מכירה פומבית 87 יודאיקה - ספרים
Kestenbaum & Company
16.1.20
242 West 30th Street, 12th Floor, New York NY 10001, ארצות הברית
המכירה הסתיימה

פריט 156:

(HOLOCAUST).
Holocaust: Dance of Death Against the Jews.
A hand-made volume. Pages are large ...

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נמכר ב: $300
מחיר פתיחה:
$ 300
הערכה :
$400 - $600
עמלת בית המכירות: 25%
מע"מ: 8.875% על העמלה בלבד
משתמשים ממדינות אחרות עשויים לקבל פטור ממע"מ בהתאם לחוקי המס המתאימים
המכירה התקיימה בתאריך 16.1.20 בבית המכירות Kestenbaum & Company
תגיות:

(HOLOCAUST).
Holocaust: Dance of Death Against the Jews.



A hand-made volume. Pages are large facsimiles of what appears to be an original Manuscripts. Calligraphic text in English with much use of Hebrew and Yiddish. Illustrated throughout. Heavy wooden covers, front with raised wood carving of arm tattooed with the number 699002. Much of the text is written in a Gothic-style font. The composer of this volume is unidentified.
ff. (62). Pages photographed from original version and pasted down on paper. Heavy wooden boards appear to be recycled from cabinet doors, connected to binding by hinges. Elephant folio.
n.p: n.d
Likely a unique volume. This highly unusual tome memorializes the Holocaust through various texts and accompanying hand-drawn artwork. The first 41 pages are dedicated to describing the horrors of each of the concentration camps. The camps are first listed in alphabetical order and multiple pages of text and illustrations are dedicated to each one; some texts are taken from survivors’ own words or previously published literature (e.g. Yevgeny Yevtushenko’s poem “Babi Yar”), others appear to be original. The rest of the volume is dedicated to a variety of related topics, also memorialized in text and illustrations, including the Warsaw Ghetto and events that followed the war.
Likely a unique volume. This highly unusual tome memorializes the Holocaust through various texts and accompanying hand-drawn artwork. The first 41 pages are dedicated to describing the horrors of each of the concentration camps. The camps are first listed in alphabetical order and multiple pages of text and illustrations are dedicated to each one; some texts are taken from survivors’ own words or previously published literature (e.g. Yevgeny Yevtushenko’s poem “Babi Yar”), others appear to be original. The rest of the volume is dedicated to a variety of related topics, also memorialized in text and illustrations, including the Warsaw Ghetto and events that followed the war.

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