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ADAGIO: A CHECKLIST
Tanner, Wesley B. and Alstrom, Eric C.
The books, pamphlets and ephemera printed at the Private Press of Leonard F. Bahr.
Limited to an edition of about 600. A complete bibliography for Adagio. Introduced by Paul Hayden Duensing. MLA Quarterly (A Private Press Profile) laid-in, includes short essay on Adagio and a selected bibliography up to 1968. Set in Robert Slimbach's Minion roman, Poetica italic, Gottfried Pott's Carolina and W. Rebhuhn's Fox on Mohawk Satin paper. Wrapper Mohawk Ultrafelt paper.
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More On This Subject - -
> BIBLIOGRAPHY, TWENTIETH CENTURY
> PRIVATE PRESS & FINE PRINTING, TWENTIETH CENTURY
> UNITED STATES, MICHIGAN
> ADAGIO PRESS
> BAHR, ANN
> BAHR, LEONARD F.
> TANNER, WESLEY B.
> DUENSING, PAUL HAYDEN
Books of related interests - -
> Zaun, Rev. Allan A., BUT THE GREATEST OF THESE IS LOVE
> Weeks, Donald, AN INTRUSION UPON ETERNITY.
> ADAGIO.
> ORNAMENTA, FLEURONS FROM A PRIVATE TYPEFOUNDRY.

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ARIEL AND MIRANDA, SEVEN WOOD ENGRAVINGS BY...INSPIRED BY...
by O'Connor, John
Printed in an edition limited to 65 numbered sets, this is one of 20 which includes an original watercolor. John S. O'Connor (1913-2004) was a student of Eric Ravilious, John Nash and others at the Royal Academy of Art in the mid-30s. His own works began to appear in the late 30's, in the publications of the Golden Cockerell Press. Since that time, Mr. O'Connor has produced paintings, watercolors, lithographs, and engravings in various media. Peppin and Micklethwait (Dictionary of British Book Illustrators, 1983, p.218) describe his wood engravings as "strikingly decorative in the tradition of Eric Ravilious, with tonal and textural contrast achieved through a wide variety of tooling." Hamilton (c1890-1990, 1994, p.150) characterizes O'Connor's landscape work as containing "strong edges, deep shadows and dramatic contrasts of light and dark" which gives "a sense of rhythm and pattern to the image." Garrett (History of British Wood Engraving, 1978, p.222) regards O'Connor's engraving style as in the "Ravilious manner," which he has aptly described (p.221) as "illustrative, decorative and dominated by intricate pattern and texture." In his introduction to this set, Mr. O'Connor discusses his interest in Shakespeare's The Tempest and provides the rationale for these engravings: "I like to consider the years previous to the brief action of the play. The "sprite" close to his master and to Miranda the child: and I suggest the boy and girl would have enjoyed each other's company in the manner of brother and sister. He would be a little wild; she enclosed in that strangely mature innocence that is written into Miranda. Shy at first, the two children would play in streams, collect herbs..." etc. There are nine illustrations: the seven signed and numbered (with regard to copy) engravings, a similarly signed watercolor on the same theme but not precisely copying any of the engravings, and a small (3x4 in.) unsigned engraving affixed to the front of the clamshell case. Figures (Ariel and Miranda, or Ariel alone) are variously posed, each partially outlined by a pure white area roughly approximating their forms. Two prints are in black, yellow, and white; the rest are black-and-white. Sizes (other than the case illustration) are roughly 4x6 or 6x8 inches. Cutouts in the fronts of the folders frame the pictures when the folders are closed. Accompanied by a folded folio sheet with title and Mr. O'Connor's introduction and signed by the artist (verso of the title page), with the annotation "92," presumably the date of publication. The interior lining of the clamshell case is printed with a repeated motif taken from one of the engravings. Printed at the Rocket Press.

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