Category Archives: Acquisitions

new acquisitions

Stereo-graphoscope

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The Graphic Arts Collection recently acquired a nineteenth-century stereo-graphoscope in a molded thermoplastic case.  This unusual model has a small section at the bottom for three colored glass filters to be used in the graphoscope lens.

Like the zograscope of the eighteenth century, this optical viewer was most often used in a family parlor for evening entertainment. The graphoscope’s round magnifying glass allows for detail views of cabinet cards, tintypes, engravings, and other single photographic images, while the lower stereo glasses are for the viewing of stereographic cards. The whole device folds up into a small box.

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Thermoplastic cases, also called Union cases, were first developed in the 1850s for housing daguerreotypes. The earliest patent was filed by Samuel Peck in Connecticut and the use of this material on the Stereo-graphoscope dates it earlier than other wood or leather models.

 

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According to an anonymous author in the British Journal of Photography, “the action of the graphoscope . . . is one [subject] that seems to be very little understood. Everyone who has used the appliance is familiar with its effect, but very few seem to be prepared with an explanation of the relief observed in a single photograph when it is observed through a single large lens.”

He goes on to explain, “a graphoscope is a large single lens of sufficient diameter to enable both eyes to observe the photograph, and the three conditions we have referred to are: first, a condition governing the appreciation of perspective; second, a condition peculiar to the formation of a virtual image of a plane object by a single positive lens; third, a condition peculiar to the binocular observation of any diagram or picture through a large lens.

We have several times pointed out the extreme importance of true perspective in connection with the subject of stereoscopy, and also when referring to the matter of monocular relief. … the trouble with photographs is that the proper view point is very often so near the print that distinct vision from that point is impossible. One remedy for this is to stop down the eye pupil by observing the object through a pinhole. This so increases the range of distinct vision that the proper position can often be found. Another remedy is the use of a magnifying lens to increase the size of the picture, and also the viewing distance, up to a convenient dimension. This, then, is one of the functions of the graphoscope.” —The British Journal of Photography 54, no. 2448 (April 5, 1907)

 

 

Caramels and Actors

actor-trade-cards5American Caramel Company. Trade cards featuring actors and actresses of the silent film era (Lancaster and York, PA: American Caramel Company, [1921]). 120 photolithographic cards. Graphic Arts Collection 2016- in process

The Graphic Arts Collection holds a collection of printed candy wrappers, begun as a joke by Princeton University students: https://blogs.princeton.edu/graphicarts/2008/11/graphic_candy.html. Since then, we continue to add to the collection, such as cookie trading cards from the LU company:  https://blogs.princeton.edu/graphicarts/2008/09/who_likes_our_biscuits.html

We recently acquired actor trading cards distributed with caramels.
actor-trade-cardsAccording to the Hershey Community Archives, “Milton Hershey started the Lancaster Caramel Company in 1886 after he returned to Lancaster, Pennsylvania following the failure of his New York City candy business. The Lancaster business would be his third confectionery venture. . . . When Milton Hershey sold the Lancaster Caramel Company on August 10, 1900 to the American Caramel Company for $1 million, he retained the rights to the Hershey Chocolate Company.”

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In the 1920s, the American Caramel Company manufactured sets of photolithographic trade cards with collectable portraits of actors and actresses. Information about the current projects and studio are also included. Anyone who bought a caramel, also received a trade card. The more caramels you bought, the closer you got to acquiring a whole set.

 

The set was issued twice, one in a set of 80 cards and another in a set of 120. The set of 120 cards includes the same portraits as the set of 80 with 40 additional images. Unfortunately, we do not have the 15 cent album to hold our set.

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Here’s a list of the actors and actresses:

