Drawing Catalog
Croquis: Cuaderno de Documentos Artisticos--Notas y Apuntes Julio, 1940, No. 2
Croquis: Cuaderno de Documentos Artisticos--Notas y Apuntes Julio, 1940, No. 2Croquis: Cuaderno de Documentos Artisticos--Notas y Apuntes Septiembre, 1940, No. 3
Croquis: Cuaderno de Documentos Artisticos--Notas y Apuntes Septiembre, 1940, No. 3Impressionist and Modern Watercolours, Drawings and Sculpture; 1 July 1980
Impressionist and Modern Watercolours, Drawings and Sculpture; 1 July 1980Impressionist and Modern Paintings, Drawings and Sculpture; 31 March 1981
Impressionist and Modern Paintings, Drawings and Sculpture; 31 March 1981A Collection of German Expressionist Drawings; 2 December 1980
A Collection of German Expressionist Drawings; 2 December 1980Impressionist and Modern Watercolours and Drawings; 30 June 1981
Impressionist and Modern Watercolours and Drawings; 30 June 1981Impressionist and Modern Paintings, Drawings and Sculpture; 1 December 1981
Impressionist and Modern Paintings, Drawings and Sculpture; 1 December 1981Impressionist and Modern Watercolours and Drawings; 4 December 1979
Impressionist and Modern Watercolours and Drawings; 4 December 1979
Other Drawing books that may be of interest:
- Bangs, John Kendrick, The enchanted typewriter, Harper & Brothers, New York, 1899
by John Kendrick Bangs; illustrated by Peter Newell " A comic ghost story in which the narrator's typewriter, possessed by the shade of James Boswell, is capable of writing in the style of any great literary figure. Chapter headings include Sherlock Holmes Again and Golf in Hades. Black and white drawings by Peter Newell." v, [1] p., 1 l., 170 p., 1 l. front., plates. 17 cm Dewey:
- Bangs, John Kendrick, Peeps at people , being certain papers from the writings of Anne Warrington Witherup [pseud ] Harper & brothers, New York and London, 1899
"Illustrated with colored Penfield drawing of woman journalist on cover. Fictional encounters with Zola, Sienkiewicz, Kipling and others. Penfield drawings in black and white throughout." 5 p.l., 3-184, [1] p. front., plates. 18 cm Dewey:
- Bynner, Witter A canticle of praise San Francisco 1918
by Witter Bynner; first delivered in the Greek theatre at the University of California, Berkeley, Sunday, December first, and now imprinted for the joy of making by John Henry Nash. Title vignette. "The title-page drawing is by Lawrence B. Haste."; "The interpolated passage beginning "It's a certain voice" is a part of the author's translation of Emile Cammaerts's poem, "La patrie."; Printed wrappers. 32.5 cm. [2], ix p. 32.5 cm. World War, 1914-1918
- Cage, John; Thoreau, Henry David Score (40 drawings by Thoreau) New York : Henmar Press,
and 23 parts : twelve haiku followed by a recording of the dawn at Stony Point, New York, August 6, 1974 : for any instruments and/or voice c1974 ([13] p.) ; 34 cm Dewey:
- Clarkson, Lida Easy lessons in drawing and painting, J. F. Ingalls, Lynn, Mass., 1889
49 p. illus. 25 cm Dewey:
- Field, Eugene Wynken, Blynken, and Nod (Filmstrip) Cooper Films and Records 1967
With teacher's guide.; CREDITS: Narrator, Margie Bell; illustrator, Carroll Spinney.; Presents drawings to illustrate the poem by Eugene Field about three fishermen who sailed off in a wooden shoe. 28 fr. color. 35 mm. and phonodisc: 2 s. (1 s. for manual projector, 1 s. for automatic projector), 12 in., 33 1/3 rpm., 3 min. Series E [from old catalog] Presents drawings to illustrate the poem by Eugene Field about three fishermen who sailed off in a wooden shoe.
