Innocence. - Rare Book Insider
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Daimler, Harriet [pseud. Iris Owens].

Innocence.

Paris: The Olympia Press, 1957. 8vo, 172 pp. Original publisher's stiff green wrappers. A near fine copy with sharp corners and clean pages; light spotting to top text block edge. § Number 33 in the Traveller's Companion series, with "Francs 1.200", and "Francs 900" blacked out on lower cover. Iris Owens wrote five erotic novels in three years for Maurice Girodias's Olympia Press under the pseudonym of Harriet Daimler. ("Daimler struggles against her impossible tendency to write more explicitly than the courts will tolerate," Girodias wrote approvingly in the Olympia catalogue of 1957.) Owens later gave her pseudonym to the protagonist of the first of two books published under her own name. A dark and intriguing figure - no feminist but a survivor - her work has been reappraised since the reissue in 2010 of her novel "After Claude". Her papers are now at Columbia University.
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William Blake.

Tate Publishing, 2019. 4to, 26.9 x 22.8 cm, 219 pp. With 200 color illustrations. Teal cloth with inset illustration to upper cover. § Step into the world of William Blake with this richly illustrated hardback catalogue created to accompany the William Blake exhibition at Tate Britain.This book presents Blake as a visual artist for the twenty-first century, celebrating the first major survey of William Blake's work to be held since 2000. Beginning with a comprehensive overview of his work as a printmaker, poet and painter this beautiful exhibition catalogue foregrounds his relationship with the art world of his time and tells the story behind some of the most iconic images in the history of British art. The chronological narrative and biographical focus helps bring together the life and the historical forces at work, and provides a framework for presenting scholarship with an emphatically art historical (rather than literary) focus.The catalogue contains rich and exciting new research and newly commissioned texts detailing Blake's life and work, including an original piece by British writer Alan Moore.William Blake (1757 ? 1827) was an English poet and artist. He had a career in etching, engraving and illustration although he received little recognition in his lifetime. Since his death his heroic story has inspired and invigorated generations, his personal struggles, technical innovation, vision and political commitment, are perhaps never more pertinent.Martin Myrone is Lead Curator, pre-1800 British Art at Tate.
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2020 Vision: Nineteen Wood Engravers, One Collector, and the Artists Who Inspired Them.

[Design Binding by Dominic Riley]. Hamway, Nigel (compiled and introduced). Lawrence, Peter (editor). Randle, Patrick (preface). Whittington, UK: Nomad Letterpress and The Society of Wood Engravers, 2020. Folio, 325 x 250 mm, 100 pp., printed on Zerkall mould-made paper using Monotype Perpetua (Series 239) cast by Neil Winter at the Whittington Press in an addition of 340 copies. Numerous illustrations in black and white throughout. § § One of 30 copies numbered I-XXX with an extra suite of plates, this is copy XX, in a magnificent design binding by Dominic Riley.Published in 2020 to mark the Centenary of the Society of Wood Engravers. A year on press, this book links past with present, and provides a fitting tribute to the skills of the engravers and the part played by the Society in the history of wood engraving.For 2020 Vision, Nigel Hamway asked nineteen engravers to choose a major artistic influence, write an introduction, and create a new engraving which sits side-by-side in the book with an engraving or illustration by their 'inspirer'. This places the engravings of twentieth century greats ? John Farleigh, John Nash, Monica Poole, Geoffrey Wales, Gertrude Hermes et al. ? alongside today's artists and presents the viewer with a snapshot of the changing nature of the engravers' craft.Featured artists:- Leonard Baskin (1922?2000), George Minne (1969)- Thomas Bewick (1753?1828), The Fieldfare & detail from The Ring Ouzel. Reproduced from pages 116 & 122 of A History of British Birds (Newcastle, 1826 [6th edition]).- Neil Bousfield, The Waves (2019).- Simon Brett, Combined title-page and frontispiece for Amelia (1995).- Harry Brockway, Printing Severn Bore (2019).- Chris Daunt, TBC (2019).- Anne Desmet, Brooklyn Bridge: New Day (2015).- Andy English, Charmouth Beach (2019).- John Farleigh (1900?1965), Park Gate (1956).- Derrick Harris (1919?1960), Frontispiece to Tom Jones (1959).- Gertrude Hermes (1901?1983), Stonehenge (1959).- Gertrude Hermes (1901?1983), Yoke (1954).- Paul L Kershaw, Hackfall View II (2019).- John Lawrence, Scene from The Shepherd's Calendar (1978).- John Lawrence, Three engravings for Phillip Pullman's His Dark Materials trilogy; The Subtle Knife (1997), Northern lights (1995), The Amber Spyglass (2000).- Peter Lawrence, New Quay (2019).- Simon Lawrence, Insert printed at his Fleece Press, 2019.- Miriam Macgregor, Thorne in August for Midwinter (2013).- Henry Moore (1898?1986), Figures, Sculptures (1931).- Robert Motherwell (1915?1991), In Black With Yellow Ochre (1963). Lithograph in two colours.- Paul Nash (1889-1946), Title-page for Places (1922), printed from reproduced artwork.- Sarah van Niekirk (1934?2018), Jacobs in Shropshire (TBC).- Sarah van Niekirk (1934?2018), Severn Bore (TBC).- Hilary Paynter, Inspired by Henry Moore (2019).- Howard Phipps, Eggardon Hill (2019).- Monica Poole (1921?2003), After the Storm (1988).- Monica Poole (1921?2003), Underwater (TBC).- Eric Ravilious (1903?1942), Downs in Winter (1935). Reproduction of watercolour and pencil painting.- Abigail Rorer, Robert Frost (2019).- Sue Scullard, Into the Woods (2019).- Yvonne Skargon (1931?2010), Boxford Garden (TBC).- Ian Stephens, Dipper on the river Conway (2004) & Swale Dipper (2019).- Reynolds Stone CBE (1909?1979), Bookplate for Edgar Wind, and Apostate Part VI (1926).- George Tute, Dandelion Field (1962).- Geri Waddington, The Little Barn (2019).- Edward Wadsworth (1889?1949), Turret ship in Dry Dock (1918).- Richard Wagener, Umbraculo Series #21 (2018).- Geoffrey Wales (1912?1990), The Waves (1969).
The Thunderbolt and the Monk: Lloyd J. Reynolds and Robert J. Palladino

