Konets Sankt-Peterburga (The End of St. Petersburg) - Rare Book Insider
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Konets Sankt-Peterburga (The End of St. Petersburg)

Octavo 22x15 cm., wrappers, 8pp.Sergei Pudovkin (1893-1953) is recognized as a pioneering great director of Soviet film. Here he writes a summary of the contents of this 1927 production with several stills from the film. Photocollage cover is unattributed. Uncommon, with only Yale and the Academy of Motion Picture Arts holding copies of this worldwide
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Der Ber

Quarto 19.8x16 cm., 10 (2) pp. Original illustrated wrappers, with title page and 8 illustrations by Lissitzky. Mild toning, rubber stamp to front wrapper and p. 5. 10, [2] p. Unknown edition size. After 1923, Lissitzky ceased illustrating Yiddish books and concentrated his great talents on Constructivism, photomontage and architectural design, making significant contributions in all of them. His illustrated Yiddish books remain unsurpassed to this day. (Tradition and Revolution, p. 66) Although this side of his work was little known until fairly recently, Lissitzky produced several extraordinary Yiddish children s books while living and working in Kiev soon after the Revolution. As a member of IZO Narkompros (People s Commissariat of Enlightenment), he helped set up the Kultur-Lige there. In 1919, he and the writer Ben Zion Raskin signed a contract with Yidisher Folks Farlag Kooperativ for 11 children s books in the Kinder Gorten series. Only two titles other than this one were ever published: The Miller, his Wife and the Millstones and The Hen that Wanted a Comb. These Yiddish children s books are extremely rare as many disappeared when Yiddish publications were officially banned by the Soviet State. OCLC locates 1 copy, at Getty. Nisbet, El Lissitzky 1919/3. Tradition and Revolution: The Jewish Renaissance in Russian Avant-Garde Art, cat. 94, illustrated pp. 186 187. Futur-anterieur, 123. Faint deaccession stamp on cover, else NF.