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TERTIARY HISTORY OF THE GRAND CAÑON DISTRICT.... [with:] ATLAS TO ACCOMPANY THE MONOGRAPH ON THE TERTIARY HISTORY OF THE GRAND CANON DISTRICT by [Moran, Thomas, and William Henry Holmes, illustrators]: Dutton, Clarence E.:
Price:
$17,500.00
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Book desription: Washington: [text:] Government Printing Office, [atlas: Julius Bien & Co. of New York (for the Government Printing Office)], 1882.. Two volumes. Text: "Department of the Interior...Geological survey" title. Forty- two plates, plans and maps (including two chromolithographed views by Sinclair after Holmes, seventeen wood-engraved views [eight after Thomas Moran, nine after Holmes], four "Heliotype" plates), ten double- page. Atlas: Mounted on guards throughout. 1p. letterpress text, otherwise lithographed throughout. Title, twelve double-page map sheets after Dutton (eleven printed in colors), ten double- page sheets of views after Holmes (nine) and Moran (one) (five chromolithographed and five printed in tints), all printed by Julius Bien & Co. Quarto (11 1/2 x 9 inches) and folio (19 7/8 x 17 1/2 inches). Expertly bound to style in deep burgundy morocco over contemporary marbled paper-covered boards, spine in six compartments with raised bands, the bands flanked above and below by gilt rules, lettered in the second compartment. Very good. A fine set of "one of the grandest publications of the scientific expeditions in the American West...[depicting] the Grand Canyon in a series of magnificent panoramas" (Reese & Miles). The work includes illustrations by arguably the two greatest American topographical artists to record this era of westward expansion: William Holmes and Thomas Moran. The atlas includes eight beautifully executed maps of the region on twelve sheets, as well as the ten sheets of views. The views include a number of images that are designed to form larger continuous panoramas. The greatest of these is Holmes' view from Point Sublime in the Kaibab: the three chromolithographed sheets (numbered XVI- XVII), if joined, would form a single panoramic view with an image area measuring approximately 17 x 90 inches. It is interesting to note that the first of these sheets includes what may be a self-portrait of Holmes and a portrait of Dutton: two figures are visible at the edge of the canyon, one is seated and clearly sketching (Holmes) while the second figure bends down to examine his companion's work (Dutton). William Goetzmann calls W.H. Holmes "the greatest artist-topographer and man of many talents that the West ever produced...his artistic technique was like no other's. He could sketch panoramas of twisted mountain ranges, sloping monoclines, escarpments, plateaus, canyons, fault blocks, and grassy meadows that accurately depicted hundreds of miles of terrain. They were better than maps and better than photographs because he could get details of stratigraphy that light and shadow obscured from the camera...his illustrations for Dutton's TERTIARY HISTORY OF THE GRAND CANON DISTRICT are masterpieces of realism and draftsmanship as well as feats of imaginative observation." The team assembled to carry out this geological survey of the Grand Canyon included some outstanding talents: C.E. Dutton, the scientist; Jack Hilliers, the photographer; and Holmes and Moran as artist- topographers. The intention of the survey was strictly scientific, but as Dutton writes in his preface: "I have in many places departed from the severe ascetic style which has become conventional in scientific monographs." This is also true of Moran and Holmes: both were clearly inspired by their subjects. The overall result is of a quality that would not be possible today. As Wallace Stegner wrote in his introduction to the 1977 reprint: "Later specialization has eliminated from scientific publications most of the elements that make THE TERTIARY HISTORY so charming. No report written as this one is written would now be published by any government bureau. No illustrators like Moran and Holmes would be permitted to illustrate it...A great book...THE TERTIARY HISTORY has kept its value precisely because it does not specialize." FARQUHAR 73. Goetzmann, EXPLORATION AND EMPIRE, pp.512-13. REESE & MILES, CREATING AMERICA 40.
- Bookseller: William Reese Company - Americana
(US)
- Bookseller Inventory #: WRCAM 36493
- Binding: Hardcover
- Publisher: Washington: [text:] Government Printing Office, [atlas: Julius Bien & Co. of New York (for the Government Printing Office)],
- Keywords: FARQUHAR 73. Goetzmann, EXPLORATION AND EMPIRE, pp.512-13. REESE & MILES, CREATING AMERICA 40.
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All material is shipped subject to approval, but notification of return must be made within ten days and returns made in a prompt and conscientious fashion.
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