George Cruikshank can be seen at the bottom left as a young, debonair gentleman talking to M. Jones, the publisher of the magazine. Note: Cruikshank is holding one of his drawings. Graphic Arts Collection GC022

 

 

Oath of Allegiance 1747

oath to king2The Graphic Arts Collection recently acquired an unsigned folio broadside for an Oath of Allegiance to King George II dated 1747. The Eighteenth Century Short Title Catalogue lists six printings of the oath, only two dated (1700 and 1702).

George II, King of Great Britain (1683-1760) was the only son of George I. His reign as King of Great Britain and Ireland, Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg (Hanover) and Prince-elector of the Holy Roman Empire lasted from 1727 to his death in 1760.
oath to king“I A.B. do sincerely promise and swear, that I will be faithful and bear true Allegiance to His Majesty King George. So help me God.

I A.B. do swear, that I do from my Heart abhor, destest, and abjure, as impious and heretical, that damnable Doctrine and Posit ion, that Princes excommunicated or deprived by the Pope, or any Authority of the See of Rome, may be deposed or murthered by their Subjects, or any other whatsoever.

And I do declare, that no foreign Prince, Person, Prelate, State, or Potentate, hath, or ought to have any Jurisdiction, Power, Preeminence, or Authority, ecclesiastical or spritiual, within this Realm.

So help me God. London: Printed by Thomas Baskett, Printer to the King’s most excellent Majesty; and by the Assigns of Robert Baskett. 1747.”
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Watermark

george iiJames Granger (1723-1776), A Biographical History of England (London: Printed by the illustrator, [1856]). Rare Books (Ex) Oversize 1497.4055.12q v.23

Touring the Plaza

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plaza8“To begin with,” wrote Cameron MacRae, class of 1963, “the portrait of Eloise that has hung in the Hotel Plaza for several years was swiped on Wednesday, the night of the Junior League Ball. According to an alert Plaza spokesman the Hillary Knight picture ‘Just isn’t here any more — it’s probably hanging in some college dormitory.’” Daily Princetonian, 29 November 1960.

Artist Hilary Knight painted the portrait of Eloise in 1957, after the success of the illustrated children’s book he and Kay Thompson published about a young girl who lived at the Plaza Hotel (Cotsen Children’s Library (CTSN) Eng 20Q 27597).

The painting hung opposite the Palm Court until “college night” in 1960 when students from many ivy league universities attended the annual debutante ball in the Plaza’s ballroom (seen below). As the Princeton student reported, the painting disappeared and was never found. Knight consented to paint a second copy, which is the one we saw during a recent tour of the Plaza Hotel. (On a side note, the Pennsylvania railroad was overloaded and stopped working during the balls that year. 400 Princeton students had to be driven back to campus in taxis.)

plaza9The original 1945 murals painted by Everett Shinn (1876-1853) in the Plaza’s Oak Bar are still in place, although both the Oak Room and Oak Bar closed in 2011. During our tour, we learned that the mural of the Vanderbilt mansion never appeared in the famous Alfred Hitchcock’s film North by Northwest. Although several scenes were filmed at the Plaza, Hitchcock did not like the columns in the Oak Bar and so, recreated the entire room back in the studio for the filming of that one scene. Only a detail of the Shinn painting was reproduced.
screen-capture-4(Another side note, although Cornelius Vanderbilt’s mansion, formerly next door to the Plaza Hotel, had 100 rooms, his son Alfred moved out and was the first person to register for a room at the newly built Plaza Hotel in 1907.)
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When the Oak Room reopened in 2008 after extensive cleaning to remove the nicotine stains from cigarette smoke, Frank Bruni of the New York Times reviewed the restaurant, admiring the decor more than the food. He commented, “That ceiling was framed by yard upon yard of gold molding and trim. If heaven is wood-paneled, it probably looks something like this.” “A Waltz of Gilt and Truffles, The Oak Room,” New York Times, February 3, 2009.

Until 1969, when Betty Friedan and other members of the National Organization for Women staged a protest, the Oak Room was only open to men during the day (while the stock exchange was open). Friedan and the others were thrown out of the Plaza but soon after, the policy was changed and women were allowed to eat at the restaurant at any time of day.

plaza2The eight publicly accessible interiors at the Plaza are largely a result of four different campaigns: Henry Hardenbergh’s original design of 1905-07; the 1921 renovation and addition by Warren & Wetmore; Schultze & Weaver’s ballroom from 1929 and Conrad Hilton’s renovation of the building when he acquired it in 1943. Hardenbergh, Warren & Wetmore and Schulze & Weaver were three significant early twentieth-century American architectural firms, which were preeminent hotel designers.