1. William S. Hart; 2. Anita Stewart; 3. Wesley Barry; 4. Geraldine Farrar; 5. Buster Keaton; 6. May Allison; 7. Will Rogers; 8. Pearl White; 9. Jackie Coogan; 10. Dorothy Dalton; 11. Tom Moore; 12. Shirley Mason; 13. Theodore Roberts; 14. Eva Novak; 15. Thomas Meighan; 16. Bessie Barriscale; 17. George Beban; 18. Kathlyn Williams; 19. Mabel Normand; 20. Sessue Hayakawa; 21. Colleen Moore; 22. Jack W. Kerrigan; 23. Mary Alden; 24. Rudolph Valentino; 25. Priscilla Dean; 26. Wallace Reid; 27. Gladys Walton; 28. Pauline Frederick; 29. Irene Castle; 30. Bert Lytell; 31. Rubye De Remer; 32. Lois Weber; 33. Marshall Neilan; 34. Irene Rich; 35. Eileen Sedgwick; 36. Herbert Rawlinson; 37. Max Graf; 38. Erich Von Stroheim; 39. Texas Guinan; 40. William Russell; 41. Jack Holt; 42. Marie Prevost; 43. Eddie Polo; 44. Conrad Nagel; 45. Viola Dana; 46. Renee Adoree; 47. Hoot Gibson; 48. Agnes Ayres; 49. William Farnum; 50. Edna Murphy; 51. David Powell; 52. Clara Kimball Young; 53. Art Acord; 54. Ethel Clayton; 55. Harry Carey; 56. Betty Compson; 57. Buck Jones; 58. Helene Chadwick; 59. Elliott Dexter; 60. Ann Forrest; 61. Monte Blue; 62. Eileen Percy; 63. Dustin Farnum; 64. Miss Du Pont; 65. Lila Lee; 66. Jack Gilbert; 67. Hazel Daly; 68. Doris Kenyon; 69. James Kirkwood; 70. Lois Wilson; 71. Nell Shipman; 72. Naomi Childers; 73. Richard Dix; 74. Johnnie Walker; 75. Hope Hampton; 76. Tom Mix; 77. John Bowers; 78. Gloria Swanson; 79. Cullen Landis; 80. Frank Mayo; 81. Mae Busch; 82. Maude George; 83. June Caprice; 84. Tom Santschi; 85. Charlie Chaplin; 86. William De Mille; 87. Harold Lloyd; 88. Robert McKim; 89. Harry “Snub” Pollard; 90. Claire Adams; 91. Katherine Spencer; 92. Baby Peggy; 93. Mildred Davis; 94. Josephine Hill; 95. Alice Lake; 96. Virginia Brown Faire; 97. Nazimova; 98. Louise Lorraine; 99. Kathleen Meyers; 100. Gertrude Olmsted; 101. Elmo Lincoln; 102. Charles Ogle; 103. Pat O’Malley; 104. Jack Perrin; 105. Lee Moran; 106. Milton Sills; 107. Ben Turpin; 108. Cecil B De Mille; 109. Marcella Pershing; 110. Mabel Ballin; 111. Betty Ross Clarke; 112. Anna Q Nilsson; 113. Ina Claire; 114. Marie Mosquini; 115. Pola Negri; 116. Alice Terry; 117. Ruth Roland; 118. Virginia Warwick; 119. Mary Astor; 120. Mary Philbin; 121. Billie Dove; 122. Jack Mulhall; 123. Martha Mansfield; 124. Gareth Hughes; 125. Myrtle Lind; 126. Conrad Nagel; 127. Jane Novak; 128. Clarence Burton; 129. Mary Jane Sanderson; 130. George Larkin; 131. Dorothy Phillips; 132. Eugene O’Brien; 133. Mabel Juliene Scott; 134. Walter Hiers; 135. Mary Glynn; 136. Carl Gantvoort; 137. Constance Binney; 138. William Boyd; 139. Marguerite Courtot; 140. May McAvoy

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Walt Whitman and Aaron Siskind

“You objects that call from diffusion my meanings and give them shape! . . . you are dear to me.”—Walt Whitman

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Sidney Shiff (1924-2010) acquired the Limited Editions Club (LEC) from Cardavon Press in 1978. He soon became known for the prominent artists he convinced to work on his books, including Jacob Lawrence, Henri Cartier-Bresson, Elizabeth Catlett, Francesco Clemente, Ellsworth Kelly, Sean Scully, and in 1990, Aaron Siskind.

Siskind was 86 years old when he agreed to collaborate on a LEC volume with Shiff. Having once aspired to be a poet himself, Siskind chose Whitman from Shiff’s list suggested authors, just as Edward Weston did for his LEC volume in 1942.

To complete the commission, Siskind walked outside his Providence, Rhode Island home and photographed the tar recently poured into the cracks of the local concrete road. Six of his detailed negatives were transferred to copper plates by Paul Taylor and printed as intaglio prints by Clary Nelson to Renaissance Press.

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Walt Whitman (1819-1892) and Aaron Siskind (1903-1991), Song of the Open Road (New York: Limited Editions Club; printed by Paul Taylor, 1990). Letterpress with six photogravures. Designed by Kevin Begos Jr. and Dan Carr. Setin English Monotype Scotch at Golgonooza Letter Foundry by Julia Ferrari and Dan Carr. The text was printed by Heritage Printers on a paper made at Carterie Enrico Magnani. Edition: 89/550. Graphic Arts Collection 2016- in process

Song of the Open Road
By Walt Whitman

3. You air that serves me with breath to speak!
You objects that call from diffusion my meanings and give them shape!
You light that wraps me and all things in delicate equable showers!
You paths worn in the irregular hollows by the roadsides!
I believe you are latent with unseen existences, you are so dear to me.

