Fall 2023 Catalogue

HISTORY, SCIENCE & PHILOSOPHY 68 First edition of this beautifully illustrated work on the design and history of eight royal residences, with 100 hand-colored aquatint plates after the works of Charles Wild, James Stephanoff and others—a lovely copy in full straight-grain morocco-gilt. Artist and author William Pyne began his career as a watercolorist, but following several successful collaborations with well-known publisher Rudolph Ackermann, he “became enamored of book production” and undertook this ambitious, “large and costly work entitled The History of the Royal Residences…a very sumptuous book for which author, artist, engraver and publisher alike did their best” (Prideaux, 143). Pyne wrote the text and called upon some of his day’s most prominent artists to produce this invaluable record of such palatial residences as Carlton House, demolished in 1827, and the luxurious rooms within Windsor Castle, Kensington Palace and other royal homes, many of which were later redesigned. Accomplished watercolorist Charles Wild contributed 59 of the 100 illustrations, displaying an “extraordinary richness of color” (Ray 42). Abbey Scenery 396. Bookplates. Only occasional light foxing to text, plates clean and fine, hand-coloring vibrant. Joints expertly repaired, Volume I text block expertly resewn, gilt bright. A beautifully bound, near-fine copy of this splendidly illustrated work. “An Extraordinary Richness Of Color”: First Edition Of Pyne’s History Of The Royal Residences, Beautifully Illustrated With 100 Hand-Colored Folio Aquatints, Elegantly Bound 77 PYNE, William Henry. The History of the Royal Residences of Windsor Castle, St. James Palace, Carlton House, Kensington Palace, Hampton Court, Buckingham House and Frogmore. London, 1819. Three volumes. Folio (11 by 13-1/2 inches), contemporary full straightgrain plum morocco gilt, custom slipcases. $17,500 “Every hole and corner of the royal palaces of England have been rendered familiar to the lieges in the splendid volumes of Pyne.” – Edinburgh Literary Journal, contemporary review

RkJQdWJsaXNoZXIy NDg3OTM=