Ten years ago, the Plaza closed to the public for three years in order to clean and restore the painted decoration of the Terrace Room and the Ballroom. The richly decorated coffered ceiling, wall panels, and wooden doors all feature painted detail by noted interior decorator John Smeraldi.

The 1929 Neo-Rococo ballroom, the third since the opening of the Plaza in 1907, was also beautifully restored although it remained surprisingly empty during our visit last weekend.

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The Plaza was the dream of hotelier Fred Sterry; Harry S. Black, President of the Fuller Construction Company; and German financier Bernhard Beinecke. Beinecke’s sons Edwin, Frederick, and Walter Beinecke assumed the leadership of The Sperry and Hutchinson Company in the 1920’s, which grew from a small enterprise to a Fortune 500 company by 1975. The Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library was given to Yale University by these men and their families in 1963.
plaza13The original skylight in the Palm Court was removed many years ago to make room for air conditioning units in the space above. Recently the stain glass ceiling was recreated and reinstalled, with fiber optic lights behind. An outdoor terrace sits above, only available to the owners of the building’s condominiums.

Sincere thanks to architectural historian Francis Morrone, who leads the private tours of the Plaza. Francis Morrone, The Architectural Guidebook to New York City (Salt Lake City: Gibbs Smith, 1994). Marquand Library (SA) NA735.N5 M64 1994

Another Thomas Cross identified

cross extra2T.Cross sculp

Although many title pages designed and engraved by Thomas Cross (active 1632-1682) are signed by the artist, such as the one above, others are not making attribution difficult. A new print has been identified. Note the name Cross in the bottom right:  cross paetorii2Johannes Praetorius (1630-1680), Anthropodemvs Plvtonicvs: das ist eine neue Welt-Beschreibung von allerley wunderbahren Menschen ... (Magdeburg: In Verlegung Johann Lüderwalds, 1666). 2 pts. in 1 v. Title page designed and engraved by Thomas Cross (active 1632-1682). Columbia University.

Cross has been discounted over the years as a minor 17th-century engraver. The DNB states, “His style shows no attempt at artistic refinement, but merely an endeavour to render faithfully the lineaments of the persons or objects portrayed; this he executed in a dry and stiff manner.” In fact, his designs are filled with fancy and imagination. The multiple compartments used above were repeated in several other books, such as The Rich Cabinet, seen below. Both volumes are very worn, leaving one image very dark and the other very brown.cross rich cabine 58John White, A rich cabinet (London: printed for William Whitwood at the sign of the Golden Lion in Duck-Lane near Smith-field, 1668). Graphic Arts Collection (GAX) N-000210

John Stewart, Landscape Photographer

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photography trees4John Stewart and and James Mitchell, Photographs of Trees &c. taken during the Excursions with The Andersonian Naturalists’ Society, &c., 1888–90. 3 volumes containing 136 albumen prints, each titled, numbered and dated in ink or pencil below.Graphic Arts Collection 2016- in process.

photography trees2The Graphic Arts Collection recently acquired three unassuming photography albums, each with a printed label on the front pastedown that reads: “Copies of these Photographs may be had at any time, on application to James Mitchell, Con. Photo. Committee, 240 Darnley St, Pollokshields. Silver prints, Unmounted, … 5 d. each… Mounted, … 8 d. Platinotype Prints (Permanent), Unmounted, 10 d. … Mounted, 1s.” Each volume also has a smaller label: “John Stewart, Landscape & General Photographers. Largs.” and price list in manuscript ink on back pastedown.

The albums hold a sequence of photographs dated from March 1888 to March 1890, although those by John Stewart (1814-1887) would have been taken earlier. The prints focus mainly on the specimen trees studied and admired by the Andersonian Naturalists, a Glasgow organization. The volumes are clearly intended as a form of sample or sales catalogue. The price lists offers the photographs in several formats including lantern slides and mounted or unmounted paper prints. “While primarily a study of the trees, for which the group were prepared to travel from the southwest of Scotland to the twin beeches at Rosehall in Sutherland, these little volumes also describe something of the pleasure the group took in these travels.”–dealer’s note.

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photography trees

John Stewart has been identified as the younger brother of John Herschel’s Scottish wife, Margaret (“Maggie”) Stewart. “Together with his brothers, he entered the printing business in London, and in 1839 he married a childhood Scottish friend, a resident of France in delicate health. This was one factor in his living mainly in Pau in southwest France, a favored area for recuperation and also a hotbed of photographic activity. It is not known when or why Stewart first took up photography, but his close relationship with Herschel could have encouraged him. Once in Pau he fell into the circle of unusually active amateurs who employed waxed paper. Stewart’s entries in the London exhibitions of the Society of Arts in 1852, the Photographic Institution in 1854, and the Photographic Society in 1855 were all views taken in the Pyrenees.“–Roger Taylor and Larry J. Schaaf, Impressed by Light (2007).stewart“Deaths” Times (London) August 3, 1887.

