MALLARMÉ (Stéphane). Pages. Brussels, Edmond Deman, 1891. Large in-8, paperback,…
Description

MALLARMÉ (Stéphane).

Pages. Brussels, Edmond Deman, 1891. Large in-8, paperback, old red morocco spine folder and slipcase (Devauchelle). Partly original edition, decorated in frontispiece with a very beautiful etching by Auguste Renoir. This etching was one of the first made by Renoir, who was not very sensitive to this mode of expression (see François Chapon, Le Peintre et le livre, p. 25). Mallarmé planned a rich illustration for this work, which was originally entitled Le Tiroir de laque, and he had admirably chosen his illustrators: J.-L. Brown, Degas, Renoir, Berthe Morisot, and perhaps Monet as well. Brown was to do the cover, "after one of the most beautiful people in Paris", Degas probably a dancer, to illustrate the pages on the ballet (but we have nothing precise), Berthe Morisot "Le Nénuphar blanc" and Monet "La Gloire". All of them finally declined, after more or less extensive attempts, except Renoir: a beautiful etching of an opulent nude with flowing hair evokes in the frontispiece "Le Phénomène futur" (cf. Mallarmé, Correspondance, 1969, t. III, p. 10). One of 50 copies on japon, the only ones containing Renoir's frontispiece in double state.

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MALLARMÉ (Stéphane).

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[MANUSCRIT] Eugène DEMOLDER - Three contemporaries. Bruxelles, Deman, 1901. Rare and fascinating manuscript of the section devoted to Félicien Rops in his son-in-law Eugène Demolder's book Trois contemporains, published by Deman in 1901. The manuscript includes printed passages, cut out and pasted together, and other manuscripts, sometimes with corrections, erasures and strikethroughs, The work is particularly effusive in its praise of Félicien Rops' work, such as Rops' "master plate" L'experte en dentelles, an etching deemed "as burning with life, despite the peaceful physiognomy of the subject, as when Rops scratches the copper to bring out some sadistic Parisian girl's look", or the comparisons made between Rops' work and that of masters such as Rembrandt or Goya. The author also devotes passages to some of Rops' works in famous collections, such as those of M. Edmond Deman, or the most beautiful of Rops' paintings according to the author: Paysage Ardennais in the collection of the poet Edmond Haraucourt. Of particular note are the exhaustive passages on the "master feminist" Rops' work on nudity, which the author links to his passion for horticulture. Some pages folded, snags, small tears overall only slightly affecting text passages, erasures, crossed-out passages, corrections, handwritten passages interspersed with printed and laminated passages (some printed passages are corrected in pen) annotations and captions ("in italics" or "XXX" "composed" etc.) showing the progression of writing, composition and layout by the author. The manuscript comprises a total of 16 pages, numbered 37 to 52. A particularly touching piece, given Eugène Demolder's great admiration for Rops, father of his companion and at the same time a great artist and personality of his time. Provenance: This manuscript comes from an important collection of documents, including letters and manuscripts, found directly in the house in the demi-lune, where the artist lived for many years with his two dressmaker sisters, Léontine and Aurélie Duluc.