Description: Verve: An Artistic and Literary Quarterly Director: E. Teriade First American editions of the complete first four issues of Verve, published in Paris from 1937-1939, featuring cover art by Matisse (No. 1), Georges Braque (No. 2), Pierre Bonard (No. 3) and Georges Rouault (No. 4), along with numerous heliogravures (many full color), original lithographs by artists such as Matisse, Chagall, Miró and Klee, and the first publication of select writings by Hemingway and Joyce, along with articles by Valéry, Gide, Bataille, Sartre and much more, assembled in one folio volume with four original lithographic front wrappers bound in. Volume 1, Number 1, December 1937The inaugural issue of the great French arts magazine, here in its English language issue for export. Features lithographs -- printed by Mourlot -- by Fernand Leger, Joan Miro, Abraham Rattner, and Francisco Bores; heliogravures of photographs by Man Ray, Brassaï; text contributions by André Gide, Georges Bataille, John Dos Passos, Federico Garcia Lorca, André Malraux, previously unpublished letters and drawings by Cezanne, and the first printed illustration of Picasso’s Guernica. Volume 1, Number 2, Spring 1938The second issue (Spring 1938, March-June), with original lithographic front wrapper by Braque, presents the first publication of Hemingway’s The Heat and the Cold, his piece on the filming of The Spanish Earth that was later included in the book The Spanish Earth. Also, herein is the first publication of James Joyce’s A Phoenix Park ‘Nocturne, “the final and entirely rewritten version of a detail of a fragment from Work in Progress which appeared originally in Transition No. 22 and later in the de luxe edition at the Servire Press, The Hague, under the title The Mime of Mick, Nick and the Maggies”. This exceptional issue also includes original lithographs by Kandinsky and Masson, and heliogravures of photographs by Brandt, Brassaï and others. Volume 1, Number 3, October - December 1938Issue Number 3 (October-December), with original lithographic front wrapper by Bonnard, offers original lithographs by Chagall, Miró, Rattner and Klee, together with articles by leading writers such as Valéry, Malraux, Claudel and Bataille. Volume 1, Number 4, January - March 1939The culminating issue in this exceptional collection, Number 4 (January-March 1939), features an original lithographic front wrapper by Rouault, and an original double-page lithograph of Matisse’s The Dance, along with heliogravures of photographs by Brassaï, Bill Brandt and others, together with articles by Michaux, Garcia Lorca, Sartre and much more. About Verve “Fifty years ago in Paris, the magazine to look for was Verve, which first came out in December 1937 and kept going in one form or another till 1960. That first cover (by Henri Matisse) sang out from the other side of the street in a way that made us run across the road to look at it more closely. And when we turned its pages, Verve had a bosomy, full-fleshed, slightly slithery quality that this former subscriber would know in his sleep” (John Russell). Art critic Efstratios Eleftheriades, under the nom de plume “Tériade,” founded Verve, with the financial assistance of David Smart, publisher of Esquire. “The magazine, a quarterly review of arts and letters, was lavish in design and challenging in content. Teriade’s view of the world of art and literature was personal, bold and compelling” (Rick Gagliano). Once called “the most beautiful magazine in the world,” Verve contained original lithographs by the most famous artists of the day— Matisse, Picasso, Braque, Léger, Miró, Chagall— with numerous lithographs appearing for the first time. Within these pages, as well, are the first publications of works by Hemingway and Joyce, and much more.
Price: 3700 USD
Location: Chicago, Illinois
End Time: 2023-12-31T02:33:13.000Z
Shipping Cost: N/A USD
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Item Specifics
All returns accepted: ReturnsNotAccepted
Topic: Literary
Binding: Cloth
Author: E. Teriade
Subject: Art & Photography
Special Attributes: 1st Edition, Illustrated