EUR 13,37
Quantità: Più di 20 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrelloPAP. Condizione: New. New Book. Shipped from UK. Established seller since 2000.
Editore: The Spectator Ltd, 1948
Da: Shore Books, London, Regno Unito
Rivista / Giornale
EUR 18,13
Quantità: 1 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrelloSoft cover. Condizione: Very Good. 32 pages. COAL BOARD UNDER FIRE / Wilson Harris "Paris Week-End" / Edward Hodgkin "At The Tribunal" / Rawle Knox "'Up The Republic'" / Peter Campbell "The Odds For 1950" / Cyril Ray "New Film Techniques" / Cleland Scott "Hippopotamus Land" / George Godwin "Horse Trade" (Papers).
Editore: Saint Elizabeth Street, Brooklyn, New York, 2003
Da: Village Works, New York, NY, U.S.A.
Soft cover. Condizione: Very Good. Campbell, Jim (illustratore). From the collection of New York poet, Tom Savage and may contain minor markings from the poet in the book. We may request additional monies for international shipping, based on actual costs. Cover and/or pages may be lightly soiled/faded/discolored due to age or minor damage.
Editore: Paris and London: Iliffe & Co., October, 1897
Da: Wittenborn Art Books, San Francisco, CA, U.S.A.
Condizione: Good. 8vo. 11.3 x 24cm. Original wraps. Pp. 488-534 + hors texte pages. .Foxing and minor wear to wrappers; occasional foxing to text and plates; very good.The Quartier Latin was a modernist journal devoted to the arts published between 1896 and 1899 by the American Art Association of Paris. Quartier Latin was illustrated and written by young American and British creators, mostly living in Paris, France. Contributors included John Butler Yeats, Lamar Middleton, Ethelyn Friend, and Grace Gallatin Seton Thompson.Trist Wood (died 1952) of New Orleans, Louisiana, appears to have chiefly worked as an artist, editor, and illustrator. After 1915, he seems to have turned his attention to genealogy, compiling extensive records on families related to his own and on Zachary Taylor (1784-1850) from whom he was descended.
Editore: Paris and London: J.M. Dent & Co., February-March, 1899
Da: Wittenborn Art Books, San Francisco, CA, U.S.A.
Condizione: Good. 8vo. 11.3 x 24cm. Original wraps. Pp. 320-356 + hors texte pages. .Foxing and minor wear to wrappers; occasional foxing to text and plates; very good.The Quartier Latin was a modernist journal devoted to the arts published between 1896 and 1899 by the American Art Association of Paris. Quartier Latin was illustrated and written by young American and British creators, mostly living in Paris, France. Contributors included John Butler Yeats, Lamar Middleton, Ethelyn Friend, and Grace Gallatin Seton Thompson.Trist Wood (died 1952) of New Orleans, Louisiana, appears to have chiefly worked as an artist, editor, and illustrator. After 1915, he seems to have turned his attention to genealogy, compiling extensive records on families related to his own and on Zachary Taylor (1784-1850) from whom he was descended.
Editore: Paris: Photoreportage Trampus, circa 1914., 1914
Da: Wittenborn Art Books, San Francisco, CA, U.S.A.
Manoscritto / Collezionismo cartaceo
Condizione: Good. Photograph. 16.5 x 12.5 cm (sheet). A collection of 1 press photograph. Good, tears in the upper quadrant, along sheet edges.
Editore: Showscan Film Corporation, N.p., 1988
Da: Royal Books, Inc., ABAA, Baltimore, MD, U.S.A.
Manoscritto / Collezionismo cartaceo
Revised Draft script for the 1989 joint French-US short film. Attached by staple to the top corner of the title page is a small hand-written note, "Vicki," a phone number, and "Call from Space office." Copy belonging to uncredited actor Nick Dimitri, with two copies of a January 16, 1989 call sheet laid in. The 29-minute short film was the first film shot using the "Showscan" process developed by Douglas Trumbull , which is photographed and projected on 70mm film at 60 frames per second (2.5 times the standard film speed), and was only screened twice in 1989, once at the "Big Bang Schtroumpf" amusement park, now "Walygator Parc," in Maizières-les-Metz, France, and once at the Omnimax Theatre at Ceasars Palace, Las Vegas. A film director (Richard Brestoff) and his nephew (Bill Campbell), an aspiring actor and eccentric inventor, make a low-budget science fiction film, when one of the nephew's inventions begins to bring visitors from the past and future into the present, including Napoleon, Archimedes, and cavemen, making what they believe may be one of the greatest movies ever made. Featuring a cameo from James Coburn as an irate studio head, and the voice of Charlton Heston as an alien visitor. Director Richard Fleischer's final film. Shot on location in Simi Valley, California. Front wrapper integral with the title page, dated 1-6-89, noted as revised, with credits for screenwriter Sarah Paris and story by Peter Beal and Sarah Paris. 29 leaves, with last page of text numbered 26. Xerographic duplication, rectos only, with yellow, green, and goldenrod revision pages throughout, dated variously between 12/22/88 and 1/6/89. Pages Near Fine, bound with two gold brads.