Derriere le Miroir 144-145-146, Braque Miró Chagall Picasso Giacometti 1956 vintage INV2096
Condition: excellent
Hint of foxing on outside spine, appropriate with age
Light handling and storage wear
Hommage a Georges Braque
Derriere le Miroir No. 144-145-146
Paris: Maeght, 1956. First edition. Unsigned. Softcover. Published for the exhibition "Tribute to Braque" at the Maeght Gallery, Paris. 84 unbound pages. 4 original lithographs in color by Miró, Tal Coat, Ubac and Pallut. 1 original lithograph double-page black and white lithograph by Pablo Picasso (28 x 38 cm). Color reproductions of the work of George Braque, Giacometti and Bissiere, 1 black & white illustration of Chagall. Photographs of Braque by Man Ray, Brassai, Routhier and Mariette Lachaud. Texts of Saint-John Perse, René Char, Giacometti, Francis Ponge, Martin Heidegger, Jean Paulhan, Jacques Prévert, Kahnweiler, Cassou Chagall. Publication measurement when closed: 15” X 11”.
Derrière le Miroir (DLM) was an art magazine published between 1946 and 1982 by the French publisher and gallery owner Aimé Maeght of Galerie Maeght, which for many years was the most important gallery in the world for contemporary art.
There were a total of 253 editions in 200 volumes. The magazine, itself designed as an art object presented in a large (11” x 15”) format, is illustrated with original lithographs as well as a number of reproductions. Poets and writers like Aragon, Beckett, Char, Eluard, Prévert, Queneau, Reverdy, Sartre, contributed with unpublished texts. Most of the major artists of the second half of the twentieth century created lithographs for DLM: Léger, Miro, Calder, Tapies, Chillida, Braque, Matisse, Giacometti, and above all Chagall. .
The edition of Behind The Mirror, DLM, accompanied each exhibition of the Galerie Maeght in 1946 to 1982. DLM, as it is published for over thirty-five years, was born from the passion of Aimé Maeght to edit and press.
DLM was mailed individually to subscribers (which seemed almost from the first to include libraries and museums) and collectors.
Provenance: The Golden Griffin Gallery/Arts Inc. operated in downtown Manhattan - New York City, New York from the 1950s to the 1970s. In the mid 1940s, Arts, Inc. was established as a publishing house specializing in European scholarly and artistic works. In the 1950s, Arts, Inc., the parent company, expanded to create, first, the Golden Griffin Bookstore and then the Griffin Gallery, which dealt primarily with contemporary American and European artists. The Golden Griffin was known as the “Continental Bookstore” because of its stock of European titles.
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