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BEATLES INTEREST - ROBERT FREEMAN (1936-2019) an original photographic print from the photo session for "Beatles for Sale" in 1964, artist proof signed front and back and dated '91, together with a copy of the letter from Robert Freeman to the vendor for assisting with his book.Provenance - Robert Freeman worked with the Beatles from 1963-1966, the vendor knew and worked with Robert Freeman and this was gifted to him with another photo in 1991, the other copy was sold in London with the original letter.
A JAPANESE FOUR-CASE GOLD LACQUER INRO BY KOMA KORYUEDO/MEIJI, 19TH CENTURYThe body decorated in hiramaki-e, takamaki-e and kinrande on a fundame ground, one side depicting two figures detailed with mother of pearl inlaid faces, the other with a momiji (maple) tree, the interior with a nashiji ground, the base signed Koma Koryu saku, together with a glass ojime and a wood netsuke carved as a shishi, the inro 6.3cm.Provenance: the private collection of a lady and gentleman, Derbyshire.The decoration on this inro may be inspired by the print entitled Momiji no ga (Beneath the Autumn leaves), from the series Genji ko no zu (Genji Incense Pictures) by Utagawa Kunisada (1843-47), which features two very similar figures.
* Adams (Ansel, 1902-1984). Canyon de Chelly, Arizona, c. 1947, later gelatin silver print press print, stamped to verso 'Ansel Adams Archive' and 'Center for Creative Photography, University of Arizona' to verso with CCP description label, image 19 x 24 cm, together with a gelatin silver print photograph of White House Ruins, Canyon de Chelly, by Leslie P. Greenhill, 1978, details to verso, 24 x 19 cmQTY: (2)
* Dietrich (Marlene, 1901-1992). A large press print showing Marlene Dietrich signing autographs for US soldiers in France, photographed by Keystone-France, 1943, later printing, wetstamp of Toni Parks (UK) Collection to verso, image 24.5 x 34 cm, together with a gelatin silver print photograph of Greta Garbo, National Film Archive London wetstamp to verso, image 29 x 22 cmQTY: (2)
* Panama & Cuba. An album containing 26 corner-mounted gelatin silver print photographs, c. 1900-1910, comprising 12 photographs of the construction of the Panama Canal by W.A. Fishbough, 11 x 16 cm, and 14 photographs of Cuban views by J.B. by F. B. Co., 8 x 13.5 cm, the majority titled in the negatives, some leaves blank, contemporary cloth, rubbed, oblong small folioQTY: (1)
* Macindoe Family Albums. A group of 3 photograph albums compiled by Armida and Rosemary Macindoe, 1932-1946, gelatin silver print snapshots, a total of approximately 1,000 mostly snapshots on rectos and versos of 87 stiff card leaves, numerous ink captions and dates throughout 2 albums, identifying places and people, family names include Cholmondeley, Pooley, Baring, Buckhurst, Astill, etc., mostly family and society candid shots at home at Norton Hall and other houses and holiday destinations, mostly UK but including touring in Germany (October to December 1934), featuring photographs of Hitler, Goebbels, Unity Mitford, Diana Mitford, Diana Guinness, one album broken, contemporary padded morocco gilt, some wear, one with covers detached, two with monogram 'RM' to upper cover and one with 'MAM' to upper cover, oblong folioQTY: (3)NOTE:Mary Armida Macindoe (1917-2010) and her sister Rosemary (1918-?) were the daughters of James Douglas 'Toby' Macindoe (1888-1954) and Maria Margaret Hungerford Pollen.
