Sprache: Englisch
Verlag: Columbus Museum of Art, Ohio, 1995
ISBN 10: 0295972521 ISBN 13: 9780295972527
Anbieter: Argosy Book Store, ABAA, ILAB, New York, NY, USA
Erstausgabe
paperback. Zustand: fine. Elijah Pierce (illustrator). Illustrated with 75 color plates and nearly 200 smaller b/w images. 256 pages. 4to, glossy pictorial wrappers. Ohio: Columbus Museum of Art, 1992. First softcover edition. A fine copy. Uncommon monograph.
Verlag: The Logan Elm Press, [Columbus, Ohio], 1980
Anbieter: Andrew Cahan: Bookseller, Ltd., ABAA, Akron, OH, USA
Erstausgabe
First edition. Broadside, 19 x 9.5 inches on handmade laid paper, illustrated with a woodcut and printed in colors. Elijah Pierce (1892-1984) Baptist preacher, barber and one of the most celebrated American wood carvers of the twentieth century. He was born in Mississippi, the son of a former slave. As a child, he began whittling and carving little figures from scraps of wood. After the death of his first wife in 1915, Pierce joined the Great Migration North. He earned his preaching license in 1920 and settled with his second wife, Cornelia in Columbus, Ohio, in 1923. There he worked steadily as a barber, carving as a pastime. "By the 1930s, Pierce was making colorful painted-and-polished sculptural reliefs as well as freestanding figures, which illustrated Biblical scenes, depicted popular cultural events and personages-particularly from sports and cinema, and recounted autobiographical details. He opened his own barbershop in 1951, installing a woodworking studio. Pierce's sculptures, already well-known in his community, garnered broader art-world attention in the 1970s, when he exhibited nationally and internationally, retiring from his barbering and concentrating exclusively on his art. He began to tackle more topical subjects like the Civil Rights Movement and Watergate. In 1982 he won a National Heritage Fellowship from the National Endowment for the Arts, in recognition of his cultural achievements." --Brendan Greaves (Foundation for self-taught American Artists.) From the colophon: "After having carved wood reliefs for most of his 88 years, The Logan Elm Press, the Arts-of-the-Book laboratory of the Ohio State University College of the Arts, Department of Art Education, is honored to present Elijah Pierce's first woodcut. KIDS DON'T CARE ABOUT RACE? is Number Three in the Logan Elm Press Broadside Series and was designed and printed by Leesa Pendley, Summer 1980." Although not noted on this broadside, less than 100 copies were printed.
Verlag: New Model Printing Co, [Columbus, Ohio], 1935
Anbieter: Between the Covers-Rare Books, Inc. ABAA, Gloucester City, NJ, USA
Unbound. Zustand: Good. Photographically illustrated broadside. Measuring 11" x 14". Stiff card stock. Dampstain on the right hand margin, age-toning on the acidic card stock, small chips, repair with archival tape on the verso, a good example of a fragile and rare poster for the traveling exhibition of Pierce's woodcarvings from the Bible. The poster leaves blank space for the place, time, and price of admission for the exhibition and also advertises "Quartet Singing . Good Music." Pierce (1892-1984) was born the son of a former slave in Mississippi, became an ordained minister and worked as an itinerant preacher displaying his carvings in the 1930s. Pierce was also a barber, sculptor, and woodcarver during his long career who lived in Columbus, Ohio. [With]: *Elijah Pierce: Woodcarver*. Columbus, Ohio: Columbus Museum of Art 1992. Large quarto. Illustrated wrappers. 256pp, heavily illustrated. The picture employed on this poster appears in the Introduction on page 11 of the catalog. A rare poster from early in Pierce's career as a woodcarver.