Mediaeval Latin Lyrics

Duncan GRANT   |   Helen WADDELL

Item#: 71498 We're sorry, this item has been sold

Mediaeval Latin Lyrics
Mediaeval Latin Lyrics

WITH WONDERFUL ORIGINAL HANDPAINTED DUST JACKET AND GIFT INSCRIPTION BY BLOOMSBURY ARTIST DUNCAN GRANT TO ASSOCIATE AT THE HOGARTH PRESS

(GRANT, Duncan) WADDELL, Helen, translator. Mediaeval Latin Lyrics. Harmondsworth, Middlesex: Penguin, (1952). Small octavo, original stiff paper wrappers; custom dust jacket handpainted by Duncan Grant. Housed in a custom chemise and clamshell box.

Custom-covered volume of Latin lyrics, with a splendid original hand-painted dust jacket in ink and watercolors by Bloomsbury Group artist Duncan Grant, depicting a monk and a nun dancing on one cover and a chalice surrounded by grapes on the other, with his gift inscription: “Angus with love from Duncan, Christmas 1954.”

Post-impressionist artist Grant, who grew up with many of the Bloomsbury Group, studied at the Westminster School of Art and the Slade School. In his youth he was openly homosexual, but began a relationship with Vanessa Bell in 1914 that was to last until her death. Bell’s son Quentin Bell noted, “Grant is assured of his place in British art history as an innovator of very great talent, as an accomplished decorator, and as a painter of large though unequal achievement. It is probable that he will be valued for his landscapes and his still lifes, for a few of his portraits, and for the [H.M.S.] Queen Mary decorations… His enthusiastic generosity as a critic of other artists’ work derived from a firm conviction that, of all human activities, painting is the best” (DNB). Waddell’s The Wandering Scholars (1927) and the present volume, originally published in 1929, “demonstrate the combination of qualities which explain the fascination which she exercised over a wide public—the phenomenal breadth of her original reading, the vivid historical imagination with which she brings an Ausonius or Alcuin or Abelard to life, and the compelling command over language evident in both her poetic translations and in her descriptive prose” (DNB). The recipient of this volume was Angus Davidson, author and an assistant at Virginia and Leonard Woolf’s Hogarth Press.

Book fine; light wear to extremities of painted dust jacket, with shallow chipping to spine ends. A beautiful and unique work by Grant, most desirable.

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