Showing posts with label landscape. Show all posts
Showing posts with label landscape. Show all posts

Sunday, July 24, 2016

Rare Views: Historic Cities from Around the World

Featuring Rare and Beautiful Views from Around the World!
Below are featured artists who are widely known for their grand display of important landmarks, landscapes and city-scapes 

David Roberts (1796-1864)
from The Holy Land, Syria, Idumea, Arabia, Egypt, and Nubia
London: 1842-1849
Hand-colored lithographs
Roberts began his grand tour of the Near East, departing for Alexandria in the summer of 1839, and spent the remainder of the year exploring Lower Egypt, encountering innumerable ancient ruins and monuments. Early in 1840, he embarked on a circuitous route to the Holy Land, via Mount Sinai and the legendary Nabataean city of Petra, in modern Jordan. He finally reached Jerusalem, before visiting other important sights in modern Israel, and finally concluding his tour in Syria. Upon his return to England, F.G. Moon introduced Roberts to the master lithographer Haghe, a collaboration that resulted in this masterpiece, which Abbey described as "one of the most Important and Elaborate
ventures of nineteenth-century publishing.
Rudolph Ackermann
The Repository of Arts, Literature, Commerce, Manufactures, Fashions and Politics
London: 1809-1828
Hand-colored engraving
Ackermann was a successful shop owner, his store the Repository of Arts opened in 1797 and became a spot for the English elite to socialize and shop for prints, illustrated books, decorative objects, art supplies, old master paintings and miniatures Ackermann extended his shop and created a yearly publication that showcased British manufacturing, in 1809 he began publishing his serious The Repository of Arts, Literature, Commerce, Manufacturers, Fashions ad Politics.  Ackermann's Repository, as it was also known, influenced English fashion, tastes, architecture, politics and literature throughout the Regency period and into the Georgian Era.

Carel Allard
“Constantinopel”
From Orbis habitabilis oppida et vestitus
c. 1695
Copperplate engraving
Allard is considered to be the first compiler of a townbook to couple the plates this way. Orbis habitabilis comprises 28 views of European towns , 24 Asian towns, 24 African towns and 24 American towns. The text for the book was in Latin by Ludolph Smids, a Groningen doctor and antiquary who settled in Amsterdam in 1685. The plates are by Aldert Meyer and Thomas Doesbergh, and Allard himself closely supervised the engraving of the plates.

Henry Salt (1780-1827)
Twenty-four views in St. Helena, the Cape, India, Ceylon, the Red Sea, Abyssinia, and Egypt
London: William Miller, 1809
Hand-colored aquatint engravings 
In 1816 Salt was given the post of British Consul-General of Egypt. His position gave him unique opportunities to pursue his growing interest in the monuments and antiquities of Egypt. He employed archeologists such as Giovanni Belzoni to excavate ancient Egyptian sites, such as Thebes, Giza and Abu Simbel, and undertook important archeological research at the Pyramids of Giza and the Sphinx. Salt also collected a large number of artifacts, such as the head of Ramses II, most of the antiquities Salt collected were purchased by, and can be seen at, The British Museum and the Louvre.

Mathias Merian
From: Topographia Galliae
Amsterdam: 1661
Copperplate engravings
Mathias Merian was one of the most prominent members of the leading print publishing family of 17th-century Germany, known throughout Europe for his engravings of cityscapes and landscapes, his scientific books, and his editions of the noted series of travel books, the “Great Voyages.” Born and trained in Basel, Switzerland, Merian joined the Frankfurt publishing house of Johann Theodor de Bry in 1616 and, the following year, he married de Bry’s daughter Maria Magdalena. Merian gained his greatest acclaim as head of the family publishing house following the death of his father-in-law in 1623.
Here at Arader San Francisco we have a wonderful space that enables us to showcase our finest examples of rare maps and original works on paper, however we simply cannot showcase all the works we possess. For this reason we will be exclusively showcasing works from within our vast antiques inventory. Please follow our blog or join our mailing list by emailing us at Aradersf@sbcglobal.net.
For more information and pricing inquiries Please call 415-788-5115, or visit us at Arader Galleries 432 Jackson Street, San Francisco, Ca 94111.

Thursday, May 12, 2016

Summer Auction is Coming! June 11th

Summer is coming and so is out next Auction!

As usual our Auction will be hosted at 1 pm EST  on June 11th at Arader Galleries 1016 Madison Avenue New York City, NY 10075.  Rest assured, if you are unable to bid onsite we are happy to provide several bidding options at your convenience. 

Below is a SPECIAL PREVIEW of our upcoming auction, showing highlights from our finest lots. You can now browse our lots online.

 If you would like to receive a hard copy of our catalog in the mail, PLEASE call us at (415) 788-5115, we are happy to send you auction catalogs at no cost. 

Enjoy!
June 90th Auction Preview
Lot 18: John James Audubon, Purple Heron or Reddish Egret, Plate 256
Original Aquatint Engraving
Lot 85: Shepherdess of Salem (American School)
Mixed Media Incl. Watercolor, Pen and Ink on Paper
c.1840
Lot 141: Antonio Floriano Untitled World Map 
Engraved Map 
Venice:1555
Lot 184: Albert Bierstadt Storm in the Rocky Mountains, MT. Rosalie
London: 1869
Lot 202: Thomas McLean The Trellis Window, Tretham Hall Gardens
London:1857
If you are interested in any Lots and wish to bid Please contact Arader Galleries at (415) 788-5115, 432 Jackson Street, San Francisco, Ca 94111. 

Sunday, March 27, 2016

From Sea to Shining Sea: Karl Bodmer's American Expedition

Embouchure de Fox-River
23 ¼ x 17 ½
Karl Bodmer's is known for his magnificent series of ethnographic accounts of Plains Indian culture during the time of 19th century western expansion. Bodmer was an unassuming Swiss painter when he was chosen by Prince Maximilian of Prussia to accompany his voyage to America, in order to document in pictorial terms his expedition. With the rest of Maximilian’s company, the two traveled among the Plains Indians from 1832 to 1834, a time when the Plains and the Rockies were still virtually unknown. The Bodmer/Maximilian collaboration produced a record of their expedition that is incontestably the finest early graphic study of the Plains tribes. Together the documented writing of Maximilian’s travels coupled with the iconic scenes of the West produced the seminal publication Travels in the Interior of North America, 1832-1843


Though Bodmer is most noted for his ethnographic drawing and paintings of the Plains Indians but his scenes of the North American views captured the mystique and majesty of the vast and diverse American  landscape. Maximilian and Bodmer journeyed from St. Louis up the Missouri River on the American Fur Company steamboat “Yellowstone,” stopping at a series of forts built by the Fur Company and meeting their first Indians at Bellevue. The travelers continued  to Fort Union, Fort Clark, and Fort Mackenzie, which proved to be the western most point of their journey. After living among and studying the Blackfeet tribe for several weeks, Maximilian decided that it was too dangerous to continue, so the travelers returned southward, reaching St. Louis in May 1834.

 Forest Scene of the Lehigh
23 ½" x 17 ½"

Cleveland Lighthouse
17 ½" x 12"
Once the journey was over, Bodmer spent four years in Paris supervising the production of the aquatints made from his drawings.These spectacular and atmospheric images are important and beautiful records of the landscape of the American West as it appeared when Bodmer saw it, just before westward expansion and industrialization took hold and began the indelible transformation of the frontier.

Junction of the Yellowstone River with the Missouri
24" x18"
A Selection of Bodmer's North American Views and Ethnographic works are available for purchase at Arader Galleries 432 Jackson St. San Francisco, CA 94111 
Please call 415-788-5115 with any questions