Physogs

physogs2Waddy Productions. Physogs: the Novel Card Game (Aldwych, London: Waddy Productions, Astor House, [between 1939 and 1945]).1 game (4 frame cards, 52 playing cards, 2 booklets). Graphic Arts Collection GA2016- in process.

Shortly after the publication of sociologist Jacques Penry’s book How to Read Character from the Face: a Complete Explanation of Character as it is Shown by the Size, Proportion, and Texture of Each Feature (New York: Fortuny’s, 1939), the British company Waddy came out with a game based on Penry’s book.

As the booklet states, “The object of the game is not merely the piecing together of features but the building of faces, the features of which are consistent with each other. The eyes, nose, mouth, etc., must not, in its respective ‘character,’ conflict with any other feature.” A key book describes thirteen distinct facial-character types: acquisitive-shrewd, dissipated, bad-tempered, determined, suaveobsequious, artistic-imaginative, credulous-impractical, magnetic, excitable-impetuous, self-conscious, crafty-self-centered, pleasant-cheerful, and narrow-minded-stubborn. Play continues until someone has selected the correct set of eyes, nose, and mouth.

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The Boxes

rowlandson boxes3The 7s on the owl’s collars indicates the increase in theater prices to 7 shillings for these seats, the ‘pigeon holes’ at the top of the boxes.

rowlandson boxes2The only one quietly paying attention to the play is the dog.
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rowlandson boxes5Thomas Rowlandson (1756-1827), after a design by John Opie (1761-1807), The Boxes, 1809. Hand colored etching. Inscribed “Opie invt/ Pubd Decr 12 1809 by T. Rowlandson No 1 James St Adelphi.” Graphic Arts Collection GAX 2014.00113. Gift of Dickson Q. Brown, Class of 1895.

This print gives you an idea of the rioting audience members at London’s Covent Garden Theatre during the Old Price Riots of 1809 (also referred to as the OP riots). A devastating fire had leveled the theatre the previous year and rebuilding lasted through the summer. Finally, on Thursday September 14, 1809, the Morning Post confirmed that the newly built Theatre Royal would open the following Monday with the tragedy Macbeth, starring Mrs Sarah Siddons.

To subsidized the new theater, ticket prices were raised from 6 shillings to 7 for the boxes and from 3 shillings and sixpence to 4 shillings for the pit. On the opening night, riots broke out during the performance and continued all night. In fact, the riots lasted another 64 days.

Happily, the audience won the fight and the prices were reduced.

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Note on the second tier the insignia “from N to O Jack you must go,” meaning: change the prices from the new to the old cost; and the owner, Jack Kemble, must go.

The print is inscribed at the bottom: “O woe is me, t’ have seen what I have seen / Seeing what I see.” Shakespear’ [Hamlet, III. ii]. 12 December 1809. Etching

The Boxes will be on view at the Princeton University Art Museum next fall when we celebrate the anniversary of Shakespeare’s death with a small exhibit entitled “Remember Me: Shakespeare and His Legacy.”

Carte Odographique

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carte odographique
Louis-Charles Desnos (1725-1805), Carte odographique de toutes les routes les plus fréquentées de Paris à toutes les capitales, ports de mer et autres villes comerçantes de l’Europe &c. (Graphic measurements of all the most popular routes from Paris to all capitals, seaports and other European cities of commerce &c.) (Paris: Desnos, Ruë St. Jacques à l’enseigne du Globe, 1763). Graphic Arts Collection GAX 2016- in process

This hand colored chart provides a graphic depiction of the distances between Paris and “the main cities of the kingdom.” It was designed by cartographer and engraver Louis Charles Desnos (1725-1805) who both made and sold maps, globes, atlases, instruments, and books from his shop on Rue St. Jacques “at the sign of the globe.”

See also: Louis-Charles Desnos (1725-1805), Nouvel atlas de la généralité de Paris: divisé en ses 22 elections. . . (Paris: [Desnos], rue S. Jacques à l’enseigne du Globe, 1762). Marquand Library (SAX): Rare Books G1838 .D47 1762

Alexander Anderson Woodblock 1801

woodblock3recto
woodblockverso, date should be 1801
woodblock4cover
woodblock5title page
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woodblock7Emblems of Mortality, Representing, in Upwards of Fifty Cuts, Death Seizing All Ranks and Degrees of People … with an Apostrophe to Each Translated from the Latin and French … to Which is Prefixed a Copious Preface, Containing an Historical Account of the Above, and Other Paintings on the Subject … 1st American ed. (Hartford: Printed by John Babcock, 1801). Sinclair Hamilton Collection (GAX) Hamilton 214