Alex Manchev
THE NOISE OF TINA, 2021
letterpress print on paper Fabriano-Ref Rus…
Description

Alex Manchev THE NOISE OF TINA, 2021 letterpress print on paper Fabriano-Ref Rusticus Neve 240 gr, cm 70x50; exh. 5/30 signature, print run and embossed stamp of the author The work is accompanied by certificate of authenticity from Poulpik Gallery, Sofia

370 

Alex Manchev

Auction is over for this lot. See the results

You may also like

DE ROSSI, John Bernard. Epithalamia exoticis lingvis reddita. Parma, Ex Regio Typographeo, 1775. Folio, 457x337 mm; Coeval full-leather binding, friezes and title in gold on spine, gold fillets on plates, marbled cuts; Variant B. Total of 139 illustrations engraved by different artists on Ferrari's drawings, 86 vignettes, 28 decorated initials, and 25 finales. Exemplar with wide margins. Rare and magnificent original edition. This masterpiece of Bodonian typography was published on the occasion of the wedding of Charles Emmanuel IV of Savoy to Marie Adelaide Clotilde of Bourbon, sister of Louis XVI. The fine engravings are by Benigno Bossi, Domenico Cagnoni, Giuseppe Patrini, Giovanni Volpato, Domenico Muzzi, Louis Sommerau, Simon François Ravenet le jeune and others. Brooks: "On the decorative side it is a fundamental work containing 139 branches [...] On the typographical side it is equally interesting for the exotic characters of which there are 26 different ones. It is, it may be said, another typographic manual by Bodoni." The 76 inscriptions in exotic languages accompanied by the Latin translation, each adorned with an engraved vignette with emblems of the cities of Piedmont, are due to the well-known orientalist Giavanni Bernardo De Rossi. Giani: "the first complete typographical proof in the history of oriental characters of European production." Updike: "Such a book, issued in honor of the marriage of Marie Adelaide Clotilde, sister of Louis XVI, printed in Bodoni's 'first manner' from old style types, is a masterpiece; really magnificent in its types, their arrangement, and the superb engraved decorations." From the 1820 Catalogue of Bodoni's editions it is noted, as Brooks notes, "that the most expensive book is the Epithalamia of 1775 and the Homerus of 1808." Brunet "Ce volume, une des plus belles productions des presses de Bodoni..." Brunet II, 1028; Brooks 70; Giani, Essay, p. 85; Updike, p. 161; A. Mortara, Chronological Catalogue of the Bodonian Collection. Parma 1879, p. 2-3. Folio, 457x337 mm; Contemporary full leather binding, gilt ornaments and titles on the spine, gilt rules on the covers, marbled edges. Variant B. A total of 139 illustrations engraved by different artists based on Ferrari's drawings, 86 vignettes, 28 decorated initials and 25 tailpieces. Copy with wide margins. Rare and magnificent first edition. This masterpiece of the Bodonian typography was published on the occasion of the wedding of Charles Emmanuel IV of Savoy to Maria Adelaide Clotilde of Bourbon, sister of Louis XVI. The refined engravings are by Benigno Bossi, Domenico Cagnoni, Giuseppe Patrini, Giovanni Volpato, Domenico Muzzi, Louis Sommerau, Simon François Ravenet le jeune and others. Brooks: "For the decorative part it is a fundamental work containing 139 copperplates [...] From the typographic side it is equally interesting for the exotic characters of which there are 26 different ones. It is, one might say, another typographical manual by Bodoni." The 76 inscriptions in exotic languages accompanied by the Latin translation, each adorned with a vignette engraved with the emblem of the cities of Piedmont, are due to the well-known orientalist Giovanni Bernardo De Rossi. Giani: "the first complete typographical proof in the history of oriental characters of European production." [the first complete typographical proof in the history of oriental typefaces produced in Europe]. Updike: ""Such a book, issued in honor of the marriage of Marie Adelaide Clotilde, sister of Louis XVI, printed in Bodoni's 'first manner' from old style types, is a masterpiece; really magnificent in its types, their arrangement, and the superb engraved decorations" From the Catalog of Bodonian editions of 1820 it can be seen, as Brooks notes, "that the most expensive book is the Epithalamia of 1775 and the Homerus of 1808" ["that the most expensive book is the Epithalamia of 1775 and the Homerus of 1808.] . Brunet "Ce volume, une des plus belles productions des presses de Bodoni..." Brunet II, 1028; Brooks 70; Giani, Essay, pp. 3-5; Updike p. 161.