NEW YORK, NY.- Early Printed, Travel, Scientific & Medical Books comes to
Swann Galleries on Thursday, October 24, featuring notable works on science, a standout selection of incunabula, and an extensive offering of volumes on innovations in medicine.
The sale is led by a first edition, first issue of Sir Isaac Newtons Opticks, London, 1704, which summarized the scientists discoveries on light and color. The volume is available at $15,000 to $25,000. Further science offerings of note include a 1632 first edition of Galileo Galileis dialogue on the Copernican and Ptolemaic systems that established the validity of heliocentricity ($10,000-15,000); a scarce complete set of first editions in 32 parts of Michael Faradays Experimental Researches in Electricity, London, 1832-56, which contributed to the modern understanding and industrial use of electricity ($3,000-4,000).
A choice selection of incunabula brings to auction infrequently seen editions of Johannes Jacobus Caniss guide to the study of civil and canon law, De modo studendi in utroque iure, Padua, 1476 ($6,000-9,000); Albertus Magnuss comprehensive book on gems De mineralibus, Pavia, 1491 ($3,000-5,000); and Philippus Beroalduss philosophical tract on happiness, De felicitate opusculum, Bologna, 1495 ($4,000-6,000).
A large medical section features first editions of Franz Anton Mesmers 1779 manifesto of Mesmerism Mémoire sur la Découverte du Magnétisme Animal, Geneva, at $800 to $1,200. The first book on lip reading, Philocophus, London, 1648, by John Bulwer, and an inscribed and signed copy of Harvey Cushings 1932 report on intercranial surgery technique that reduced the mortality rate from the procedure Intracranial Tumors, Springfield, both are estimated at $1,000 to $2,000. Also of note is René Descartes final work, Les Passiones de lAme, Paris, 1649, available at $3,000 to $5,000.
Additional highlights include a complete set of nine volumes of James Cooks Sothern Hemisphere, South Pole, and Pacific Ocean voyages, London, 1773-84, which formed the foundation of modern knowledge of the Pacific ($10,000-15,000); a first edition of Athenaeuss Deipnosophistarum, Venice, 1514, an early third century work that describes a series of imaginary banquets ($8,000-12,000); John Bulwers Chirologia, London, 1644, a first edition on an exhaustive study of gesture as it relates to religious ritual ($1,500-2,500); and a first separate edition of acrostic poems Panegyricus dictus Constantino Augusto, Augsburg, 1595, by Publilius Optatianus Porphyrius ($1,000-2,000).
Exhibition opening in New York City October 19.