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Ure's Dictionary of Arts, Manufactures & Mines 1846 Autographed by Famous Artist [204494]

Currency:USD Category:Books / Antiquarian & Collectible Start Price:300.00 USD Estimated At:600.00 - 800.00 USD
Ure's Dictionary of Arts, Manufactures & Mines 1846 Autographed by Famous Artist [204494]
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Ure's Dictionary of Arts, Manufactures and Mines Containing a clear exposition of their principles and practice. By Andrew Ure, M. D. Illustrated with twelve hundred and forty engravings on wood. From the third London edition, corrected. New York: D. Appleton & Company. Philadelphia: George S. Appleton. 1846. Leather bound, complete 1340 pages plus 12 pages from the Publisher advertising other works. Important reference, cited by FH regularly, and the single most important scientific dictionary of its kind at the time, filled with thousands of useful statistics and technical information, including export figures, descriptions of machinery, and tables depicting elements and organic chemistry, and much more. Ure's dictionary became the standard reference work in the nineteenth century. Profusely illustrated with twelve-hundred-and-forty engravings on wood. This copy is signed in ink on the cover page Wm. P. Bagg, who was an important, well-known British wood cut artist/engraver who worked in the 1820s-1840s. He created art for wood engravings that were cut by his father, Thomas Bagg, and the pair worked out of a shared location at 8 Hart Street in London. William Bagg and Thomas Bagg are mentioned in many important reference works, such as British Art Studies, Issue 20, July 2021; Wordsworth, Christopher, 1807-1885Greece, pictorial, descriptive and historical 1839 held by the Yale Center for British Art; and Wood Engraving and the Illustration of American Surgical Texts during the Nineteenth Century by Christopher Hoolihan, among many others. Additionally one of the Bragg prints from a book illustration is held in the collection by the British Museum of Art. Wood engravings designed specifically for the London editions of The Surgeon's Vade Mecum were those of William Bagg, as well the first American edition of Robert Liston's Practical Surgery, from 1838, which contains 120 wood engravings faithfully copied from the original designs that had been engraved on wood by William Bagg under Liston's own supervision. This original, Key reference work was originally owned by and autographed by an important British artist and the condition is very fine for it's age. Because Ure does not credit the wood cut engraving artist(s) who created the 1200 plus illustrations in this early edition, and due to the similarity of the Ure illustrations to the works of William Bagg referenced above, we believe it is highly likely that William Bagg is one of the artists, if not the only artist responsible for the wood cut engravings prolific in this Dictionary. Due to the importance of Ure's work, the illustrator would be greatly esteemed had he been credited. Please see photos. Bagg is not found in international newsdpapers.com, nor Niles Register.
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Date:
Country (if not USA): United Kingdom
State:
City: London
Provenance: Noel Kirshenbaum Geochemical Engineer Collection