Plans, Elevations, Sections, and other Ornaments of the Mansion-House, belonging to the Corporation of Donacaster - Rare Book Insider
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PAINE, James

Plans, Elevations, Sections, and other Ornaments of the Mansion-House, belonging to the Corporation of Donacaster

1751
  • $3,750
PAINE, James. Plans, Elevations, Sections, and other Ornaments of the Mansion-House, belonging to the Corporation of Doncaster. Engraved title-vignette incorporating portrait of the architect by Grignion after Hayman, 17 engraved plates numbered 1-21, 4 double-page. Folio, modern 3/4 calf over boards. London: For the Author, 1751. Paine was appointed Clerk of Works at Nostell Priory, Yorkshire, in 1737 when he was only nineteen years old and he continued to supervise the building there until 1750, but Doncaster Mansion House was his first major project, from 1745-48. In 1745 Doncaster Corporation appointed him to design a Mansion House to be used for 'civic hospitality and celebrations'. Paine chose, as his inspiration for the facade of the building, Inigo Jones's unexecuted design for a Royal Palace at Whitehall for King James I 'A facade fit for a king'. At the age of 27, Paine's career was launched and over the next 40 years he established himself as one of the great architects of the Palladian Revival and an early exponent of rococo interior decoration in the mid 18th century. In the event, only the central section of Paine's design was constructed as the Corporation did not acquire the adjacent properties until the turn of the century. A couple of plates with insignificant marginal waterstains, but overall a handsome copy.
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Les hieroglyphiques de Ian-Pierre Valerian, vulgairement nomme Pierius Autrement, commentaires des lettres et figures sacre es des Aegyptiens & autres nations. Oeuure reduicte en cinquante huict liures, ausquels sont adjoincts deux autres

VALERIAN,Ian-Pierre; Valerianus, Giovanni Pietro. VALERIAN, Ian-Pierre. Les hieroglyphiques de Ian-Pierre Valerian, vulgairement nomme Pierius. Autrement, commentaires des lettres et figures sacrées des Aegyptiens & autres nations [38], 807, [75] pp., engraved title page by Léonard Gaultier, numerous small in-text woodcuts, head- and tail-pieces, initials throughout. Folio, 350 x 225 mm., bound in contemporary calf. Lyon: P. Frellon, 1615. French translation by Jean de Montlyard of this important work of symbolism and artistic iconography of the Renaissance, integrating the study of hieroglyphs with "the symbolism of mediæval lapidaries and bestiaries, and of the Physiologus ascribed to Epiphanius, a collection of symbols suggested by animals" (Praz). The volume is divided into two books. The first by Ian-Pierre Valerian (Pierio Valeriano) describes hieroglyphic meanings of all animals, and the second book - Les hieroglyphiques by Caelius Augustin Curion (Celio Augustino Curione) - concerns the symbolic meanings of effigies and portraits of gods and men. First published in Latin with incomplete text in Florence, 1556, and with complete text in Basel later that year (see R. Mortimer, Italian 16th cent., 511). This Lyon edition by Paul Frellon is "highly sought after, with a frontispiece engraved by Leonard Gaultier, a portrait and numerous hieroglyphic and emblematic figures engraved on wood" (Caillet). Brunet V, 1042 ("La plus complete de toutes"). Praz, pp. 24, 225, & 521. Volkman, Bilderschriften der Renaissance (Leipzig, 1923), pp. 35-40. Olivier et al., fers 7 & 16. See Edgar Wind's Pagan Mysteries in the Renaissance (New York, 1968), with numerous citations therein. On Paul Frellon, publisher of the volume, see Bibliography Lyonnais V, 271-285. On the library of the Collège de Clermont, cf. Histoire des bibliothèques Françaises II, pp. 60-61, with reproduction. On the royal bookbinders to Louis XIV, see Esmerian's Douze tableaux synoptiques sur la reliure au XVIIe siecle (Paris, 1973).
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Nova Alphati Effictio.

