“IN THE BEST PICTORIAL TRADITION”: FIRST TRADE EDITION OF FLUTE OF THE GODS, WITH 24 SEPIA HALFTONES AFTER PHOTOGRAPHS BY EDWARD CURTIS
CURTIS, Edward and RYAN, Marah Ellis. The Flute of the Gods. New York: Frederick A. Stokes, (1909). Octavo, original brown cloth with photographic halftone tipped to front board, pictorial endpapers.
First trade edition, issued same year as signed limited edition (500 copies) of a scarce photographic novel by author Marah Ryan and photographer Edward Curtis, with 24 splendid full-page sepia-toned halftones after images by Curtis, many in book form for the first time.
Flute of the Gods is the second collaboration between novelist Ryan and photographer Edward Curtis, who earlier contributed the frontispiece image for her Indian Love Letters (1907). This handsome photobook was published just as Curtis had begun publication of his multi-volume masterpiece, North American Indian (1907-30)—“the longest, the most ambitious and the most expensive project ever attempted in photography” (Parr & Badger I:73). The 24 splendid sepia halftone plates within reflect Curtis’ dedication to photographing Indian life “in the best Pictorial tradition… balancing composition, well-defined lights and darks, harmonious arrangement and appealing sentiment” (Beck, 11). Printed the same year as the signed limited edition (500 copies), no priority established. Without scarce dust jacket.
Text and plates fine; very tiny chip to front free endpaper, lightest edge-wear, faint toning to upper edge of front board. A handsome near-fine copy.