CRANACH PRESS & VERGILIUS MARO (Publius)

The Eclogues of Vergil. In the original Latin with an English prose translation by J. H. Mason with illustrations drawn and cut on the wood by Aristide Maillol.

One of the greatest achievements of 20th century fine printing

Number 116 of 225 copies, with an additional 33 de luxe copies on Japanese paper and six on vellum. 43 illustrations drawn and cut on the wood by Aristide Maillol printed in black, along with two complete initials, 14 ornaments for initials and pressmark, title designed and cut by Eric Gill, along with lettering around the pressmark. 4to., [9], 110, [6], 4 pp. 33x26cm. Original full red Morocco by W.H. Smith & Son, spine lettered in gilt. Weimar, The Cranach Press, 1927.

£8,000.00

Very good, upper cover with a spot of minor soiling, lightly foxed throughout, an occurrence which seems endemic with this edition, but overall attractive and presentable.

Described by Harry Graf Kessler as an attempt ‘to create a complete harmony between type area, illustration and paper by which, as was the case in Carolingian manuscripts and in the illustrated incunabula, all elements of the book are combined to a complete work of art’ (Kessler, from the prospectus), the Cranach Press Virgil is one of the greatest achievements of 20th century fine printing.

The design of the page was influenced by Edward Johnston, who explained to Kessler that the strict rules of William Morris should be seen only as ‘a jumping off ground, a starting point, which was to be left behind. The guiding principle should be one’s artistic sense’ (as quoted in J.D. Brinks, The Art of the Cranach Press). Maillol’s woodcuts radiate a prelapsarian naivety, which ‘restores to this world its innocence and its bliss… and therefore is an art which is religious in the Greek sense’ (Kessler, Warum Maillol Vergils Eklogen illustriert hat), the result of ‘a love which burns out from its object all which will not feed its fire… a love which is not, like the academic one colder than nature, but warmer, more pregnant, more stimulating’ (Kessler, Aristide Maillol). ‘The book did not owe its supreme unity to the proportions of the type area or to the balance of picture and letters, but to Kessler’s musical - or poetical - sense of the unity of his vision’ (J.D. Brinks, The Art of the Cranach Press)

Stock No.
253024