Chez l'auteur en 1975, reliure toilée beige carrée sous couverture beige textee chocolat dans un état proche du neuf. EDITION ORIGINALE DE 1975. Les 60 photographies représentent de grands auteurs en littérature
Reference : BBA-942
MAGNIFIQUE DÉDICACE DE L'AUTEUR EN PAGE DE GARDE AVEC NOTAMMENT UNE RÉFÉRENCE À "BLANCHE" SON ASSOCIÉE.(del)
Christian Bultez
M. Christian Bultez
06 66 31 54 28
- Comptant plus port Libeller les règlements à l'ordre de "Christian BULTEZ " - Virement bancaire Credit mutuel-06600 ANTIBES :RIB: 10278 08956 00020717101 62 EUR IBAN : FR76 1027 8089 5600 0207 1710 162 BIC : CMCIFR2A
Alfred A. Knopf. 1975. In-4. Cartonné. Bon état, Coins frottés, Dos satisfaisant, Papier jauni. 61 pages illustrées de photos en noir et blanc. Texte en anglais. Jaquette passable. Quelques rousseurs.. Avec Jaquette. . . Classification Dewey : 420-Langue anglaise. Anglo-saxon
Classification Dewey : 420-Langue anglaise. Anglo-saxon
Shanghai, A.S. Watson, 1922, 3rd edition. 1 volume, folio, VIII-40 pp., original full cloth binding, a good copy with usual foxing, some loss of silk on cloth covers. This volume is illustrated with 66 photographs on tipped-in plates by the famous photographer Donald Mennie.
Donald Mennie was a photographer in Shanghai and Peking from 1920 until late 30'. This volume shows includes photographs of famous views such as the Summer Palace, the Forbidden City, the Great Wall, and scenes of shopkeepers, merchants, travellers, and monks going among other people...
Shanghai, A.S. Watson, 1922, 3rd edition. 1 volume, folio, VIII-40 pp., original full cloth binding, a very good copy without the usual foxing. This volume is illustrated with 66 photographs on tipped-in plates by the famous photographer Donald Mennie.
Donald Mennie was a photographer in Shanghai and Peking from 1920 until late 30'. This volume shows includes photographs of famous views such as the Summer Palace, the Forbidden City, the Great Wall, and scenes of shopkeepers, merchants, travellers, and monks going among other people...
Shanghai, A.S. Watson, 1922, 3rd edition. 1 volume, folio, VIII-40 pp., original full cloth binding, a good copy with usual foxing, some loss of silk on cloth covers. This volume is illustrated with 66 photographs on tipped-in plates by the famous photographer Donald Mennie.
Donald Mennie was a photographer in Shanghai and Peking from 1920 until late 30'. This volume shows includes photographs of famous views such as the Summer Palace, the Forbidden City, the Great Wall, and scenes of shopkeepers, merchants, travellers, and monks going among other people...
Shanghai, A.S. Watson, 1922. Folio (390 x 300 mm). In the original blue silke covered binding with gilt lettering and decoration to front board. Spine slightly faded. Internally fine and clean, an overall very nice copy. (8), 40 pp. + 66 photogravures tipped into recto of each page with caption on verso.
Third edition of this fine work with sixty-six fine photogravure plates documenting the twilight of imperial China. It is the most iconic of Donald Mennie's early photobooks and a cornerstone of Western visual records of early 20th-century Beijing Although born and raised in Golspie, Scotland, Donald Mennie (1875–1944) spent the majority of his life in China, arriving around 1899. Trained as a chemist he rose to become Managing Director of the Shanghai branch of A.S. Watson & Co., a firm that by the 1930s was also a dealer in photographic materials. His photographic work, inspired by the Pictorialist style, emphasized mood and composition over mere documentation, making his books highly desirable as both artistic and historical records. From 1914 Mennie traveled widely across China, producing popular photo-books that include ""China by Land and Water"", ""Picturesque China"", and his magnum opus, The Grandeur of the Gorges (1926). The Pageant of Peking remains one of his most sought-after works for its focus on Beijing at a pivotal historical moment - before the empire gave way to modern transformation. This edition is accompanied by an introduction by Putnam Weale (B.L. Simpson) and descriptive notes by S. Couling Tragically Mennie’s life ended in Japanese captivity during WWII, dying in a Shanghai internment center in 1944.