LIMITED EDITION OF THE SELECTED POEMS OF ROBERT BROWNING, IN STUNNING RIVIERE COSWAY BINDING, WITH EXQUISITE HANDPAINTED MINIATURE OF BROWNING ON IVORY, SIGNED BY ARTIST C.B. CURRIE AND COSWAY INVENTOR J.H. STONEHOUSE
BROWNING, Robert. A Selection from the Works. London: Edward Moxon, 1865. Square octavo, early 20th-century full Cosway blue morocco, elaborately gilt-decorated spine and covers, original miniature of Robert Browning set in front cover within circular frame, raised bands, watered silk endpapers, top edge gilt. Housed in a custom cloth slipcase.
Limited edition of Robert Browning’s selected poetry in an exquisite Cosway signed binding, with a beautiful miniature painting of Robert Browning executed on ivory by Miss Currie, number 810 of the Cosway Bindings invented by J.H. Stonehouse, signed on the limitation page by both Currie and Stonehouse, splendidly bound in full morocco-gilt by Riviere & Son.
Robert Browning was the best loved of Victorian poets and many of his works—including the selections made here as part of Moxon’s Miniature Poets series—are still considered to be classics. Cosway bindings (named for renowned 19th-century English miniaturist Richard Cosway) were commissioned in the early 1900s by J.H. Stonehouse, managing director of London booksellers Sotheran & Company, from the famous Rivière bindery, who employed Miss C.B. Currie to faithfully imitate Cosway’s detailed water-color style of portraiture. These delicate miniature paintings, often on ivory, were set in the covers or doublures of richly-tooled bindings and protected by thin panes of glass. This superb specimen of the fascinating art of Cosway binding was executed by Miss Currie herself. Painted on ivory, it shows Robert Browning and is inset into the front cover. The binding is the 810th invented by Stonehouse for Riviere. This copy is signed on a limitation page by both Currie and Stonehouse. Armorial bookplate of Albert Henry Wiggin, the chairman of Chase National Bank and a prominent art and book collector who donated several thousand pieces to the Boston Public Library. Bookplates of Selden, probably a descendent of John Selden.
Slightest wear to bottom of front joint. An exceptionally beautiful copy in fine condition.