View full screen - View 1 of Lot 1187. Heine, Wilhelm | An important work recording Commodore Perry's expedition to Japan.

Heine, Wilhelm | An important work recording Commodore Perry's expedition to Japan

Lot Closed

June 28, 07:05 PM GMT

Estimate

10,000 - 15,000 USD

Lot Details

Description

Heine, Wilhelm

Graphic Scenes of the Japan Expedition. New York: G.P. Putnam & Company, 1856


Folio (514 x 368 mm). Letterpress text, 10 lithographic prints including one tinted portrait of Perry from a daguerreotype by P. Haas, and nine hand finished views by Heine, two of these chromolithographed, seven printed in two colors on india paper, all printed by Sarony & Co., mounted. 20th-century maroon half morocco over paper-covered boards, spine gilt-lettered, original wrappers bound in.


The plates are numbered and titled as follows:

[1. portrait of Perry]

2. Macao from Penha Hill

3. Whampoa Pagoda

4. Old China Street, Canton

5. Kung-kwa at On-na, Lew-Chew

6. Mia or road side chapel at Yokuhama

7. Temple of Ben-teng in the harbor of Simoda

8. Street and bridge at Simoda

9. Temple of the Ha-tshu Man-ya-tshu-ro at Simoda

10. Grave yard at Simoda Dio Zenge

 

An important work recording Commodore Perry's expedition to Japan.

 

William Heine was the official artist on Commodore Matthew Perry's expedition to Japan in 1853-54. On returning to the United States he produced several series of prints commemorating the trip. A group of six elephant-folio prints appeared in 1855, and the following year the present volume was issued in a smaller format, with different images, and with explanatory text. Both projects employed the New York lithographic firm of Sarony, among the best lithographers in the United States at that time. "As artistic productions, the pictures speak for themselves ... none superior to them have been executed in the United States, and they have no cause to shun comparison with some of the best productions of Europe" (Introduction). Copies were produced tinted on regular paper as in the present copy and hand-colored.

 

Bennett describes the plates as "many times finer than those in the regular account of the Perry expedition." His remarks on the work's great rarity are confirmed by its absence from both of Cordier's Japanese bibliographies.


REFERENCE: 

Bennett 53; McGrath, American Color Plate Books 123