* Churchill (Sir Winston Leonard Spencer, 1874-1965), British statesman, soldier, and writer who twice served as Prime Minister of the United Kingdom, 1940-1945 during the Second World War, and again from 1951 to 1955. A very fine, double-signed photograph of Churchill by Yousuf Karsh (1908-2002), [1941], printed later, sepia-toned gelatin silver print, Karsh’s copyright stamp in the image lower right, image size 216 x 168 mm (8.5 x 6.5 ins), signed by Karsh on the original paper mount in pencil lower left, ‘© Y. Karsh’, and signed and dated by Churchill in black ink lower right, ‘Winston S. Churchill / 1954’, the date below and left of his signature, photographer’s copyright wet stamp to verso, sheet size 337 x 262 mm overall (13.5 x 10.5 ins), in superb condition with trivial creases to right-hand corners, loosely preserved in the original buff card portfolio with Karsh’s details lettered in silver to upper cover (some minor marks and spotting to folder only)QTY: (1)NOTE:Possibly the finest signed photograph of Churchill ever offered for sale.After a visit to Washington in 1954 Churchill flew to Ottawa on 29 June, making a short speech on landing. The following day he attended a meeting of the Canadian cabinet and broadcast a speech to the Canadian people. He was later a guest of the Canadian Prime Minister, Louis St Laurent, at the Country Club, and flew on, this time to New York, arriving after midnight to board the Queen Elizabeth for his return to England. It seems likely therefore that the day of signing this remarkable example of his photograph was 30 June 1954.The iconic photograph, now always named 'The Roaring Lion', was taken on 30 December 1941 during Churchill's brief visit to Ottawa (29 December 1941-1 January 1942). Karsh himself recalled that 'Churchill lit a fresh cigar, puffed at it with a mischievous air ... I held out an ashtray, but he would not dispose of it. I went back to my camera and made sure that everything was all right technically. I waited; he continued to chomp vigorously at his cigar. I waited. Then I stepped toward him and, without premeditation, but ever so respectfully, I said, “Forgive me, sir,” and plucked the cigar out of his mouth. By the time I got back to my camera, he looked so belligerent he could have devoured me. It was at that instant that I took the photograph.’The steadfast, defiant and unconquerable image was emblematic of Churchill and Britain at this time. Churchill later said to Karsh, 'You can even make a roaring lion stand to be photographed'. The picture, later produced in larger format, became one of the most widely reproduced images in the history of photography. Karsh reflecting on the image said: 'My portrait of Winston Churchill changed my life. I knew after I had taken it that it was an important picture, but I could hardly have dreamed that it would become one of the most widely reproduced images in the history of photography.'In a letter to the private owner of this photograph, dated 20 October 2011, the Estate of Yousuf Karsh wrote that '... The Estate has, in its possession, one example signed by both Karsh and Churchill. That is the only other example I currently know of. I have seen others come up from time to time, but surely they're quite scarce. Yours is interesting in that Churchill also dated it. Yours is the only [example] I have seen with that. So I don't think you have any reason to believe it to be a forgery or fake - it looks similar to the example in our possession and I think you're safe in assuming that everything is authentic... .'There can be no suggestion of the signature being a facsimile despite the unusual black ink. The pen-strokes are visible under magnification, and no other copy of this image has ever emerged. The photograph itself is clearly a Karsh original, and there is no doubt that Karsh's own signature (in pencil) is genuine. Very few examples of this photograph double-signed by Churchill and Karsh are known. The present example is unique in having been signed and dated by Churchill at a known time.Literature: Yousuf Karsh, Faces of our Time (Toronto, 1971), p. 39; A Fifty-Year Retrospective (Toronto, 1983), p. 38; Regarding Heroes (Boston, 2009), p. 53; Beyond the Camera (Boston, 2012), p. 25.
* China. Two albumen print photographs, c. 1870, Chinese Coolies in their rainy weather costume [and] Chinese Travellers, both by William Saunders, 12.5 x 8.5 cm; together with 5 albumen print photographs of Chinese scenes including one of the Chinese diplomat, Li Hung, 27 x 21 cm, card mounts with contemporary inscriptions in German to versosQTY: (6)NOTE:Provenance: The Carl Jahreis Collection of China Photographs