- Frost, Robert; Spiral Press.; Cook, Howard Norton Does no one but me at all ever feel this way in the least The Spiral Press [New York 1952; c1952
by Robert Frost. Issued as holiday greetings from Henry Holt and Company at Christmas 1952.; Inscription: Best wishes Marcello & Grace.; Drawings by Howard Cook.; Crane, J. Frost 1st ed. 15 cm. [9] p. ill. 15 cm. Greeting cards.
- Halleck, Fitz-Greene The poetical works of Fitz-Greene Halleck. Now first collected. Illustrated with steel engravings, from drawings by American artists D. Appleton & company; New York, 1847
Added t.-p., engr., with vignette 280 p. front., plates, port. 21.5 cm Dewey:
- Herford, Oliver The astonishing tale of a pen & ink puppet or, The genteel art of illustrating C. Scribner's sons New York 1907
by Oliver Herford. 21 x 31 cm. [62] p. illus. 21 x 31 cm. Pen drawing.; American wit and humor, Pictorial.
- Keats, John La belle dame sans merci William Edwin Rudge, [New York] : 192-?
by John Keats Poem"Drawing by Katharine Stymetz Lamb. 1 sheet : ill. ; 35 x 19 cm. Dewey:
- Mifflin, Lloyd; Moran, Thomas The hills The Transatlantic Publishing Company New York London 1895; c1895
by Lloyd Mifflin. Illustrated. "Illustrated with reproductions from pen drawings ... by Thos. Moran, N.A." 26 cm. 12 l., [4] p. 8 pl. 26 cm.
- Moore, Marianne The pangolin and other verse Brendin Pub. Co. [London] 1936
Marianne Moore. "120 copies ... printed at the Curwen Press, Plaistow, London. The drawings are by George Plank." 24 cm. 24 p. ill. 24 cm.
- Pyle, Howard, A catalogue of drawings illustrating the life of Gen.Washington Philadelphia, 1897
28 p. plates. 25 cm Dewey:
- Robertson, Keith; Berry, Erick The pilgrim goose. Viking Press, New York, 1956
Illustrated by Erick Berry "This book tells the story of Mr Paul Ives and a very special breed of goose, which is brave, intelligent and loyal! The book is divided into 4 parts and covers 4 periods in our history 1690, 1775, 1875 and 1955. An entertaining way to learn about an unusual aspect of American history with delightful line-drawings by Berry, whose speciality was Americana." 80 p. illus. 25 cm Dewey:[Fic Four stories trace the history of the Pilgrim goose in America, from its arrival on the Mayflower to near extinction of the breed and the efforts for its preservation
- Tabb, John B. The rosary in rhyme Small, Maynard & company Boston, 1904
by John B. Tabb "Of this edition of The rosary in rhyme written by John Banister [!] Tabb and embellished with fifteen decorative drawings and initial leters by Thomas Buford Meteyard, three hundred and fifty copies have been printed on Van Gelder Dutch handmade paper at the University press for Small, Maynard and company of Cambridge, Massachusetts, U. S. A. in November MDCCCCIIII. 4 p. l., 58, [3] p. illus. 17 cm Dewey:
Links
Library of Congress, Prints and Photographs Online Catalog
Cabinet of American Illustration, Cartoon Drawings: Swann Collection of Caricature and Cartoon, Civil War Photographs Civil War Photographs, Drawings (Master),Farm Security Administration/Office of War Information Color Photographs, Fine Prints Fine Prints, Posters: Performing Arts Posters, Stereograph Cards Stereograph Cards, Daguerreotypes, Fenton Crimean War Photographs, Fine Prints: Japanese, pre-1915, Lomax Collection, Panoramic Photographs, Thesaurus For Graphic Materials, Van Vechten Collection, Wright Brothers Negatives, and much more.