The Thunderbolt and the Monk: Lloyd J. Reynolds and Robert J. Palladino, Teachers who influenced calligraphy, handwriting, and digital type design.

Stock-Allen, Nancy. San Francisco: The Book Club of California, 2022. 4to, 320 pp. Foil stamped Harmatan leather binding, and a digitally printed photograph tipped-in on the cover, with slipcase and text covered in black Japanese book cloth, museum board portfolio contains a quote by William Morris, lettered on archival paper by Jerry Kelly. Fine, new. § One of the Deluxe Edition of 25 copies. An appreciation of the lives and careers of Lloyd J. Reynolds and Robert J. Palladino, calligraphy teachers at Reed College, Oregon. "Unlikely as it may be, two calligraphy teachers at Reed College were the seminal inspiration for some of the most important figures in early digital typography. Former students Steve Jobs (Apple Inc.), Sumner Stone (Adobe Industries), and Charles Bigelow (Stanford University and Rochester Institute of Technology) integrated their teachers' lessons of letter design and legibility into the nascent world of digital type technology. Other classmates took the Reed studio message into emerging fields: environmental signage, entertainment, branding, and digital humanities. A significant number excelled in the already established fields of calligraphy, handwriting education, fine art, poetry, and writing.The originator of the calligraphy program at Reed, Professor Lloyd J. Reynolds, possessed a dynamic persona and boundless curiosity for art, literature, philosophy, religion, and most significantly the historical forms of writing. He developed a steadfast conviction about the importance of writing, especially italic handwriting, and proselytized that message through his classroom studio, countless workshops, instructional books, exhibitions, and popular public television series. Reynolds's successor, Robert J. Palladino, a former Trappist monk, was quieter but similarly remarkable in his devotion to his craft and teaching. While he never used a computer during his life, he directly influenced the future of digital type design.Written and designed by Nancy Stock-Allen, The Thunderbolt & the Monk profiles the lives and careers of both Reynolds and Palladino along with a representative cross-section of their remarkable former students. The preface is authored by noted book designer and calligrapher, Jerry Kelly, who studied under two of Reynolds's students, Don Kunz and Denis Lund. A substantial introduction recounts the historical background and technical developments of the italic form?the foundation of Reynolds's handwriting mission." - Kevin Kosik, Executive Director, Book Club of California