* China. A Chinese Beauty, possibly by William Saunders, [and] A Chinese woman carrying a baby on her back, by Pun Lun, c. 1870, albumen prints, 26.5 cm x 20 cm and 27 x 20 cm, damage to right edge of one print, card mounts with contemporary inscriptions in German to versosQTY: (2)NOTE:Provenance: The Carl Jahreis Collection of China Photographs
* Dodgson (Charles Lutwidge, ‘Lewis Carroll’, 1832-1898). Clara, Harry and Jessie Rowden, [Badcock’s Yard], Oxford, [4-13 July], 1863, albumen print, three children on a chaise longue, negative number ‘133’ in the image upper right, image 150 x 190 mm, contemporary card album leaf mount, near-contemporary ink inscription to lower mount, ‘Clara, Harry and Jessie Rowden. Taken by Mr Dodson (Lewis Carrol) (sic). Oxford 1863’, with a gelatin silver print photograph pasted to mount verso, captioned in pencil [?by Harry Rowden], ‘Khyber Pass, Ali Masjid, went there with Gilpin 1901’, image 23 x 29.5 cmQTY: (1)NOTE:Provenance: from a family photograph album compiled by Harry Rowden, by direct family descent. Edward Wakeling, The Photographs of Lewis Carroll: A Catalogue Raisonné (Austin, 2015), IN-0983 (Print not located). Copies of the photographs IN-0984 (George William Kitchin and Snub the dog) & IN-0986 (Snub, the Kitchin family dog—asleep) taken in the same period at Badcock’s are located in the Kitchin Family Album and utilise the same chaise longue. This photograph shows the 10-year-old Harry Wetherell Rowden (1853-1921) with two of his younger sisters, Clara (b. 1859) and Jessie Theresa (b. 1857). The children’s parents were Mary Anne and Dr Edward Wetherell Rowden DCL (1814-1870). There were two other Rowden children, Edward (b. 1852) and Mary Harriet (b. 1854), the latter being photographed by Carroll in April 1864. Edward was a Fellow of New College, Oxford from 1833 to 1851, and a sub-Warden of the College in 1849. He held the position of University Registrar until his death in 1870. Carroll made no photographs in the first half of 1863 but having the studio at Badcock’s Yard gave him renewed impetus and he took a series of photographs in July before leaving Oxford for a long vacation. He reported: ‘I have taken many photographs lately, among others the Brodies, the Donkins, and the Rowdens; two of the Brodies and two of the Donkins were “ghost” pictures and seem to have succeeded very fairly. I have had some (of Kitchin and his dog) printed, and have come to the conclusion that the background is much too light at present.’ (Diary, 13 July 1863)
* Large-scale Aerial Photographs. A group of 3 large-scale gelatin silver print photographs of Reading, Buckingham Palace and Mecca, produced by Fairey Services, Maidenhead, late 1970s, a little surface loss to one edge of the Reading photograph, one margin of Mecca slightly damp damaged and torn with small loss to one corner, images 76 x 99 cm (Buckingham Palace), 101 x 122 cm (Reading) and 91 x 85 cm (Mecca), all rolled on heavy duty photographic paperQTY: (3)
Coburn (Alvin Langdon, 1882-1966). The Door in the Wall and Other Stories, by H. G. Wells, Illustrated with Photogravures from Photographs by Alvin Langdon Coburn, 1st edition, New York & London: Mitchell Kennerley, 1911, 9 (of 10) tipped-in photogravures, lacks 'The Embankment' on p. 100, and 'The Lord of the Dynamos' on p. 114 detached, all plates heavily offset to text pages facing (including title-page), partly uncut, original holland-backed boards, printed spine label (chipped) and gilt-titled on upper cover, slightly rubbed and soiled, folio (37 x 28.5 cm)QTY: (1)NOTE:From a print run of 600 copies. Of these only 300 copies were completed from plates prepared by Coburn and printed under his supervision, the remaining 300 copies were short one or more photogravures, for which aquatones were substituted. This is one of the 300 copies with the photogravures, the missing plate showing the same heavy offsetting to the text page facing from when present.
* Gandhi (Rajiv, 1944-1991), Indian politician who served as Prime Minister of India from 1984 until his assassination in 1989. Signed photograph, 'Rajiv Gandhi, 8.2.85', gelatin silver print, formal head and shoulders pose signed in black fountain pen ink to lower area of image, 14.5 x 11.5 cm, together with a signed gilt-embossed Prime Minister's card, 'Rajiv Gandhi, 25.3.85', signed in blue fountain pen ink, plus the accompanying Typed Letter Signed from the Prime Minister's office with secretarial signature, 27 March, 1985, to Peter Bland enclosing the signed photograph and card, 1 page, 8vo, with the accompanying postally used envelope addressed to Peter Bland, plus a blue ink signature of the first Prime Minister of India (1950-64), Nehru Jawaharlal (1889-1964), signed and dated '16.1.47' on off-white card with mounting remains to verso, 7.5 x 11.5 cmQTY: (5)NOTE:Provenance: The Autograph Collection of Peter Bland (1928-2003).
