The Momentum of Modernism 1920-1930

The momentum of modernism, interrupted by World War I, was unleashed afterwards in the “Roaring Twenties.” Cubism and Dada were established styles by then, not outrageous affronts to aesthetic propriety. From this period onwards, artists’ books generally consisted of two forms. Accessible, inexpensively produced volumes, often of revolutionary design, with photomechanical reproductions conveyed ideas and images to the greatest number of persons. Fernand Léger’s La Fin du Monde (1919) is an extraordinary example of such a publication. Other artists’ books were more traditional works in which the tendency was to use only original prints and the finest papers and bindings to create sumptuous volumes that were referred to as livres d’artistes. The range and variety of artists’ books created in this decade are in keeping with the frenetic nature of the period.

A Book Concluding With As A Wife Has A Cow : A Love Story by Gertrude Stein

Book with 4 lithographs (1 color) on Arches laid paper; slipcase in book cloth with paste paper sides, single signature pamphlet binding.

Quatre histoires de blanc et noire

Book of 29 woodcuts on cream wover paper; loose in cream wove wrappers, woodcut and lettering on cover, lettering on spine.

Les Éclogues de Virgile

Les Éclogues (The Eclogues) de Virgile by Virgil (translation by Marc Lafargue) (London: Emery Walker Limited (for Cranach Presse, Weimar).

Primitives: Poems and Woodcuts by Max Weber

Book with 11 woodcuts on laid paper; bound in boards covered in grey/brown paper with decoration in dark brown and silver on front and back covers.

A Village: Are You Ready Yet Not Yet

A Play in Four Acts by Gertrude Stein (Paris: Simon Kahnweiler, 1928).

The Modernism Gallery

A portrait of Fernand Leger

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