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Seller's Description:
Very Good. Inscribed by Seymour Slive on front end page. Hardcover and dust jacket. Good binding and cover. Shelf wear. Edges scuffed. Small markings and stamp on front end page, else unmarked. viii, 378 pages, plates: illustrations, 29 cm. "Seymour Slive (1920-2014) an honorary member of HNA, was the first art historian trained in the United States who specialized in seventeenth-century Dutch art. He received his undergraduate and graduate degrees from the University of Chicago, where he studied with the scholar of Italian sculpture Ulrich Middeldorf. His dissertation, written long before anyone put together the words 'reception' and 'history, ' examined Rembrandt's critical reputation from his lifetime through the early eighteenth century. It was published in 1953 as Rembrandt and His Critics, 1630-1730. Slive remained engaged with Rembrandt for the rest of his life. One of his last publications, a study of Rembrandt's drawings organized by subject, as they were classified in the 1656 inventory of the artist's possessions, appeared in 2009. Never one to shy away from studying the major figures in the field, in addition to pursuing his interest in Rembrandt Slive was the leading authority on Frans Hals and Jacob van Ruisdael. As early as 1962 he wrote the catalogue entries for a Hals exhibition in Haarlem."-HISTORIANS OF NETHERLANDISH ART. This is an oversized or heavy book, which requires additional postage for international delivery outside the US.
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Seller's Description:
Fine in Very Good jacket. 4to-over 9¾-12" tall. (USA) Presumed 1st edition. No markings, Fine in Very Good dust jacket with two small tears to the top edge of Dj at the spine head. DJ is in mylar sleeve. Red cloth, 378pp, index, 429 illustrations and reprodutions with many in colour. Slive is the Fine Arts emeritus at Havard University. This work covers all the major artists of the period-Hals, Rembrandt, Vermeer and sets them firmly in the wider context of Dutch art. It will immediately establish itself as the new standard work on this great period of painting. A heavy book. (4.8 JM LVR 202/b6.