You flagg’d walks of the cities! you strong curbs at the edges!
You ferries! you planks and posts of wharves! you timber-lined sides! you distant ships!

You rows of houses! you window-pierc’d façades! you roofs!
You porches and entrances! you copings and iron guards!
You windows whose transparent shells might expose so much!
You doors and ascending steps! you arches!
You gray stones of interminable pavements! you trodden crossings!
From all that has touch’d you I believe you have imparted to yourselves, and now would impart the same secretly to me,
From the living and the dead you have peopled your impassive surfaces, and the spirits thereof would be evident and amicable with me.

Face powder envelopes, Kyoto 1815

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The Graphic Arts Collection recently acquired a sample album holding nearly 200 colorful cosmetic packages of Oshiroi or white face powder. The ephemeral decorative envelopes are pasted onto 45 unnumbered leaves with various printed and manuscript labels. The final leaf holds a hand-written note indicating the album was produced in Kyoto in 1815.

 

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“In Japan, beauty has long been associated with a light skin tone. During the Nara Period (710–94), women painted their face with a white powder called oshiroi, and in the Heian Period (794–1185), a white facial color continued to stand as a symbol of beauty. References to the beauty of light skin tone are found in the Diary of Lady Murasaki and Tale of Genji. More than a thousand years ago, cosmetics for whitening the skin had already become a status symbol among the aristocracy.”–Originally written in Japanese by Ushijima Bifue.

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This marvelous sample book was assembled in 1815 for the Fujiwara Harima Ishizuka Face Powder Company and the Chikamaro Face Powder Company of Kyoto by a cosmetics distributor named Omi-ya.

The early pages hold thirty sets of three labels each: the first label tells in rapturous detail of the special qualities of the contents, the second gives the brand name, and the third the manufacturer’s name.

Following this are 107 color-printed labels for the envelopes (each including a brand name), then another 52 color-printed labels, and finally the actual face powder envelopes. The decorative designs are either color woodblock prints or made from special paper with metallic flakes including gold.

 

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This album was once owned by Dr. Kokichi Kano (1865-1942), a Japanese literature scholar, who came from Oodate City, Akita Prefecture. Kano began his career as the principal of First Higher School (1898-1906) and was then named President of a liberal arts college, Kyoto Imperial University (1906-1908).

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Mr. Crindle and The Man in the Moon

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The British artist Henry George Hine (1811-1895) left Punch in 1844 to freelance for a variety of other satirical newspapers and magazines, including Great Gun, Puck, and, beginning in 1847, The Man in the Moon. Although it had a smaller format, Man in the Moon boasted a large, fold-out cartoon narrative at the front of every monthly issue.

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The first fold-out told the Life and Death of Don Guzzles of Carrara (artist unknown), followed the next month with The Foreign Gentleman in London; or the English Adventures of M. Vanille, drawn by Cham (1819-1879).

Man in the Moon’s third issue offered the first of nine installments chronicling Mr. Crindle’s Rapid Career upon Town. Hine collaborated on the story and designs with Albert Smith (1816-1869), who had also left Punch for this new journal.

The Crindle series became so popular with the British public that the nine parts were combined and published as a continuous narrative in four pages, titled The Surprising Adventures and Rapid Career Upon Town of Mr. Crindle (recently acquired by the Graphic Arts Collection).crincle4

Not to be outdone, the Paris publisher Charles Philipon (1800-1861) had Gustave Doré (1832-1883) create a revised version called L’Homme aux Cent Mille Écus (The Man with a Hundred Thousand Crowns) which ran in Journal pour Rire between January 12 and June 15, 1850.journal-pour-rire-1850-01-12-800-2

The Man in the Moon: A Monthly Review and Bulletin of New Measures, New Men, New Books, New Plays, New Jokes, and New Nonsense; Being an Act for the Amalgamation of the Broad Gauge of Fancy with the Narrow Gauge of Fact into the Grand General Amusement Junction (London: Clarke, 1847-1849). Edited by Albert Smith (1816-1869) and Angus B. Reach (1821-1856). Artists include Smith; George Augustus Sala (1828-1895); Phiz (Hablot Knight Browne, 1815-1882); Joseph Kenny Meadows (1790-1874); Lionel Percy Smythe (1839-1918); Cham (1819-1879); Robert B. Brough (1828-1860); Henry George Hine (1811-1895); Isaac Nicholson; and Thomas A. Mayhew. Graphic Arts Collection (GA) 2005-0423N