* China. A group of 3 albumen print photographs, c. 1870, Wedding procession, by William Saunders, 20.5 x 24 cm; Garden of a Mandarin, 20 x 26 cm; Procession of a Mandarin, 20 x 27 cm, card mounts with contemporary inscriptions in German to versosQTY: (3)NOTE:Provenance: The Carl Jahreis Collection of China Photographs
* La Guardia (Fiorello, 1882-1947), American attorney and politician, 99th Mayor of New York City 1934-46. Signed Photograph, 'F. LaGuardia', c. 1930s, oval aperture gelatin silver print photograph, full length, showing LaGuardia in a suit with trilby and buttonhole, signed in dark ink lower right, adhesion remains from previous mounting to verso, minor creases to corner extremities, 25 x 19.5 cmQTY: (1)NOTE:Provenance: The Autograph Collection of Peter Bland (1928-2003).
* Hawthorn (John Michael, 1929-1959), British racing driver and the United Kingdom's first Formula One World Champion in 1958. Signed Photograph, ‘Mike Hawthorn’, January 1959, a large vintage sepia-toned gelatin silver print, showing Hawthorn taking a bend in his Ferrari racing car, inscribed and signed in ink lower right, ‘To Colin, with best wishes, Mike Hawthorn, Jan 1959’, some generally light creasing, mostly to corners (one touching date), and a few marks (printing chemicals?), but all away from the car and signature, 28 x 37 cm, taped into a contemporary card aperture mount (heavy spotting), 33 x 42 cm overallQTY: (1)NOTE:A rare signed photograph of Mike Hawthorn, signed just three months into his retirement and the same month as his tragic, early death. This unusually large signed image shows Hawthorn (his facial profile clearly visible) taking a bend in his Ferrari Dino 246 F1 racing car at the Belgian Grand Prix, Spa Francorchamps, on 15 June 1958. He came second in the race but became World Champion. Hawthorn died on 22 January 1959 in a car accident on the A3 Guildford bypass while driving his comprehensively modified 1958 Jaguar 3.4-litre VDU 881 to London.
* Australia. An album containing approximately 96 photographs of New South Wales and Victoria, c .1870s, albumen print photographs of views and scenes including some mines and some with people, including Melbourne, Ballaarat, etc., various sizes, mostly mounted to album leaf rectos with neat ink captions beneath, the album including over 100 further mostly albumen print photographs of North Devon, Cornwall, Channel Islands, etc., various sizes, ownership signature of Arthur Fisher, Tiverton, Devon, October 1878, contemporary limp morocco, gilt-titled to upper cover, some wear, upper cover detached, oblong folioQTY: (1)
* Chiang Kai-Shek (1887-1975), Chinese Political and Military leader, President of the Republic of China 1948-49, 1950-75. Signed Photograph, [1944], printed later, gelatin silver print press print by Horace Bristol, boldly signed in Chinese characters to right side of image, small tear with loss to lower left corner and small closed marginal tear to lower margin, neither affecting signature, press wire caption and studio wet stamp to verso, 20.5 x 24.5 cmQTY: (1)NOTE:Provenance: The Autograph Collection of Peter Bland (1928-2003).The photograph shows a seated and smiling Chiang Kai-Shek before D-Day at his mountain home of Tsao Shan, near Taipei. On the walls behind him are two poems which he wrote during the days of his imprisonment.
* Fernando de Orleans y Borbón (Luis, 1888-1945), Infante of Spain and French prince who lost his title. Signed Photograph by Robert Herbst of Heidelberg, sepia-toned gelatin silver print, three-quarter length, boldly signed and dated ‘Luis Fernando, 1912’ at foot of image and across photographer’s blind stamp, 19 x 13 cm, original blue-grey paper mount, 38 x 31 cm overallQTY: (1)NOTE:In October 1924 Luis Fernando was expelled from France as he was purportedly involved in the trade of illegal drugs. In response, King Alfonso XIII of Spain deprived him of his privileges as an Infante of Spain. A very uncommon signed photograph.
* Evans (Frederick Henry, 1853-1943). North Transept from St Paul's Chapel, Gloucester Cathedral, c. 1900, platinum print, 128 x 79 mm, laid on original cut down card double mount with photographer's embossed initials lower right, framed and glazed, photographer's signed handwritten caption on card tipped to verso, 31 x 25 cm overallQTY: (1)
* Pavlova (Anna, 1881-1931), Russian prima ballerina. Signed Photograph, c. 1920, vintage gelatin silver print photograph by Becker & Maass, Berlin, full length in costume performing in the ballet scene 'Snowflake', signed in black ink across her white tutu, photographer's printed details to lower margin, 23.5 x 17 cmQTY: (1)

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