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Exlibris Bookplate Cliche Willi Geiger 1878-1971 Quill Forehead Wolf

$ 16.32

Availability: 100 in stock
  • Year Of Publication: 1904
  • Return shipping will be paid by: Buyer
  • All returns accepted: Returns Accepted
  • MPN: Does not apply
  • Restocking Fee: No
  • Brand: Unbranded
  • Item must be returned within: 14 Days
  • Refund will be given as: Money Back
  • Condition: Used
  • UPC: Does not apply
  • Author: Geiger, Willi (1878-1971)

    Description

    Item details
    Property v. Fritz fleischmann [chemist]. Reflective man in baroque clothing, scratching his forehead with a quill pen, and a Roman she-wolf on paper ribbon knots.
    Geiger, Willi (1878-1971):
    1904. 96 x 72 mm. Cliche.
    Language: German
    Order number: 16012
    Comments: * Thieme-Becker 13; Vollmer 2; Gutenberg 3155; Schreyl 36. - Signed and dated in the print. Geiger attended the arts and crafts school, the technical college and the academy in Munich, his teachers include Franz von Stuck and Peter Halm. After an interlude in Berlin, he returns and becomes a professor at the School of Applied Arts. The Nazis fired him and in 1946 he was able to resume teaching. He created bookplates all his life, and Schreyl lists 347 sheets, Paul G. Becker listed a number of works after that. Not to be underestimated is the style-forming effect that Geiger had on numerous bookplate makers. - Small remnants of assembly on the back.
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    (2021-06-30)
    Property v. Fritz fleischmann [chemist]. Reflective man in baroque clothing, scratching his forehead with a quill pen, and a Roman she-wolf on paper ribbon knots. Comments: * Thieme-Becker 13; Vollmer 2; Gutenberg 3155; Schreyl 36. - Signed and dated in the print. Geiger attended the arts and crafts school, the technical college and the academy in Munich, his teachers include Franz von Stuck and Peter Halm. After an interlude in Berlin, he returns and becomes a professor at the School of Applied Arts. The Nazis fired him and in 1946 he was able to resume teaching. He created bookplates all his life, and Schreyl lists 347 sheets, Paul G. Becker listed a number of works after that. Not to be underestimated is the style-forming effect that Geiger had on numerous bookplate makers. - Small rem