Will Shakespeare His America - 5 Angebote vergleichen
Bester Preis: € 5,66 (vom 27.11.2016)1
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Will Shakespeare His America (1964)
EN HC US SI
ISBN: 9780670769063 bzw. 0670769061, in Englisch, The Viking Press, gebundenes Buch, gebraucht, signiert.
Lieferung aus: Vereinigte Staaten von Amerika, Versandkosten nach: USA.
Von Händler/Antiquariat, Ground Zero Books, Ltd.
Nw York: The Viking Press, 1964. Presumed first edition/first printing. Hardcover. Good in good dust jacket. Signed by author. DJ has some wear, tears and soiling.. Weiss, Emil. 318, [2] p. Signed by both authors. Index. From Wikipedia, on the illustrator: "Emil Weiss (Aug 14 1896-Jan 6 1965) Illustrator, one of the last press artists (that old journalistic specialty superseded by photography, which is undoubtedly faster and perhaps more literally accurate, but seldom as penetrating. ) He was born in Moravia, then part of Austria-Hungary, now in the Czech Republic and trained as an architect in Vienna. In Prague of the 1920s, he ran a triple studio: 1. As cartoonist having fun in the newspapers. 2. As commercial artist doing advertising. His very Art-dйco poster are on display at the Prague Museum of Applied Arts, where reproductions are on sale as posters and even as miniatures on matchbox covers. 3. As architect. His style was very Art-dйco, severely geometrical, with rounded corners, un-decorated, handcrafted of finest materials. All went fine until the Depression and then Hitler destroyed that whole world. In 1938 he sought refuge in Britain, but was denied a working permit until the Nazis invaded Czechoslovakia, whereupon his status changed from visitor to refugee. His personal version of English and his European drawing style made it difficult to find work so at 43 he started from zero. He did whatever he could during those difficult years: wartime propaganda posters illustrations for Czech publications portrait sketches for the Daily Telegraph then he met Rose Fyleman, author of children's books and poetry, who was doing a serial for the children's page of the Christian Science Monitor in Boston. He illustrated the weekly segments for her and that led him to Saville Davis, then the Monitor s London correspondent, who appointed him their London visual reporter. There he covered international events such as the 1946 conference in Lancaster House where the United Nations was born. In 1948 he emigrated to the US and became the Monitor s artist-reporter covering national events and politicians both on assignment as well as freelance until his death in 1965. One of his favorite haunts was the UN in New York, where he was often mistaken for a delegate, with his gracious old-world manner, bow tie, and homburg hat. Thus diplomatically camouflaged, he blended into the background, where he would scribble surreptitious notes on any scrap of paper he found in his pocket. Incredibly quickly he caught and pinned down the personal characteristics of his distinguished subjects by their stance and body language. He then scooted back to his studio where he deftly traced the scribbles using his unique dry-brush technique of ink on vellum paper identified the scene in his somewhat inventive spelling tossed it in an envelope and rushed to catch the Monitor s Boston pouch. The drawings bear the working notes of an artist-reporter under deadline. It was not a highly lucrative profession, but he loved its immediacy, its glamor, and the fun of revealing people. His portrait gallery of some thousand drawings of international personalities is a historic microcosm of the mid-20th Century. Some drawings are straight reportage, some slyly satirical, all expose his victims singularity. Aside from his portraits, the Monitor published pages-worth of his article-illustrations as well as sketches from his travels many from Austria for which The President of Austria awarded him their Golden Badge of Honor in 1964. Illustrator of some 40 children's books (originals now in the Kerlan Collection of the University of Minnesota Library) he illustrated Harper & Row s young readers edition of JFK s Profiles in Courage; He was author of My Studio Sketchboook, Marsland, London 1948; with Karla Weiss the children's cookbook Let s have a party, Bruce, London, 1946; as well as Slavische Mдrchen, Schweizer Druck und Verlagshaus, Zьrich, 1952.".
