Lingua: Tedesco
Editore: Berlin: Verlag für Jüdische Kunst und Kultur Fritz Gurlitt, 1920., 1920
Da: Jack Baldwin Rare Books, Glasgow, Regno Unito
EUR 35,79
Quantità: 1 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrelloHardcover. Condizione: Good. 114, [1]p. 4 lithograph portraits depicting Theodor Herzl, Marko Baruch, J.L.Perez, and Baruch Spinoza. Decorated paper-covered boards (soiled and dusty and slightly splayed), grey linen spine. End-papers discoloured; unobtrusive, faint water-stain at lower outer corner of pages 105-115. Inscription "Rudi Katz 1926 [1926 scored through] 1939 Fraulein Jacoby zur Erinnerung" on front free endpaper.
Editore: Jüdischer Verlag, Berlin, 1919
Da: The Book Gallery, Jerusalem, Israele
EUR 25,81
Quantità: 1 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrello140X205mm. 79 pages. Gilt hardcover. Cover corners slightly bumped and slightly worn. Spine taped. Spine edges slightly worn. Pages yellowing. Otherwise the book is in good condition. The book is in : German.
Editore: Berlin: Lowit, 1921
Da: Dan Wyman Books, LLC, Brooklyn, NY, U.S.A.
Prima edizione
Hardback. 1st Edition. Original illustrated boards, 8vo, [43] Hebrew + [42] German pages. With 39 woodcut historiated initials and lithograph etchings. Yaari 1913; Yudlov 2821. Joseph Budko (1888-1940) , was a "painter and graphic artist. Budko, who was born in Plonsk, received a traditional Jewish education. In 1902 he went to study at the art school in Vilna. In 1910 Budko moved to Berlin where he learned metal-chasing and also studied at the Museum of Arts and Crafts. In Berlin Budko met Hermann Struck who taught him the technique of etching. Eventually he also took up woodcutting, lithography, and painting. In 1933 Budko settled in Palestine. In 1935 he became the director of the reopened New Bezalel school of arts and crafts. Budko stressed the teaching of graphic design and utilized the ornamental value of the Hebrew letters. Budko's subject matter was determined by the Jewish environment in which he grew up and to which he returned in Jerusalem. Budko developed a style that combined the personal with the Jewish, being a synthesis of Jewish tradition and modern art. He also revived the spirit of Jewish book illustration, adapting it to modern design. Among the books he illustrated are the Haggadah, and he designed many bookplates. " (EJ 2007) "Joseph Budko?s Haggadah, 1921, skillfully integrated the Hebrew text with illustrations. Budko was thought to be withdrawn and outwardly cold, but his art was warm in a style that permitted a melding of tradition with modernism, slavery with redemption. His [illustration of a] faceless Jew trudges alone through history from a callous past to an unknowable future, moving over a snow-lined path, half-frozen, but determined and defiant. No signs or wonders for him - he knows he must make it on his own. " (Harris, "The way Jews lived: five hundred years of printed words and images, p. 353) . SUBJECT(S): Haggadot -- Texts. Haggadot -- Illustrations. Seder -- Liturgy -- Texts. Judaism -- Liturgy -- Texts. Judaism -- Liturgy Seder -- Liturgy. OCLC: 1048006051. Spine neatly rebacked. Corners bumped, text block is very clean and in excellent condition. Good+ Condition Overall (BK) (HAG-27-9-LGGBCCX).