Lingua: Spagnolo
Editore: Museu del Palacio de Bellas Artes, Mexico, 2012
ISBN 10: 6076051663 ISBN 13: 9786076051665
Da: Mullen Books, ABAA, Marietta, PA, U.S.A.
Slipcased. Condizione: All Fine. Bw illustrated card wraps with gold lettering. Deep French flaps, illustrated. 275 pp. with illus. throughout in color and bw. Also a booklet of white, stapled paper wraps with bw drawings and color photos; 71 pp. with 5 folding plates and one gatefold. Both housed in a board slipcase matching the main, bw volume. Texts in Spanish (Mexican) and English. A documentation of the entire exhibition history of the MPBA, from its opening in 1934 to 2012; 78 shows in all. Includes a section on the history of the museum itself, a complete chronological list of the exhibtions. Full of essays, images in color and bw, and all sorts of fascinating artistic information on/by art, artists, museum directors, etc. The white booklet is essays by the current generation of artists on their interpretations of the murals in the Palacio. Authors include Jorge Satorre, Edgardo Aragon, Omar Barquet, Marcela Armas with Santiago Itzcoatl, Julieta Aranda, and Pablo Lopez Luz.
Editore: The Old Santa Fe Press, Santa Fe, New Mexico, 1916
Da: RareNonFiction, IOBA, Ladysmith, BC, Canada
Membro dell'associazione: IOBA
Rivista / Giornale Prima edizione
EUR 438,58
Quantità: 1 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrelloSingle Issue Magazine. Condizione: Good. First Edition. Features: Castano de Sosa's Expedition to New Mexico in 1590, by Dorothy Hull, editied for publication by Charles Wilson Hackett; The Pueblo Revolt of 1696 - Extracts from the Journal of General De Vargas; William Hayes Pope - first Federal Judge of the District of New Mexico; and more. 306-388 pp. Printed upon glossy stock. Several black and white illustrations including a full-page black and white photo portrait of William Hayes Pope. Clean and unmarked with moderate wear. Binding sound. A well-preserved copy.; Sm 4to.
Editore: Manila, 1940
Da: Tavistock Books, ABAA, Reno, NV, U.S.A.
Copia autografata
52 leaves, most with typescript to recto only. ~ 10-1/2" x 8-1/8" A cache of 40+ typed letters and TLs exchanged between the Office of the President of the Philippines and various officers of the U.S. High Commissioner of the Philippines, many on official letterhead and some marked "confidential." The letters, ordered chronologically, chart the negotiations, defense concerns, and sometimes uneasy power sharing between the two administrations in regards to the rules and regulations governing aerial photography of the islands. Issues discussed include the advisability of allowing aerial photography by outside entities, the feasiblity of specifying no-fly zones for aerial photography without interferring with commercial flights, enforcement efforts, and the powers afforded the two administrations. The majority of the letters expressing the Commonwealth's position are from and signed by Jorge B. Vargas, then serving as Executive Secretary to President Manuel Quezon. Later, Vargas administered Manila as an open city during the Japanese occupation in 1942 and served in the puppet government of the Second Philippine Republic; following the war, he chaired the National Planning Committee, served on the board of regents of the University of the Philippines, and became the first Filipino on the International Olympic Committee. In 1960, he was awarded the Legion of Honor by the Republic of the Philippines. Signed letters from the U.S. High Commission include several from Major General R. L. Holbrook as well as Colonel/Acting Chief of Staff E. H. DeArmond. From the first letter, dated May 25, 1937: "under the present prohibitive measures regarding aerial photography embodied in Proclamation No. 485 of the Governor-General dated August 12, 1932, and in the Bureau of Aeronautics rules and regulations, it is believed that the granting of permission to aviation companies, particularly to an aerial photographic company, to take pictures, will be exceedingly difficult and complicated. This office is studying the advisability of altering the present rules and regulations." Jorge B. Vargas, Secretary to the President. From November 12, 1938: "So long as the Philippine Islands remain United States territory the United States is responsible for their defense, and that responsibility, at least so far as land operations are concerned, devolves upon the Commanding General . . . . To say that the Department Commander is supreme in time of war or grave emergency, but that, in time of peace, his responsibilities are limited to administrative control over United States military personnel and United States military reservations, and that in peace time he should not interest himself in control or prevention of activities which may have the gravest consequences in time of war or public emergency, is manifestly contradictory." Edward H. DeArmond, Colonel, (FS), G.S.C., Acting Chief of Staff. From October 26, 1939: "I have the honor to inform you that in an investigation conducted by proper authorities of this Government, Mr. B. A. Glover, airplane pilot in the emply of Elizalde & Co., was found guilty of violation of the provisions of Proclamation No. 364 of the President of the Philippines, in view of which he was suspended as transport pilot for a period of one month from October 18 to November 17, 1939, inclusive, and warned that repetition of a similar offense in the future will be subject of a more drastic action." Jorge B. Vargas, Secretary to the President. An interesting cache of material documenting activities of the transitional government of the Philippines, just prior to the outbreak of WWII. Age-toning & staining. Fastener rusted. Folder front cover chipped & detached. A VG cache. Letters housed in a file folder, attached at top with two prong paper fastener. All now housed in a clear archival mylar sleeve.