NEW YORK, NY.- Swann Galleries Thursday, April 26 auction of Fine Illustrated Books & Graphics will offer books, magazines, portfolios, editions and unique works, with material that changed the trajectory of design and influenced book arts in the last two centuries.
Luminous works by Gustav Klimt lead the auction with the limited edition tours-de-force Das Werk, 1918, and Eine Nachlese, 1931. With text by Hermann Bahr and Peter Altenberg, Das Work is the only monograph published during Klimts lifetime. The present copy, numbered 103 of 300, retains 49 of the original 50 plates, including the ten printed in color and heightened in gold and silver, carries an estimate of $25,000 to $35,000. The lavish portfolio Eine Nachlese boasts 30 plates, 15 in color, compiled by Max Eisler. The tome features several important works by Klimt, including some which were destroyed by wartime fires. Rarely seen complete, it is here estimated at $15,000 to $25,000.
Works by fine artists of the twentieth century will include volumes by Jean Arp, Jean-Michel Basquiat, Salvador Dalí and David Hockney. One of 55 copies on vellum of Pablo Picassos idiosyncratic bestiary, Eaux-Fortes originales pour des textes de Buffon, 1942, with text by Georges Louis Marie Leclerc Buffon, is estimated at $20,000 to $30,000. Fernand Légers Cirque, 1950, is an unusual interpretation of the artists book: rather than use reproductions of existing works, he conceived and developed the theme and prints especially for the project ($20,000 to $30,000).
Fine presses are well represented in the auction, with a section devoted to works produced by the Ashendene, Cheloniidae, Doves and Kelmscott Press houses, as well as the Limited Editions Club. Both the second issue of the first book published by the Kelmscott Press, The Story of the Glittering Pain, 1894, with elaborate decorations by William Morris, and The Defence of Guenevere, 1892, published and decorated by the same and bound in vellum, carry an estimate of $2,500 to $3,500. An original woodblock carving by Eric Gill for the Golden Cockerel Press edition of The Canterbury Tales of a naked man dead dangling from a vine, 1929, was featured no fewer than ten times throughout the volumes ($2,000 to $3,000).
Of note is a never-before-offered trade catalogue of brightly colored wallpaper samples by Jacques-Émile Ruhlmann, the legendary Art Deco interior designer. Bound in original oblong leather folio, it is the most extensive array of Ruhlmanns wallpaper designs known. The 47 pochoir sheets of 19 patterns reveal the effect of variant colorways on his designs ($15,000 to $25,000). Additional wallpaper sample books will also be available.
Design cornerstones can be found throughout the offerings: an early nineteenth-century piece de resistance of color printing and typography, Jean Midolles Spécimen des Écritures Moderns Romaines fleuronées, Gothiques nouvelles, Fractures, Françaises, Anglaises, Italienne et Allemande, 1834-35, influenced printers and designers for years to come ($3,000 to $4,000). The Russian avant-garde journal Zhurnalist, by El Lissitzky, helped to define the look of the Soviet regime; the first six issues of this extremely scarce periodical carry an estimate of $2,000 to $3,000.
An archive of material from a late office of Marcel Breuers architectural firm offers edifying insight into the architects vision. The largest section pertains to the monolithic building on Manhattans Upper East Sidepreviously the Whitney Museum of American Art and currently the Met Breuer. The files include early photographs of construction and finished buildings, floorplans and sketches for many of his iconic structures, including the Bobst Library at New York University and Yale University's Becton Engineering and Applied Science Center. Records span the 1960s and 70s, when Breuer was partnered with Hamilton Smith ($3,500 to $5,000).