Henry Rowe Schoolcraft
Collection Summary Creator: Schoolcraft, Henry Rowe, 1793-1864 Title: Papers of Henry Rowe Schoolcraft 1788-1941 (bulk 1820-1856) Size: 25,000 items; 90 containers plus 1 oversize; 28 linear feet; 69 microfilm reels Repository: Manuscript Division, Library of Congress Abstract: Author, ethnologist, explorer, geologist, glass manufacturer, and Indian agent. Correspondence, journals, articles, books, manuscripts of magazines, poetry, speeches, government reports, Indian vocabularies, maps, drawings, and other papers reflecting Schoolcraft's career as a glass manufacturer, mineralogist on an exploring expedition in the Ozark Mountains, geologist on the Cass expedition to the Northwest Territory, leader of expeditions throughout the Great Lakes region, member of Michigan's legislative council, Indian agent, superintendent of Indian affairs for Michigan, ethnologist, and author of works concerning the Iroquois of New York state and other Indians of North America.
Quotes
THE PIONEER.
SPRING awakens the wilds of the west, Gruff winter has ceased his roar, For the green leaf hath burst the bud Of our white-limb?d sycamore. And fairest of wood flowers blow, Where prowls the sly raccoon, And the sumac hath trim?d its bough In the glass of the clear lagoon. There?s a sound in the upper air, The rush of a thousand wings, ?Tis our brave summer bird he?s away With his songs to the northland springs. And hark!?tis the cheer of our bold pioneer, He?s away in our venturesome van, He is bluff, he is rough, but he?s made of the stuff That?s widening the world for man. Free and fearless he treads, thro? prairies and glades, His face to the set of the sun, The red man and brute may his passage dispute, But his charter?s his axe and his gun. Far, far from his home, where wild buffaloes roam, See his crackling camp-fire shine, While he halloos aloud to the forest and flood, ?This slice of the world it is mine!? Let thirty long years, with their comforts and cares Pass, as thousands have passed before, Then as evening sets in, let us eye him again As he sits by his cottage door. There are deep furrows now, in that cheek and that brow, Still he?s stalwart, stout, and hale, By his side take a rest?he is proud of a guest And list to a squatter?s tale. ?The first time I plodded this plain, I was six feet and rising of twenty, Being raised on the mountains of Maine Ye may guess that the boy wasn?t dainty. ?My neighbours?then wild cat and bear, Were brutish and sometimes uncivil, But my sleeping companion old Tear He fear?d neither bull, bear, or devil. ?On the ground floor old Tear and I fix?d, We?d the ?might is right? title to take it, The squirrels and coons had the next, The turkeys they rented the attic. ?We had room in our lodge, ye?ll suppose, It was airy tho? none of the cleanest; The rafters were sturdy old boughs, Well shingl?d with leaves of the greenest. ?Our summer arrangements got thro?, I began for to think of December?s; So some jolly old settlers I slew, And penn?d in a patch with their members. ?We?d corn soon, and deer came in flocks, I was carpenter, farmer, and hunter; So when old Johnny Frost shook his locks, We?d a cabin to keep out the winter. ?Soon movers came tumbling in, And squatted without e?er a ?thank ye;? Well, Tear and I thought it no sin, To be swapping a bear for a Yankee. ?Ye?11 guess then the trunk and the limb Of our forest Goliahs got shattered; And daylight look?d bloody and grim, As they blaz?d and their ashes we scatter?d. ?While cabin and corn crib arose, Like tents of the mighty invader; And craftsmen came following close, With preacher, and doctor, and trader. ?Then clubbing the means and the mind, Together all pulling and drawing; A lively young creek we confin?d, And set it to grinding and sawing. ?Frame fabrics then rose in a twink, For stores and for matters domestic; We?d one temple for talk and for drink, Another for things ecclesiastic. ?Thus chopping and cropping ahead, Continually scratching and scheming; What a gash in the forest we?ve made! While drones are a drowsing and dreaming. ?Our youngsters, too, rise in the ranks, Ourselves we grow bigger and bigger; I?ve got shares in your railroads and banks, And a seat in the State Legislature,?Hew Ainslie [1792-1878]