Von Händler/Antiquariat, Ground Zero Books, Ltd.
Nw York: The Viking Press, 1964. Presumed first edition/first printing. Hardcover. Good in good dust jacket. Signed by author. DJ has some wear, tears and soiling.. Weiss, Emil. 318, [2] p. Signed by both authors. Index. From Wikipedia, on the illustrator: "Emil Weiss (Aug 14 1896-Jan 6 1965) Illustrator, one of the last press artists (that old journalistic specialty superseded by photography, which is undoubtedly faster and perhaps more literally accurate, but seldom as penetrating. ) He was born in Moravia, then part of Austria-Hungary, now in the Czech Republic and trained as an architect in Vienna. In Prague of the 1920s, he ran a triple studio: 1. As cartoonist having fun in the newspapers. 2. As commercial artist doing advertising. His very Art-dйco poster are on display at the Prague Museum of Applied Arts, where reproductions are on sale as posters and even as miniatures on matchbox covers. 3. As architect. His style was very Art-dйco, severely geometrical, with rounded corners, un-decorated, handcrafted of finest materials. All went fine until the Depression and then Hitler destroyed that whole world. In 1938 he sought refuge in Britain, but was denied a working permit until the Nazis invaded Czechoslovakia, whereupon his status changed from visitor to refugee. His personal version of English and his European drawing style made it difficult to find work so at 43 he started from zero. He did whatever he could during those difficult years: wartime propaganda posters illustrations for Czech publications portrait sketches for the Daily Telegraph then he met Rose Fyleman, author of children's books and poetry, who was doing a serial for the children's page of the Christian Science Monitor in Boston. He illustrated the weekly segments for her and that led him to Saville Davis, then the Monitor s London correspondent, who appointed him their London visual reporter. There he covered international events such as the 1946 conference in Lancaster House where the United Nations was born. In 1948 he emigrated to the US and became the Monitor s artist-reporter covering national events and politicians both on assignment as well as freelance until his death in 1965. One of his favorite haunts was the UN in New York, where he was often mistaken for a delegate, with his gracious old-world manner, bow tie, and homburg hat. Thus diplomatically camouflaged, he blended into the background, where he would scribble surreptitious notes on any scrap of paper he found in his pocket. Incredibly quickly he caught and pinned down the personal characteristics of his distinguished subjects by their stance and body language. He then scooted back to his studio where he deftly traced the scribbles using his unique dry-brush technique of ink on vellum paper identified the scene in his somewhat inventive spelling tossed it in an envelope and rushed to catch the Monitor s Boston pouch. The drawings bear the working notes of an artist-reporter under deadline. It was not a highly lucrative profession, but he loved its immediacy, its glamor, and the fun of revealing people. His portrait gallery of some thousand drawings of international personalities is a historic microcosm of the mid-20th Century. Some drawings are straight reportage, some slyly satirical, all expose his victims singularity. Aside from his portraits, the Monitor published pages-worth of his article-illustrations as well as sketches from his travels many from Austria for which The President of Austria awarded him their Golden Badge of Honor in 1964. Illustrator of some 40 children's books (originals now in the Kerlan Collection of the University of Minnesota Library) he illustrated Harper & Row s young readers edition of JFK s Profiles in Courage; He was author of My Studio Sketchboook, Marsland, London 1948; with Karla Weiss the children's cookbook Let s have a party, Bruce, London, 1946; as well as Slavische Mдrchen, Schweizer Druck und Verlagshaus, Zьrich, 1952.".
2
Symbolbild
Will Shakespeare His America (1964)
EN HC SI FE
ISBN: 9780670769063 bzw. 0670769061, in Englisch, The Viking Press, Nw York, gebundenes Buch, signiert, Erstausgabe.
Von Händler/Antiquariat, Ground Zero Books, Ltd. [62893], Silver Spring, MD, U.S.A.
