The Old Testament. Three Hundred and Ninety-Six Compositions Illustrating the Old Testament (2 vols. complete) Tissot, J. James Bible
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Folios. Vol. 1: [14] 299 [8]pp. Vol. 2: [8] 305-656 [7]pp. Original green cloth, with gilt-stamped lettering and grain ears on front covers and spines. Top edges gilt. Both title pages printed in red and black with tan embossed publisher's device. Decorative and illustrated endpieces, and decorative initials. A finely produced edition of the Old Testament profusely illustrated throughout with 396 in-text and full-page plate illustrations (some in color) by acclaimed French artist Jacques Joseph Tissot. Each of the full page plates is tissue guarded. These images were the final work of the artist's life, which he created during the period of 1896-1902. The final pages of each volume contain a table of contents and a complete list of illustrations. Very light wear along edges of bindings. Two illustrated book plates on inside cover and front free endpaper of both volumes. About the Illustrator: James Jacques Joseph Tissot (1836 1902) was born at Nantes. He studied at the École des Beaux-Arts in Paris under Ingres, Flandrin and Lamothe, and exhibited in the Paris Salon for the first time at the age of twenty-three. In 1861 he showed The Meeting of Faust and Marguerite, which was purchased by the state for the Luxembourg Gallery. His first characteristic period made him a painter of the charms of women. Demi-mondaine would be more accurate as a description of the series of studies which he called La Femme a Paris. He fought in the Franco-Prussian War and, falling under suspicion as a Communard, left Paris for London. Here he studied etching with Sir Seymour Haden, drew caricatures for Vanity Fair, and painted portraits as well as genre subjects. Sometime in the 1870s Tissot met an Irish divorcee, Mrs. Kathleen Newton, who became his companion and the model for many of his paintings. Mrs. Newton moved into Tissot's household in 1876 and lived with him until her suicide in the late stages of consumption in 1882 at the age of 28. It was many years before he turned to the chief labor of his career, the production of a series of 700 watercolor drawings to illustrate the life of Christ and the Old Testament. He disappeared from Paris, whither he had returned after the death of Kathleen Newton, and went to Palestine. In 1896 the series of 350 drawings of incidents in the life of Christ was exhibited in Paris, and the following year found them on show in London. They were then published by the firm of Lemercier in Paris, who had paid him 1,100,000 francs for them. (Over 500 related drawings, watercolors and oils are now in the collection of the Brooklyn Museum.) After this he turned to the scenes of the Old Testament, upon which he was still engaged at the abbey of Buillon, in the department of Doubs, France, when he died.
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