Le Journal pour rire (Paris: Aubert, 1848-1855). Graphic Arts Collection (GAX) 2011-0030E

Here are some details:

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Illustrated Police News

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police-newsThe Illustrated Police News, Law Courts and Weekly Record was founded in 1864. “Published in London by John Ransom and George Purkess and printed by Purkess and Richard Beard, the Illustrated Police News claimed to give attention to subjects of more than ordinary interest ranging from gory murders to courtroom dramas. The sensational weekly priced at 1d . . . Its circulation grew over its first 20 years of publication from 100,000 to 300,000.” –Laurel Brake and Marysa Demoor, Dictionary of Nineteenth-century Journalism in Great Britain and Ireland (2009)

A pictorial front page of the January 14, 1882, issue was recently acquired by the Graphic Arts Collection, without the three text pages that followed. The top-most cells depict George Lamson, who was found guilty of murder, a sensational case covered by the paper almost daily from December 1881 through his hanging the following April.

George Henry Lamson (1850-1882) had become a morphine addict and needed money. On December 3, 1881, he poisoned his crippled brother-in-law using aconite or wolf’s bane, in the hope of receiving his inheritance. The transcript of Lamson’s trial is recorded in the Old Bailey Online database at:
https://www.oldbaileyonline.org/browse.jsp?id=def1-367-18820227&div=t18820227-367#highlight

Lamson insisted on his innocence and turned himself in to officials. “However, with the consciousness that I am an innocent and unjustly accused man, I am returning at once to London to face the matter out. If they wish to arrest me they will have ample opportunity of doing so. I shall attempt no concealment. I shall arrive at Waterloo Station about 9.15 tomorrow (Thursday) morning. Do try and meet me there. If I do not see you there I shall go straight to your house, trusting to the possibility of finding Kitty there.—In great haste, yours truly, GEO. H. LAMSON.—W. G. Chapman, Esq.”

Other events are also highlighted in this issue.police-news4
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See also Giles St. Aubyn, Infamous Victorians: Palmer and Lamson, two notorious poisoners (London: Constable, 1971). RECAP HV6555.G7S35

“Les minutes de sable mémorial”

jarry4Alfred Jarry (1873-1907), Les minutes de sable mémorial ([Paris]: Editio[n] du Mercure de Fra[n]ce, C. Renaudie, 1894). One of 216 copies printed. Seven woodcuts carved and printed by Jarry, two printed from earlier woodblocks. Graphic Arts Collection GAX 2016- in process.

 

Alfred Jarry published his first book of prints and poems, Les minutes de sable mémorial in September 1894 at the age of twenty-one. He paid the cost himself working with the printers at Mercure de France where many Symbolists were publishing.

The design of the volume, repeated the following year in his second book César antichrist, includes astonishingly modern typography, which predates that of Un Coup de Dés Jamais N’Abolira Le Hasard (A Throw of the Dice will Never Abolish Chance) by Stéphane Mallarmé in 1897. Jarry’s book should be considered an early artists’ book although it never appears in such studies
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According to Keith Beaumont, “…the prestigious and highly influential Echo de Paris had held a monthly literary competition which offered to aspiring young writers the prospect of four valuable and much coveted prizes of 100 francs each … and a guarantee of publication in the paper’s weekly illustrated literary supplement. Between February and August 1893, Jarry was to win outright or to share five such prizes, with poems or prose texts, which would be republished the following year in his first book, Les Minutes de sable mémorial.” (Keith Beaumont, Alfred Jarry. St. Martin’s Press, 1984)

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Jarry liked multiple meanings for a single text, exemplified in his title: Les minutes de sable mémorial. Beaumont notes, “Sable refers both to the sand of the sablier or hourglass, which marks the passage of time, and which recurs in the title of the last poem in the volume, and to the term for the colour black in heraldry; and memorial has the meaning of both ‘in memory of’ and ‘of the memory’. The title as a whole therefore refers simultaneously to the passage of time whose ‘minutes’ are here recorded; to the movement of memory; and to the committal to paper of a series of moments of creative activity (‘sable’ referring to the ink-blackened pages) which memory has inspired or, alternatively and simultaneously, which are reproduced here as a ‘memorial’.”

