Rabu, 14 Desember 2011

Maas Gallery - Victorian Engravings

http://maasgallery.co.uk/index.php?option=com_joomgallery&view=category&catid=2&Itemid=54
Thanks to Jeremy Hoare for highlighting this

Charles Silem Lidderdale - Rejected Addresses, 1876

Sangorski & Sutcliffe binding

A fine example of an elaborately illuminated Sangorski manuscript in a superb Sangorski & Sutcliffe binding

The Vision of Sir Launfal by James Russell LOWELL. . 21 pp. Pre-Raphaelite style calligraphic manuscript on vellum, by Alberto Sangorski but unsigned. With a large illuminated watercolour on the title page with 3 other illuminated watercolours and very elaborate illuminated borders with lavish use of gilt and colour on six of the pages plus illuminated initials throughout, written in black and red ink. In a remarkable lavish signed binding by Sangorski & Sutcliffe. In the originalsilk and velvet lined box of green leather. Illuminated and bound for the Grolier Society, London. c.1909. POA

A verse parable based on the Arthurian legend of the Holy Grail, which was one of the most popular works of the 19th century Boston writer James Russell Lowell, perfectly illustrated with Pre-Raphaelite miniatures with lavish use of gilt and medieval armorial designs.

Sangorski & Sutcliffe was one of England’s foremost binding firms during the early decades of the twentieth century. Founded in London in 1901 by the Polish émigré Francis Longinus Sangorski (1875–1912) and George Sutcliffe (1878–1943), the firm began in 1905 to specialize in magnificent custom-made bindings. Some of their most lavish efforts were reserved for unique literary calligraphic manuscripts such as this one, written in neo-Gothic calligraphy with beautiful Pre-Raphaelite illuminations. this one is unsigned but is most probably by Alberto Sangorski (1862–1932), the binder’s brother.

http://www.ssrbooks.com/pages/recent-acquisitions

The Silk Room, Leighton House

http://www.englishheritageprints.com/the_silk_room_leighton_house_cc53_00187/print/1529595.html

Selasa, 13 Desember 2011

Leighton House #2



LEIGHTON HOUSE, 12 Holland Park Road, London. Home of the artist Lord Frederic Leighton (1830 - 1896) which is now a museum. Interior view of the studio displaying recently completed works. Photographed by Bedford Lemere in 1895.

Leighton House #1



LEIGHTON HOUSE, 12 Holland Park Road, London. Home of the artist Lord Frederic Leighton (1830 - 1896). Interior view. The studio of Lord Frederic Leighton displaying recently completed works including 'Flaming June' and The Maid with the Golden Hair'. Leighton was loosely associated with the Pre-Raphaelite movement. Photographed by Bedford Lemere in 1895.
http://www.englishheritageprints.com/lord_frederic_leightons_studio_bl13090_a/print/1471701.html

Brabazon paintings come to the aid of Tricycle Theatre

http://www.artdaily.org/index.asp?int_sec=2&int_new=52379
LONDON.- Government funding struck Tricycle Theatre has found a new saviour in the form of art collector and philanthropist Al Weil. Weil is giving around 35 paintings by the renowned Victorian watercolourist Hercules Brabazon Brabazon to the theatre, to exhibit and auction, using the proceeds to support its activities.