318, [2] p. Signed by both authors. Index. From Wikipedia, on the illustrator: "Emil Weiss (Aug 14 1896-Jan 6 1965) Illustrator, one of the last press artists (that old journalistic specialty superseded by photography, which is undoubtedly faster and perhaps more literally accurate, but seldom as penetrating. ) He was born in Moravia, then part of Austria-Hungary, now in the Czech Republic and trained as an architect in Vienna. In Prague of the 1920s, he ran a triple studio: 1. As cartoonist having fun in the newspapers. 2. As commercial artist doing advertising. His very Art-déco poster are on display at the Prague Museum of Applied Arts, where reproductions are on sale as posters and even as miniatures on matchbox covers. 3. As architect. His style was very Art-déco, severely geometrical, with rounded corners, un-decorated, handcrafted of finest materials. All went fine until the Depression and then Hitler destroyed that whole world. In 1938 he sought refuge in Britain, but was denied a working permit until the Nazis invaded Czechoslovakia, whereupon his status changed from visitor to refugee. His personal version of English and his European drawing style made it difficult to find work so at 43 he started from zero. He did whatever he could during those difficult years: wartime propaganda posters illustrations for Czech publications portrait sketches for the Daily Telegraph then he met Rose Fyleman, author of children's books and poetry, who was doing a serial for the children's page of the Christian Science Monitor in Boston. He illustrated the weekly segments for her and that led him to Saville Davis, then the Monitor s London correspondent, who appointed him their London visual reporter. There he covered international events such as the 1946 conference in Lancaster House where the United Nations was born. In 1948 he emigrated to the US and became the Monitor s artist-reporter covering national events and politicians both on assignment as well as freelance until his death in 1965. One of his favorite haunts was the UN in New York, where he was often mistaken for a delegate, with his gracious old-world manner, bow tie, and homburg hat. Thus diplomatically camouflaged, he blended into the background, where he would scribble surreptitious notes on any scrap of paper he found in his pocket. Incredibly quickly he caught and pinned down the personal characteristics of his distinguished subjects by their stance and body language. He then scooted back to his studio where he deftly traced the scribbles using his unique dry-brush technique of ink on vellum paper identified the scene in his somewhat inventive spelling tossed it in an envelope and rushed to catch the Monitor s Boston pouch. The drawings bear the working notes of an artist-reporter under deadline. It was not a highly lucrative profession, but he loved its immediacy, its glamor, and the fun of revealing people. His portrait gallery of some thousand drawings of international personalities is a historic microcosm of the mid-20th Century. Some drawings are straight reportage, some slyly satirical, all expose his victims singularity. Aside from his portraits, the Monitor published pages-worth of his article-illustrations as well as sketches from his travels many from Austria for which The President of Austria awarded him their Golden Badge of Honor in 1964. Illustrator of some 40 children's books (originals now in the Kerlan Collection of the University of Minnesota Library) he illustrated Harper & Row s young readers edition of JFK s Profiles in Courage; He was author of My Studio Sketchboook, Marsland, London 1948; with Karla Weiss the children's cookbook Let s have a party, Bruce, London, 1946; as well as Slavische Märchen, Schweizer Druck und Verlagshaus, Zürich, 1952." Good in good dust jacket. Signed by author. DJ has some wear, tears and soiling.
