The International Studio, An Illustrated Monthly Magazine of the Fine and Applied Arts. (8 Bound Volumes 1908-1913)**New York Architect Hiram H. Bickford's copy** Various; White, Joseph Gleeson (editor); Holme, Charles (editor) Bickford, Hiram H. (his copy) ART - GENERAL,Art - British Arts and Crafts Movement,SETS OF BOOKS
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Hard cover, 4to in three-quarter calf over red cloth covered boards, the raised bands on the spines ruled in gilt and blind, with "H.H. Bickford" tooled at the foot. Each volume bound with a preliminary indexes, except for last one. Original wraps and advertising-only pages were not included. Page numbering begins with roman numerals and changes to numeric; v.p. Illustrated with many black and white halftone reproductions, some full page with tissue guards, fewer in color, with some tipped in on colored card. CONDITION: Very Good. Original owner stamp in blue ink to head of a number of pages of earlier issues, sometimes upon front of plates: "Return to H.H. Bickford's Private Library." (See provenance below.) Light shelfwear. Front hinge reinforced with woven tape on several volumes. Lacking Volume Thirty Nine and Forty [would have been bound as 2-in-1] so, sadly, not quite complete. Some light offset opposite black and white illustrations, occasional light marks. Last vol. was bound with punched three ring holes at gutter edge of some issues. One page found lacking, copy supplied. NOTE: I inadvertently left one volume out of the group picture; this has now been replaced.**CONTENTS: Articles and reviews by some of the taste-makers of the age, including book reviews, gallery-talk, artist profiles, exhibit reviews and more highlighting the American School, British Art Nouveau, Arts and Crafts Movements, and European art and design, including German Bauhaus, Hungarian, Swedish, Turkish, and Japanese art. "The International Studio" was a successor to the British art journal, "The Studio," begun in 1893 by Charles Horne and editor Gleason White; the International edition debuted in New York in 1897 and continued until 1931. British publisher John Lane had previously, with partner Charles Elkins, been publisher of works designed by Charles S. Shannon and Charles Ricketts, and in 1887, the two co-founded London's The Bodley Head publishing firm. Lane then relocated to New York in 1896, forming the John Lane Company, producers of this periodical.**SELECTION of British artists include: in-depth pieces on Charles S. Shannon, the stained glass panel designs of Edward Burne-Jones, A.E. Newcombe, E.A. Taylor and Jessie M. King and the Glasgow School of Art, William Morris in Glasgow, the National Competition of Schools of Art 1910, the Brussels Universal Exhibition of 1910, Italianate, and Arts and Crafts style architecture. A number of British Arts and Crafts style fine book bindings are illustrated, a number of them by women, as well as other handcrafts shown at the Arts & Crafts Exhibition Society. Book illustration and architectural illustration are also considered. AMERICAN art is also heavily promoted: Frank W. Benson, John Singer Sargent, Winslow Homer, William Merrit Chase and William Morris Hunt being shown in Germany. Works at the Metropolitan Museum, a Philadelphia Architectural Exhibition, Miniatures by Laura Coombs Hills (of Newburyport) and other women painters of the American Society of Miniature Painters, Philadelphia portraitist Ella S. Hergesheimer, the Jewelry Exhibition in Boston at the Society of Arts and Crafts in 1907. et al. INTERNATIONALLY, there is a whole series on Japanese art including Utamaro's eighteenth century woodblocks in color reproduction, Japanese ceramic artists, silks and carvings in wood or jade. A book by Yone Noguchi, "The Pilgrimage" is reviewed. Spanish painters Joaquin Sorolla y Bastida and the Basque artist Ignacio Zuoaga are profiled in a review of a show at the Hispanic Society of America. A landscape scene by Swedish painter Carl Larsson, younger brother to King Gustav V, is illustrated in color. German bauhaus interiors earn coverage in the discussion of The Brussels Universal Exhibition: Max Läger, Emanuel von Seidl, R. Riemerschmid, Bruno Paul and Albin Müller being shown. Otto Fischer and Hans Von Hayek are mentioned in a Vienna exhibition. **PROVENANCE: From the Private Library of or
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