A fáklya (The torch)
Budapest: Legrady, 1918. Cover by Robert Berény. Second edition. In original paper. 350 p. More
Budapest: Legrady, 1918. Cover by Robert Berény. Second edition. In original paper. 350 p. More
Dresden: 1926. Fold out. Stefan Sebok was a Hungarian-born architect who worked with Walter Gropius in Dessau and Berlin in the late 1920s, and then with fellow Hungarian emigré László Moholy-Nagy on his famous Light Prop, and later moved to the Soviet Union to work with the constructivist architects Moisei..... More
Budapest: 1963. 23 x 17 cm. More
Budapest: 1919. 11 lithographs by Rezso Balint . 1 signed. First edition. Numbered. One of the 120 copy. In original portfolio. . [4] p., 10 t. Rezso Balint was the brother of art writer Jenő Bálint. From 1906 he studied in Nagybány and at the private school of Ferenc Szablya-Frischauf..... More
Budapest: Amicus, 1927. Illustrated by Gyorgy Rauscher and Vilma Kiss. Book design by Laszlo Reiter. First edition. In original paper. 23, [3] p., 3 t. With the writings of Máriusz Rabinovszky and Kálmán Kovács. The first issue of the magazine is not known in any bibliographies. Most likely, it was..... More
Budapest: Világosság, 1930. Cover by Károly Dukai. First edition. In original binding. 60 p., 16 t. More
Pecs: Pécsi Irodalmi és Könyvnyomdai, [1929]. Cover by Ferenc Martyn. First edition. In original paper. 166, [2] p. Ferenc Martyn was a student of Rippl-Rónai from 1918 and István Réti from 1923. Between 1926 and 1940 he worked in Paris, at first joining the Surrealists, then as a member of..... More
Budapest: Vajda, 1928. Cover by János Repcze. First edition. In original paper. 30 p. Repcze was a graphic designer, active from the second half of the 1920s. He studied at the private school of Lajos Csabai-Ékes and Károly Kernstok. Later he studied at the Academy of Fine Arts where his..... More
Paris: 1937. In original portfolio with hand drawn cover. 40 drawing. 40 drawing made mostly about the pavilions. The Exposition Internationale des Arts et Techniques dans la Vie Moderne (International Exposition of Art and Technology in Modern Life) was held from 25 May to 25 November 1937 in Paris, France..... More
Lodz: Yung Yiddish, 1921. Modernist illustration by Broderzon on the title page. In original paper. 31, [3] pages. Dramatic poem in Yiddish by Moishe Broderzon (1890-1956) – poet and playwright, a prominent artist in the Jewish avant-garde movement. More
Budapest: Tolnai, 1938. Cover by Sandor Bortnyik. In original paper. 19, 12 p. Cover by Sandor Bortnyik. More
Bratislava: 1931-1935. In original paper. 1931 2,4,5,7,8-9,10), 1932 1-12, 1933 1-6, 1934 1-10, 1935 1-5, 1936 1, includes 2 special issue. Almost complete set of the important Hungarian-language left-wing avant-garde magazine published in Czechoslovakia. With many photomontage and illustrations (Georg Grosz). The editor Zoltán Fábry was a...... More
Budapest: Hungária, 1930. Illustrated by Erno Schubert and Marc Chagall. First edition. In original paper. 31 p. Lajos Kassák was the chief figure and organizer of the Hungarian avant-garde movement, not merely as a versatile artist who created in various artistic fields but also as the editor and publisher of..... More
Budapest: Munka, 1930. Illustrations by Dor (Alexander Trauner) and Dezso Kornis. First edition. In original paper. 31 p. Lajos Kassák was the chief figure and organizer of the Hungarian avant-garde movement, not merely as a versatile artist who created in various artistic fields but also as the editor and publisher..... More
Tel-Aviv and Jerusalem, 1925-1928. First editionIn original papers. Issues 1-13 (nine booklets) 16-32 p. per booklet. A complete set of Teatron veOmanut [Theatre and Art], a monthly journal published by Aharon Yachnovitz (Yachnai). "Teatron veOmanut" was amongst the few art journals published in Palestine in the 1920s, yet a most..... More
Paris: 1929. 1 p. Contributors included Tzara, Cendrars, Chirico, Krull, Kertesz, Moholy-Nagy, Tabard, , Eli Lotar, L. Bunuel. More
Netherlands. At Paul Citroen studio: 1936. Ink on paper. 14 x 12 cm. Moissey Kogan (1879-1943) was a Moldovan Jewish sculptor who lived int the Netherlands. The drawing is made when Moissey Kogan visited Paul Citroen's studio, who made some photo of him. More
Kharkiv: Around 1920. 12 x 17 cm. Vasyl Dmytrovych Yermylov (Ukrainian: Василь Дмитрович Єрмилов) (1894–1968) was a Ukrainian painter, avant-garde artist and designer. His genres included cubism, constructivism, and neo-primitivism. More
Budapest: Stamp on the back, Around. 1920. Vintage print. 8 x 11 cm. József Pécsi (1889–1956) was a Hungarian photographer, known for his influential book “Photo und Publizität” (Photography and Publicity; 1930) wherein, by his own advertisement designs, promoted the blending of typography, design, and photography in avant-garde advertising. More
Kosice: Szlovák, 1922. First Hungarian edition. In contemporary halfcloth. 97 p. First Hungarian edition of this key work by Czech dramatist Capek, originally produced in Prague in 1921. The word “robot” was coined by Capek’s brother Josef, and the concept of the robot has its source in this play. More
Around. 1920. 1 p. Futurist letter by F.T. Marinetti, handwritten by the avant-garde theoretician of Futurism, on official paper of the Movement with the lithographed "Pugno di Boccioni" by Giacomo Balla, reproduced on the original 1915 sketch, which described the body physiognomy of the painter Umberto Boccioni. The..... More