Menu
   
From the Galleries

2096 pictures in 33 albums


Members' Creations

color-coded Vault diagram
color-coded Vault diagram


Last Updated Picture:

Sutekh Ammon Deith
Sutekh Ammon Deith

   
From the Bibliography

759 entries  •  1603 images  •  158 user notes



Aceldama: A Place to Bury Strangers In (1898)
from the_real_simon_iff


Most recent image:


Ecclesia Gnostica Catholica (1998)
from moyal


Recent edits:  Das Beste von Frie… (1997)
 Der Kleine Theodor… (1993)
 In Nomine Demiurgi… (2010)
 Geheimnisse der Se… (2007)
 Ein Leben für die … (1995)

   
Articles
Media Articles
 Aleister Crowley
 Kenneth Anger

Lairs and Locations
 Boleskine House
 Cefalu, Sicily

Texts
 Background
 Documents
 Works by Aleister Crowley New this week 

LAShTAL.COM
 Administration
 
5 latest pages
 The Fountain of Hy…
 Sybarite Among The…
 007 and 666: A Tru…
 Cefalu in FAZ
 Picture Post: 26 N…
 
   
Statistics

Site visits since 30 September 2003:
34,072,772
Yesterday's visits:
22,161


Registrations:
Today:  2
Yesterday:  6
Overall:  7035

Newest Members:
Dokia

Mayonicman
ellie01
j_a
   
Recent Links
   
Random Quote

Since all men from their birth employ sense prior to intellect, and are necessarily first conversant with sensible things: Some, proceeding no farther, pass through life considering these as first and last; and apprehending what is painful to be evil, what is pleasant to be good, they deem it sufficient to shun the one and pursue the other. Some pretending to greater reason than the rest, esteem this wisdom; like earth-bound birds, though they have wings are unable to fly. The secret souls of others would recall them from pleasure to worthier pursuits; but they cannot soar: they choose the lower way and strive in vain. Thirdly, there are those divine men whose eyes pierce through clouds and darkness to supernal vision, where they abide as in their own lawful country

-- Plotinus
   
Weiser Antiquarian 58: Austin Osman Spare
Posted by lashtal on Sol in 2° Gemini : Luna in 24° Taurus : dies Saturni : Anno IVxvii   (May 23, 2009 - 10:19 PM)
transparent.gif

Further evidence that Austin Osman Spare is the most interesting artist in our genre is abundant in the latest Weiser Antiquarian catalogue. Apologies for the delay in posting this item...

Austin Osman Spare. Books and Ephemera

may now be viewed here.

Weiser Antiquarian Books is pleased to announce the release of the Fifty-fifth of our on-line catalogs. This catalog comprises an interesting collection of material by and about Austin Osman Spare (1886-1956).

The first section: "Books, Catalogs and Journals Relating to Austin Osman Spare," includes works by Spare's friends Denis Bardens and Oswell Blakeston (who presents a rather unflattering fictionalized account of Spare and his pet mouse "Death Posture" in For Crying Out Shroud), as well books by James Bertram & F. Russell, J. C. Squire and Vera Wainwright that feature Spare illustrations. Spare's friend and literary collaborator, Frederick Carter, shared Spare's interest in mysticism and magick and was briefly a member of the O.T.O., and is represented by his book The Dragon of the Alchemists, which comprises an essay and thirty-eight drawings, a number of which are strongly reminiscent of those done by Spare himself. The section also includes the two important catalogues published by the Beskin Press: Austin Osman Spare, 1886-1956: The Divine Draughtsman and Austin Osman Spare: Artist - Occultist - Sensualist, each of which contains superb color reproductions of Spare's work and important essays. There is also a good selection of commentaries and edited anthologies relating to Spare's work, including the extremely limited productions A.O.S., A Celebration. London 14th May, 2006 and Existence. Austin Spare - 1886 - 1956, and William Wallace's The Early Work of Austin Osman Spare, 1900-1919, and The Later Work of Austin Osman Spare, 1917-1956, both high quality productions, with color plates, that were printed in small quantity in the late 1980s and count amongst the first scholarly studies of Spare and his artistry to be published.

The second section of the catalog contains a good selection of works by Spare, including several original drawings, and a copy of the beautifully-produced facsimile of a 1944 "Drawing Book" that was published in 2005 in an edition of only 24 copies, each of which includes an original sketch by Spare. There is a copy of the spectacular second number of Form magazine, with a huge double page reproduction of a drawing by Spare, as well as a good selection of Golden Hind magazines, most of which have a number of large illustrations by Spare, including, in one instance, a huge double-page lithograph. Several of these are the rare, signed and limited hardcover editions. Other rarities include First Editions of The Focus of Life (the rare limited issue) and The Book of Pleasure, and a nice second edition (with additional plate) of A Book of Satyrs.

Amongst the other unusual items are three different issues of The Book of Automatic Drawings, a magnificent previously-unpublished sketchbook dating from 1925 that was finally put into print by three friends: Ian Kenyur Hodgkins, Roy Curtis-Bramwell, and Ian Law in 1973. The trio's plans for the work were ambitious: they had a thousand sets of sheets printed for a trade hardcover edition, and two hundred sets of sheets printed on hand-made paper for a special edition, each copy of which would be bound in quarter leather, and posthumously 'autographed' by Spare by way of a signed check. Unfortunately the Fates intervened, and only 100 or so copies of the trade hardcover edition were ever issued (with perhaps 500 copies being bound up in grey paper wrappers), and only a tiny number of the leather edition – perhaps a couple of dozen - were ever bound. A number of the sets of unbound sheets (and their attendant checks) survived, and what must surely have been one of the last of these caches of these sheets was used to make up a new issue, in 2007, handsomely bound in quarter leather, and with a check signed by Spare, as originally intended. The new issue also included an especially-written brief Afterword by Roy Curtis-Bramwell, in which he outlined the history of the book.

Of course both sections include a number of the beautifully-produced Fulgur publications.

___________

As usual we have a variety of other catalogs in preparation. Future catalogs will be devoted to Astrology, Mythology, Theosophy, Kabbalah, Grimoires, The Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn, Witchcraft, and other of our specialties, with a few suprises along the way. Of course we will also continue to regularly issue our Aleister Crowley catalogs.

The books in these catalogs represent just a minute fraction of our overall holdings. We currently list nearly 10,000 other other mostly esoteric-related titles on our main website: www.weiserantiquarian.com with new stock added weekly.

Again, if you wish to view the books in this current catalog simply visit www.weiserantiquarian.com/catalog or go to: www.weiserantiquarian.com/catalogfiftyeight

del.icio.usDiggRedditFacebookStumbleuponTechnoratiYahoo MyWebGoogle

0 Comments810 Reads
   
Weiser Antiquarian 58: Austin Osman Spare | Log-in or register a new user account | 0 Comments
Comments are statements made by the person that posted them.
They do not necessarily represent the opinions of the site editor.



LAShTAL
The Thelemic News and Culture web site. Updated daily
Home of The Aleister Crowley Society
Copyright 1998-2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010
The Owner and Editor of LAShTAL and Chairman of The Aleister Crowley Society is Paul Feazey
RSS Feeds: Main Feed | Forums

intention