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Books, Autographs & Prints

Wednesday 15 June 2022 e Thursday 16 June 2022, 03:00 PM • Rome

497

D'Annunzio, Gabriele

Opera omnia, 1927

Estimate

€ 1.800 - 2.000

Sold

€ 2.304

The price includes buyer's premium

Information

Verona, Veronese Oficine by Arnoldo Mondadori, Officina Bodoni, 1927-1936. In 8th. 170 x 247 mm., 49 volumes (48 of text plus one of Indices), copy n.625 / 2501 printed on Fabriano "Perussia" tissue paper, the copy for Bottai as shown in his ex libris applied to the counterplate (not in all volumes), only volume 18 [ Femmine e Muse ] is not relevant to the series but comes from copy no.407, full parchment editorial bindings with gilt frames on the plates and title on the spine; in addition the volume All the Works of Gabriele D'Annunzio , Verona, Officina Bodoni, June 1927, containing the program of the National Edition with various facsimiles and specimens; The three editions of a War Notebook , Verona, Mondadori, 1942; Le dit du sourd et muet qui fut miraculé en an de grace 1266 , Verona, Mondadori, 1936, copy n.518; & nbsp; Le dit du sourd et muet qui fut miraculé en an de grace 1266 & nbsp ;, Rome, Per l'Oleandro, 1936.

Specialist Notes

"It would indeed be difficult to trace in the twentieth century, and not only in Italy, a complex and highly important publishing and typographic enterprise such as that of Gabriele D'Annunzio's Opera omnia, so strongly characterized and made unique by editorial and entrepreneurial elements , self-congratulatory, economic, political, typographical, advertising, literary: a company that in the space of a few years will attract the protagonists of the publishing and typographic world of the time (Arnoldo and Remo Mondadori, Raffaello Bertieri and Hans Mardersteig), personalities of the business world (Senator Borletti), writers and publishing men (Francesco Pastonchi, Angelo Sodini), publishers by now at sunset (Guido Treves), kings, dictators and party men (Vittorio Emanuele II, Benito Mussolini and Pietro Fedele, Minister of 'National Education), and finally becoming a crossroads in the vast sector of D'Annunzio's bibliophilia. (...) even, and perhaps above all, for the set of strictly graphic-typographic elements that distinguish it. (...) & nbsp; The man of letters, although not strictly speaking a scholar of typography, had a great passion for beautiful characters, hand-made paper and ancient codes. He was convinced that the validity and importance of a book, or of an entire editorial series, should have an adequate and harmonious typographic construction, especially with regard to the characters used; he remained faithful to this aesthetic canon both for his works and for those of others. (...) "(Massimo Gatta, From Oneglia to Villa Cargnacco. The Opera omnia by Gabriele D'Annunzio, in News from Delfico, 2-3, 2007).
< p> The result is all in the 49 volumes of this lot, a tangible sign of an unprecedented editorial success, especially in terms of quality. & nbsp;