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In 1950, the publisher Paul Elek commissioned Rachel Reckitt to engrave sixteen whole-page illustrations for George Eliot's THE MILL ON THE FLOSS .... The blocks turned out to be Rachel's finest illustrative work, but Elek went into receivership and tragically [the engravings] were never published. The images were exhibited for the first time in 1997, from proofs that Rachel had taken after engraving the blocks. Shortly afterwards the blocks themselves came to light, when it was realised that the non-appearance of the engravings had been a double tragedy, for on the reverse of the blocks were parts of other much larger engravings done by Rachel before the war. Due to the wartime shortage of boxwood she had sawn the blocks down to less than half size. Lost and Found will show all sixteen of the blocks for The Mill on the Floss for the first time, as well as reconstructing the larger palimpsest images on the reverse of the blocks. -- Publisher's description.
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Subjects
Criticism and interpretation, Art collections, Women wood-engravers, Illustrations, Wood-engraving, English, SpecimensPlaces
Great BritainTimes
20th centuryEdition | Availability |
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1
Lost & found: Rachel Reckitt's book illustrations, including the complete set of woodblocks engraved for "The Mill on the Floss," & what was lost in their making
2010, Whittington Press
in English
1854280899 9781854280893
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Book Details
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Edition Notes
This edition of 225 copies is set in 14-point Van Dijck at Gloucester Typesetting, & printed at Whittington on Zerkall mould-made papers. 40 copies are half-bound in Oasis leather & contain a set of proofs of the engravings for The Mill on the Floss -- Colophon.
Rare Book copy: No. 30 of the 40 copies half-bound in Oasis leather.
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History
- Created December 21, 2022
- 1 revision
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December 21, 2022 | Created by MARC Bot | Imported from marc_columbia MARC record |