BRY, Johann Theodor; Bry, Johann Israel; De Bry DE BRY, Johann Theodor and J. I. DE BRY. Nova Alphati Effictio histories ad singulas literas correspondentibus, et toreumate Bryanaeo artificiose in aes incises illustrate. Engraved title-page, 24 elaborately engraved plates of letters, all with grotesque Mannerist ornamentation. 4to., 325 x 212 mm, bound by Rivière in full crushed brown morocco, triple gilt fillet on covers, floral gilt ornaments in corners, spine with intricate floral tooling in compartments, a.e.g. Frankfurt: [De Bry], 1595. First Edition of this celebrated and rare Renaissance Alphabet Book. "Elles représentent un grand Alphabet majuscule dont les lettres sont formées par découpures mouvementées ornées de figures de trophées, d'oiseaux, de fleurs et de fruits" (Guilmard, Les Maîtres Ornemanistes, p. 368). The letters appear in uppercase and are embedded within elaborate ornamentation consisting of Biblical figures, nymphs, fauns, musical instruments, cherubs, lovers, insects, fruits, birds, trophies, fish, lobsters, flowers, splendid entrelacs and luxurious arabesques. These extravagant illustrations are characterized by a disintegration of reality, in which the forms have been redistributed in accordance with the fantasy of the De Bry brothers. The mixture of grotesque, classical and symbolic imagery executed with supreme artistic bravado elevates this work to the pinnacle of published ornamental alphabet books. Each engraving is accompanied by a letterpress text in German and Latin on the verso, where the subject matter is identified. The engravings are individually "signed" with "J.T.B. fe." A second edition of the work appeared at Cologne in 1613. The rarity of this first edition is attested by the recent facsimile of it (Ravensburg, 1997). No copies sold at auction as listed by ABPC; OCLC lists 7 copies in America (at Houghton, Morgan Library, NYPL, Walters Art Gallery, RISD, Newberry and the University of Virginia). There are also 7 copies listed in European institutions. This copy had the engravings cut out and mounted during the nineteenth century on large papier Hollande in a folio format. However, the size of the cut-out sheets (195 x 150 mm) remains fully intact; the folio sheets measure 325 x 212 mm. Some insignificant spots to interleaved sheets, binding with minor rubbing to extremities. This copy lacks the two dedication leaves, which includes the text to the letter A on the verso of the second leaf. A desirable copy nonetheless. PROVENANCE: Sir John Stirling Maxwell (1818-1878) with his private ex-libris, his sale Christie's London 1958, Lot 59 and with the Nether Pollok "Arts of Design" ex-libris. Berlin Katalog 5281. Guimard, Les Maîtres Ornemanistes, p. 368, No. 38. Bonacini 292 ("estremamente rara"). Brunet I, 1309. BMC German 161. See: Becker, The Practice of Letters, The Hofer Collection of Writing Manuals, 1514-1800, for the 1596 German edition of Alphabeten.
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The Ritz, Paris. Collection of Original Groundplans for the 1898 Design of the Ritz in Paris

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I quattro libri dell’ architettura. Four books in one volume.

PALLADIO, Andrea PALLADIO, Andrea. I quattro libri dell' architettura. Four books in one volume. 34 ff., 40 ff., 24 ff., 68 ff., profusely illustrated with 217 woodcuts throughout the four books, of which 156 are full-page (of these 84 are printed as plates, recto and verso of 42 leaves). Folio, 295 x 200 mm., bound in slightly later Italian calf over paper boards. Venice: Domenico de' Franceschi, 1570. First edition of the four books together, a work of superlative importance in the history of architecture. "Palladio's lasting influence on architectural style in many parts of the world was exercised less through his actual buildings than through his textbook. Palladio left no immediate successors, his book exerted a powerful influence on contemporary architecture and classical ideals until the end of the eighteenth century" (Printing and the Mind of Man pp. 55-6). The influence which this work had on eighteenth-century England and America cannot be over-emphasized. "Palladio's Quattro Libri (Venice, 1570) is the influential architectural testament in which he set out his formulae for the orders, for room sizes, for stairs and for the design of detail. In the Fourth book he published restorations of the Roman temples which he had studied most closely and, in the Second and Third books (as no architect had done until then), offered a sort of retrospective exhibition of his own designs for palaces, villas, public buildings and bridges. Concise and clear in its language, effective in its communication of complex information through the coordination of plates and texts, the Quattro Libri represents the most effective illustrated architectural publication up to that time. The intelligence and clarity of the 'interface' which Palladio offers to his readers can be seen if one compares it to Serlio's architectural books which started to appear in 1537. Whereas Serlio does not inscribe dimensions on the plates but laboriously rehearses them in the small print of his text, Palladio frees the text of this encumbrance and places the measurements directly on the plans and elevations. It was therefore not only Palladio's architecture, with its rational basis, its clear grammar, and its bias towards domestic projects, but the effectiveness of his book as a means of communication that led to the immense influence of Palladio on the development of architecture in northern Europe, and later in North America" (Guido Beltramini, Andrea Palladio: The Complete Illustrated Works, p. 9). Outer margin of title and first page reinforced, some insignificant browning and two corners missing small pieces presumably paper flaws. But overall an unusually fine copy of this landmark book. PMM 92. Mortimer, Italian 352. Millard, Italian 65. Berlin Katalog 2592. Besterman 78. Cicognara 594. Fowler 212.
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Ruins of the Palace of the Emperor Diocletian at Spalatro in Dalmatia.

