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Set of 19th Century Framed Chromolithographs of the Four Seasons

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  • 19th Century Chromolithograph of a Sailor Boy
    Located in Nantucket, MA
    19th Century chromolithograph of a sailor boy, circa 1880, a colored print on canvas view of a young American sailor boy sitting astride a bowsprit. A class...
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  • 19th c. Framed English Chromolithograph Fern
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    A beautiful collection of four chromolithographs from the 19th c. by Francis George Heath. Archival quality framing with archival matte front and back, protecting the original, antiq...
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  • Antique 19th Century Framed Chromolithograph Print, "H.M.S. Hermes."
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    Antique 19th Century Framed Chromolithograph Print, "H.M.S. Hermes."
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  • 19th C., Vanity Fair Framed Chromolithographs of Gentlemen Ex. Christie's, 12
    By Sir Leslie Ward
    Located in Morristown, NJ
    [English Gentlemen], from Vanity Fair twelve chromolithographs, on wove papers. Printed by Vincent Brooks Day & Son., with various dates from 1875 to 1897. Eight are by Spy, two are by Ape, one by "T" and one by Lib. Professionally framed with black and gilt frames and beige silk mats, with margins, apparently in excellent condition, not examined out of the frames. Titles comprise: "Accrington", June 11, 1892, "Newcastle Upon Tyne" July 18, 1893, "A New Peer", October 5, 1878, "South Bucks", June 4, 1896, "South Kensington", September 2, 1897, "Lord Salisbury's Manners", July 13, 1893, "The Blister", August 4, 1888, "A Postmaster General", April 30, 1892, "Sir James Miller", September 6, 1890, "Sol", October 28, 1897, "A Young Man" September 11, 1875, and "A Naturalist", September 9, 1882. Vanity Fair was a weekly magazine published in London, founded & edited by Thomas Gibson Bowles. His aim was to expose to contemporary vanities of Victorian society. From 1868 to 1914, full page colour lithographs appeared in most weekly issues, frequently lampooning or lauding their subjects which included artists, athletes, royalty, politicians, scientists, authors, actors, sportsmen, lawyers, diplomats, soldiers, clergy, scholars and other celebrities of the day - mostly British, but also many other internationally significant personalities. Over 2,300 of these colour cartoons were printed, and they are considered the chief cultural legacy of the magazine, forming a pictorial record of many of the most significant public figures of the period. They are renowned throughout the world and highly collectible and recognisable. Famous artists contributed to Vanity Fair, typically under pen names. The best remembered today is Leslie Ward (1851-1922), who signed his works as "Spy", and whose caricatures account for well over half of those featured in Vanity Fair. So famous have these fabulous prints become, Vanity Fair caricatures today often are referred to simply as "Spy Cartoons...
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  • Late 19th Century Botanical Chromolithograph Print in Gilt Frame
    Located in Chapel Hill, NC
    Late 19th century botanical chromolithograph print in gilt frame, Odontoglossum Crispum. From an illustration by B. Herincq. Document taped en verso: "Favourite Flowers of Garden And...
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  • Collection of 19th Century Chromolithographs of British Ferns
    By George Heath
    Located in Tetbury, Gloucestershire
    Collection of 19th Century chromolithographs of life-size British ferns by Francis George Heath. Framed in Italian faux bamboo frames, ...
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