318, [2] p. Signed by both authors. Index. From Wikipedia, on the illustrator: "Emil Weiss (Aug 14 1896-Jan 6 1965) Illustrator, one of the last press artists (that old journalistic specialty superseded by photography, which is undoubtedly faster and perhaps more literally accurate, but seldom as penetrating. ) He was born in Moravia, then part of Austria-Hungary, now in the Czech Republic and trained as an architect in Vienna. In Prague of the 1920s, he ran a triple studio: 1. As cartoonist having fun in the newspapers. 2. As commercial artist doing advertising. His very Art-déco poster are on display at the Prague Museum of Applied Arts, where reproductions are on sale as posters and even as miniatures on matchbox covers. 3. As architect. His style was very Art-déco, severely geometrical, with rounded corners, un-decorated, handcrafted of finest materials. All went fine until the Depression and then Hitler destroyed that whole world. In 1938 he sought refuge in Britain, but was denied a working permit until the Nazis invaded Czechoslovakia, whereupon his status changed from visitor to refugee. His personal version of English and his European drawing style made it difficult to find work so at 43 he started from zero. He did whatever he could during those difficult years: wartime propaganda posters illustrations for Czech publications portrait sketches for the Daily Telegraph then he met Rose Fyleman, author of children's books and poetry, who was doing a serial for the children's page of the Christian Science Monitor in Boston. He illustrated the weekly segments for her and that led him to Saville Davis, then the Monitor s London correspondent, who appointed him their London visual reporter. There he covered international events such as the 1946 conference in Lancaster House where the United Nations was born. In 1948 he emigrated to the US and became the Monitor s artist-reporter covering national events and politicians both on assignment as well as freelance until his death in 1965. One of his favorite haunts was the UN in New York, where he was often mistaken for a delegate, with his gracious old-world manner, bow tie, and homburg hat. Thus diplomatically camouflaged, he blended into the background, where he would scribble surreptitious notes on any scrap of paper he found in his pocket. Incredibly quickly he caught and pinned down the personal characteristics of his distinguished subjects by their stance and body language. He then scooted back to his studio where he deftly traced the scribbles using his unique dry-brush technique of ink on vellum paper identified the scene in his somewhat inventive spelling tossed it in an envelope and rushed to catch the Monitor s Boston pouch. The drawings bear the working notes of an artist-reporter under deadline. It was not a highly lucrative profession, but he loved its immediacy, its glamor, and the fun of revealing people. His portrait gallery of some thousand drawings of international personalities is a historic microcosm of the mid-20th Century. Some drawings are straight reportage, some slyly satirical, all expose his victims singularity. Aside from his portraits, the Monitor published pages-worth of his article-illustrations as well as sketches from his travels many from Austria for which The President of Austria awarded him their Golden Badge of Honor in 1964. Illustrator of some 40 children's books (originals now in the Kerlan Collection of the University of Minnesota Library) he illustrated Harper & Row s young readers edition of JFK s Profiles in Courage; He was author of My Studio Sketchboook, Marsland, London 1948; with Karla Weiss the children's cookbook Let s have a party, Bruce, London, 1946; as well as Slavische Märchen, Schweizer Druck und Verlagshaus, Zürich, 1952." Good in good dust jacket. Signed by author. DJ has some wear, tears and soiling.
3
Symbolbild
Will Shakespeare and His America (1964)
EN HC US
ISBN: 9780670769063 bzw. 0670769061, in Englisch, Viking Books, gebundenes Buch, gebraucht.
Lieferung aus: Vereinigte Staaten von Amerika, zzgl. Versandkosten, Verandgebiet: DOM.
Von Händler/Antiquariat, R A Cobb, OK, Konawa, [RE:5].
Sewn binding. Cloth over boards. With dust jacket. Audience: General/trade. Hard cover.
Von Händler/Antiquariat, R A Cobb, OK, Konawa, [RE:5].
Sewn binding. Cloth over boards. With dust jacket. Audience: General/trade. Hard cover.
5
Symbolbild
Will Shakespeare His America (1964)
EN HC US
ISBN: 9780670769063 bzw. 0670769061, in Englisch, The Viking Press, Nw York, gebundenes Buch, gebraucht.
Lieferung aus: Vereinigte Staaten von Amerika, zzgl. Versandkosten, Verandgebiet: DOM.
Von Händler/Antiquariat, Ground Zero Books Ltd, MD, Silver Spring, [RE:5].
Hardcover, Presumed first edition/first printing.
Von Händler/Antiquariat, Ground Zero Books Ltd, MD, Silver Spring, [RE:5].
Hardcover, Presumed first edition/first printing.
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