ADAM, Robert ADAM, Robert. Ruins of the Palace of the Emperor Diocletian at Spalatro in Dalmatia. vi, [8], 33, [1] pp., with 61 engraved plates on 54 sheets (some double-page). Folio, 525 x 370 mm., bound in full contemporary calf. [London]: For the author, 1764. First edition. "The book incorporated the first encyclical of Britain's most popular architect of the day, who had now been in practice for several years with an immense patronage. Adam makes it quite plain that the great palace of Diocletian forms the source of his ideas upon domestic building, and he modestly claims that it is the first private dwelling-house of the Romans to have been illustrated and described." Adam's account was based on his five-week visit to Spalatro (in Croatia, now known as Split); the sixty-one superb plates were executed after Clerisseau, Zucchi and others (some of the drawings survive at the Hermitage, St. Petersburg). In his introduction, Adam expresses his conviction that Diocletian had revived a taste in Architecture superior to that of his own times. Adam's "observance on unusual detail throughout is remarkable. Nothing is too minute to escape his notice. A careful reading of the descriptions shows whence Robert Adam derived his theories for the planning of his domestic buildings on a monumental scale, like Syon and Kedleston" (James Lees-Milne, The Age of Adam, pp. 67-69). A fine copy of this landmark book. Millard, British 1. Harris, British Architectural Books 4. Fowler 2. Berlin Katalog 1893. Cicognara 3567. John Fleming, Robert Adam and His Circle (1962), pp. 235-240. Georg Kowalczyk, Denkmäler der Kunst in Dalmatien (1910) reproducing 22 plates.
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Designs for the Pavillon at Brighton

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A Book of Architecture

GIBBS, James GIBBS, James. A Book of Architecture. 2 ff., xxviii pp., with 150 engraved plates. Folio, 507 x 370 mm., bound in contemporary full calf, red lettering piece. London: The Author, 1728. First edition. This was perhaps the most popular architectural book of the eighteenth century; its impact extended beyond Great Britain and America to the West Indies, South America, India and even South Africa. Furthermore, "this was the first book by a British Architect consisting entirely of his own designs, executed and projected" (Harris). "The sheer number and variety of buildings and ornamental forms provided by Gibbs clearly appealed to amateur architects and craftsmen. The influence of A Book of Architecture was enormous. St. Martin-in-the-Fields served as a model for church building throughout the English-speaking world, and in particular in the American colonies, where architects such as Peter Harrison drew heavily from its example. The extraordinarily diverse and numerous borrowings from Gibbs through the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, including those of Thomas Jefferson for Monticello, are carefully studied by Terry Friedman in James Gibbs, 1984" (Millard). The work reveals Gibbs (1682-1754) in his fullest architectural expression, the designer of churches, country houses, garden buildings and pavilions, the "New Building" of King's College Cambridge, the Senate House, and also of church monuments, urns and pedestals, chimney pieces, doors, windows, and much more. The work is a cornerstone to any significant architectural library. Wear too the corners of the binding and insignificant waterstains to the lower corners of the text pages, but overall an excellent copy, and rarely found thus. Harris 257. Millard 22. Berlin Katalog 2270. Fowler 138.
  • $12,500
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