Idioma: Inglés
Publicado por J. C. J. L., 1938
Librería: Once Read Books, Long Beach, CA, Estados Unidos de America
EUR 88,29
Cantidad disponible: 1 disponibles
Añadir al carritoPaperback. Condición: Fair. FAIR. White illustrated wraps with light brown string. Approx. 9 1/2'' x 10 1/2''. Large sections torn/worn away from spine, edges and corners of covers. Large tears to remaining spine and spine hinges, plus large tear extending from middle right edge of front cover. Light brown liquid stain to top corner and top edge of covers and some inner pages. Clear text and pictures. Once Read Books, cover scan available - just ask, OnceReadBooks com Orders shipped via USPS.
Publicado por Java China Japan Lijn Amsterdam 1938, 1938
Librería: Andrew Barnes Books / Military Melbourne, Melbourne, VIC, Australia
Original o primera edición
EUR 46,03
Cantidad disponible: 1 disponibles
Añadir al carrito1st edition card covers Very Good octavo (48)pp., illusts., Pictorial card wrappers rather chipped o/w a nice sound copy.
Publicado por De Unie and Java-China Japan Lijn N.V., Netherlands Indies, 1938
Librería: Ground Zero Books, Ltd., Silver Spring, MD, Estados Unidos de America
Original o primera edición
EUR 163,75
Cantidad disponible: 1 disponibles
Añadir al carritoString bound, card wraps. Condición: Fair. Ger. P. Adolfs [Gerard Pieter Adolfs] Ilustrador. The format is approximately 9.5 inches by 10.5 inches. With a color printed image on the front cover by Gerard Pieter Adolfs to the front cover. Back cover map has some color. Unpaginated (48 pages plus covers, with 23 drawings of scenes typical to the East Indies printed recto only and with a short descriptive caption facing). The drawings were produced in pen and ink and many are of Bali, its culture and temples. A book produced by the Java-China-Japan Line ("JCJL") for promotional and advertising purposes. The artist, Gerard Adolfs (1897-1968) was called by the press "The Wizard of Light". Cover has wear, soiling and is missing a small piece at the lower Front right corner and top left rear corner. The Java-China-Japan Lijn,was one of the largest Dutch shipping companies during the interwar period, which transported cargo and passengers between the Netherlands East Indies, China, and Japan. Due to its position within the Asian shipping market, the company was forced to address customer demands while simultaneously attempting to maintain imperial authority in its business dealings across the region. Contending with an increasingly cosmopolitan and politicized clientele who at times used the company to question the treatment of Chinese residents in the Netherlands East Indies and critique Dutch interference in East and Southeast Asia the company was conflicted about how to manage various ethnic groups onboard. The company was forced to negotiate with a complex set of Chinese actors, who forced the company to make concessions at odds with their imperial position. Gerard Pieter Adolfs (born 2 January 1897 in Semarang, Central-Java; died 1 February 1968 in 's-Hertogenbosch, the Netherlands) was a Dutch East Indies painter and architect. In the 1930s at the height of his artistic career the press called G.P. Adolfs the "Wizard of Light". Adolfs spent his youth in Java and received at home his first artistic inspirations. His father, Gerardus Cornelis Adolfs, was an architect and a versatile amateur (painter, photographer, piano and violin player as well as a pole vaulter). Adolfs studied architecture in Amsterdam. After graduating, he was drawn back to Java, where he designed houses in Yogyakarta, Surakarta and Surabaya. But soon he swapped the drawing pen for the dry-point, pencil and brush and from then on dedicated his whole life to painting. He was already well known as a talented advertising illustrator, when in 1924 he was first introduced to the public of Yogyakarta as a painter, water-colorist and graphic artist. Each year Adolfs traveled for a few months. He had studios in Florence, Rome, Vienna, Budapest, Prague and - together with his Japanese friend Léonard Tsuguharu Fujita - in Paris and exhibited his works of art internationally (Netherlands Indies, Japan, Singapore, United States, England, Netherlands, Sweden, Norway, France, Switzerland.) The main subjects of his work were scenes of Java, Bali, Japan and of North Africa (market sceneries, cock-fights, landscapes and townscapes). In 1940 shortly before the occupation of the Netherlands Adolfs came back to Europe and settled in Amsterdam. On 22 February 1944, during an exhibition at the Kunstzaal Pollmann, the largest part of Adolfs' paintings was destroyed by the bombardment of Nijmegen. Adolfs kept on working. He wrote and illustrated a book about his memories of Surabaya and exhibited in many well-known galleries. He lived mostly in Amsterdam - interrupted by longer stays in Scandinavia, France, Spain, Italy and North Africa. In 1967 he retired to a small village in South-Holland. On 1 February 1968, G.P. Adolfs died in 's-Hertogenbosch, North Brabant. Amongst those who have brought drawings and paintings from the Dutch East Indies, G.P. Adolfs stands out on account of the striking frankness of his style. These are not the aperçus of a typical Dutch painter seeking to achieve atmosphere and tone at all costs; but neither is there any forced exoticism in t.
Librería: Fahrenheit 451 Antiquarian Booksellers, Nieuwerbrug, Holanda
EUR 90,00
Cantidad disponible: 1 disponibles
Añadir al carritoBatavia, G. Kolff & Co., z.j. (ca. 1937), 33,(7) pag., 1 gevouwen kaart, zw/w (fotogr.) illustraties, tabellen, origneel in kleuren doorlopend geïllustreerd voor- en achteromslag naar Ger P. Adolfs, 29.,7 x 23 cm. = Prachtig geïllustreerd omslag. Zeldzaam. "Uitgave vanhet kantoor voor den Handel van het Departement van Economische Zaken".