 

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In November 1894, Jarry cut his long hair and enlisted in the 101st Infantry Regiment in Laval.
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See also Alfred Jarry (1873-1907), Cesar antechrjst ([Paris]: Mercure de France, 1895). One of 7 large-paper copies on vergé Ingres de carnation. Rare Books (Ex) 3260.33.323 1895 [below]jarry

 

Les sept péchés mortels

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hamilton-deadly-sinsEverett Hamilton, Les sept péchés mortels. Observes et graves sur bois dans la ville de Cagnes (Paris: Gilbert Rougeaux, 1936). Copy 34 of 100. Graphic Arts Collection GAX 2016- in process.

Rare Books and Special Collections has many different versions of Sept péchés capitaux or Seven Deadly Sins or Siete pecados capitals or Sieben tödliche Sünden. This is a new addition to the group.

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Almost nothing has been recorded about the life of the American artist Everett Hamilton. As a young man, Hamilton left the United States in 1923 to live and study painting in Paris. Six years later, he returned and received his first one-man show of watercolors and linocuts at Montross Galleries on Fifth Avenue.

“The subject matter his pictures are reminiscent of the work of all the other painters who frequent the popular painting resorts of France. There the similarity ends, in that the artist has remained curiously free from popular trends of style and points of view. A direct transcription of visual reality and an emphasis on structure which, when the human figure is introduced, becomes definitely plastic, [and] gives his work its distinctive style.” Brooklyn Daily Eagle, December 15, 1929

By 1932, Hamilton was included in an American watercolors exhibition assembled by the College Art Association and held at the Worcester Art Museum, in Worcester, Massachusetts. His three paintings hung side-by-side with the work of Milton Avery, Charles Burchfield, Stuart Davis, and Wanda Gag, among others.

This was Hamilton’s last American show and it seems likely that the artist moved back to the South of France, where he observed and engraved The Seven Mortal Sins in the town of Cagnes.

 

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How to Write a Letter in 1661

1661bGeorg Philipp Harsdörffer (1607-1658), Der Teutsche Secretarius [The German Secretary], part two (Nuremberg: Christoph and Paul Endtern, 1661). Graphic Arts Collection GAX 2016- in process

“Known as der Spielende (the Playful One) in Germany’s leading intellectual society, . . . Georg Philipp Harsdörffer (1607-58) was one of the most influential advocates of German in the seventeenth century. He intended Der Teutsche Sekretarius (The German Secretary), as a reference tool for chancery as well as private use.”—Camden House History of German Literature (2001).

The Graphic Arts Collection recently acquired part two of Harsdörffer’s popular manual for letter writing. Over 700 pages offer instruction in grammar, spelling, semantics, petitioning, composing official forms, and examples of personal communication. We learn how to write a letter of apology for being drunk and one describing the virtues and vices of men verses animals.

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The decorative title page was engraved by Johann Friedrich Fleischberger (1631-1665) after Georg Strauch (1613-1675), both Nuremberg natives who collaborated on a number of projects. In particular they designed and printed a broadside on “the trivial importance, time, and maximum desired importance of eternal goods,” entitled Christiche Betrachtung, with verse attributed to Harsdörffer.

 

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1661aA code appears on the front leaf: +ERO+WERO+OPE25. This has been translated as “I shall be, I shall drink freely, I shall busy myself.” Uvero is the future tense of uveo, which is apparently a variant of uvesco.
According to Lewis & Short, uvesco is “to moisten or refresh one’s self, i.e. to drink freely, to tipple.”
The verb uvesco is used by Horace in one of his Sermones, in the context of drinking wine at a banquet.

 

 

 

 

Day-Glo Designer’s Guide

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In conjunction with VIS 313, we are strengthening our holdings in fluorescent color photography and printing from the 1960s. It is a recognizable moment in printing history, similar to the French pochoir illustration of the 1920s or the wood-engraving of the illustrated newspapers of the 1850s.

This particular guide was printed as a promotional piece to demonstrate the effects of Day-Glo fluorescence for posters and album covers, magazine ads, packaging and more. The volume Includes a short history of Day-Glo and a myriad of tips for designers.

In addition, there is a pop out and build up Day-Glo box, a pop up Day-Glo flower garden and several color sheets in a pocket at the rear. In addition, a 12-page bound in section of Bert Stern’s famous series of Day-Glo serigraph prints of Marilyn Monroe (originally published in Avant Garde magazine)

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The Day-Glo designer’s guide (Cleveland, Oh.: Dayglo Color Corp., 1969). Movable/removable parts include (in pocket at rear): Day-Glo tone chart; Day-Glo bonus color chart: Day-Glo four-color process lithography chart.  Graphic Arts Collection GA 2016- in process