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Publicado por Vision Press, publishers, London, 1958
Librería: Book Orphanage, McCrae, VIC, Australia
hardcover, 6" x 9¼", with jacket parts mounted to boards 160 pages In this book, Salvador Dali takes a sharp look at modern art, and doesn't like what he sees! "Nothing," he writes "has ever aged more rapidly and more poorly than modern art." Here he evaluates the work of Picasso, Cezanne, Mondrian, Turner, Jackson Pollock and others. Here is Dali at his pungent best. This book has renderings of fifteen of the paintings Dali deals with in the text, and fifty-seven of Dali's calligraphic devices as decorations. Dali also designed the book's jacket. Ours is an ex-library copy with jacket front mounted to cover, and 'blurb' mounted on front endpapers - book has usual stamps, stickers, barcode, pocket etc. Book in GOOD condition.
Publicado por The Dial Press, New York, 1948
Librería: Mullen Books, ABAA, Marietta, PA, Estados Unidos de America
Hardcover. Black cloth boards with gilt lettering, 192pp, profuse color and BW illustrations. Written by Dali, in his own inimitable way. One good way to sum it up is from the prologue (a "clear and brief prologue") -- "a kind of culinary initiation to the Eleusinian mysteries of painting." Good+ (Boards are moderately edgeworn/foxed/scuffed/smudged; much of gilt lettering is worn away; textblock is toned and smudged/scuffed; signature of former owner ifc; interior is clean with light toning, as expected with age; interior has occasional smudging and foxing; binding is solid.).