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Douglas Stewart Fine Books Pty Ltd

(Douglas Stewart)
PO Box 272
Prahran VIC 3181
By appointment.
Specialising in rare books, maps and globes, manuscripts & archives, historical artworks & photographs, antique childrens games.

Items for Sale

Click on photo to enlarge
Circa: 1870
Price: $1,700
[Photographer unknown] # 1946 Albumen print photograph, carte de visite format (94 x 53 mm), laid down on a stock card of the photographer Em. Blanchet (his imprint verso) at a contemporary date, the sitter's name 'Moetia Salmon' inscribed in ink verso of the albumen print itself, still clearly legible, although as a reverse image; a photographer's circular wet stamp is also very faintly visible through the paper, but is not identifiable. The vignette portrait is in fine condition, with excellent tonal range. A rare and important portrait of Ariʻiʻinoʻore Moetia "Moe" Salmon (1848-1935), the daughter of Alexander Salmon (1820-1866), a merchant from an English-Jewish family who had become secretary to Queen Pomare IV of Tahiti and who had married in 1842 Ariitaimai (Princess Oehau) of the Tahitian royal family. Moetia's younger sister was Johanna Marau Salmon, who was to become Queen Marau of Tahiti (consort of Pomare V), and whose daughter Moetia would adopt later in life. Her older sister was the celebrated Titaua Tetuanui Salmon, who married John Brander, the wealthiest and most influential trader in eastern Polynesia during this period. In the mid 1860s, when she was just seventeen, Moetia visited Europe with Titaua and John Brander. Within a few years of her return she married Dorence Atwater, the U.S. Consul to Tahiti, in 1871. Aside from his diplomatic career, Atwater also became a highly successful businessman in the pearling industry, and was recognised as a philanthropist with a particular interest in eradicating leprosy. Atwater was accorded honorary royal status in Tahiti: after his death in 1910, Moetia arranged for his body to be brought back to Tahiti from San Francisco, where Moetia and he had spent most of the previous few decades on account of Atwater's ill health. A portrait of Moetia Salmon taken by the French naval officer and photographer Paul Emile Miot during his visit to Tahiti in 1869-70 appears to be exactly contemporary with this image, and it is certainly possible that Miot was also the photographer of this portrait, which may have been sold commercially by a studio (cf Mme. Moetia Salmon, niece de la Reine Pomaré IV, sœur de la Mme. Brander, p. 73 in Picasso, Sydney. The invention of Paradise, 1845-1870. Photographs by Paul Emile Miot. Munich : Galerie Daniel Blau, 2008). This photograph was originally from an album belonging to a French naval doctor who served in the colonies, which would explain the fact that the print is laid down on the card of Emanuel Blanchet, a photographer active in the 1860s at Basse-Terre, Guadeloupe.
Click on photo to enlarge
Circa: 1893
Price: $2,850
Photographer unknown / Artist: MACKENNAL, Bertram (1863-1931) # 723 Silver gelatin print photograph (285 x 200 mm) in original glazed frame (465 x 365 mm), c 1893. Printed captions on the mount above and below image; signed in pen in period hand lower right: "Dear Felix - love from Dodo" (Felix Meyer, the Melbourne art patron); accompanied by a handwritten copy of a letter from Bertram Mackennal ("Dodo") to Felix Meyer, a highly revealing communication regarding the exhibiting of Circe at the Paris Salon, Mackennal's struggle for recognition, private patronage and the lack of appreciation and support for his work in Australia. Mackennal was Australia's pre-eminent sculptor of the late nineteenth and early twentieth century, his highly refined and elegant style drawing inspiration from the Art Nouveau and Symbolist movements. Perhaps his most celebrated - and most powerful - sculpture was his figure of "Circe", the sorceress of Greek mythology, which was first exhibited as a full-size plaster statue in Paris in 1893. This photograph of the statue, with its caption in French (and plaque with accolade of "Mention Honorable"), was taken at the Paris Salon in May 1893 (Mackennal was based in France from 1891-94). When Circe was later shown at the Royal Academy in London (1894) she caused a scandal - the lascivious, writhing figures around the base were covered by the Academy committee. The statue was to become an important work in the New Sculpture movement around this time, and several editions of Circe in the form of smaller statuettes were cast in bronze and sold on the art market. The letter from Mackennal to Felix Meyer is addressed from "Hotel St Malo, 2 rue d'Odessa, Paris Montparnasse" and is dated April 12th 1892. "I am still waiting the decision of the jury of the Salon whether they intend to pose my Circe or not. You send in your work and then have to wait over two weeks for their decision. How I wish you were here to see this work. It is certainly my biggest attempt in any way. I feel that I am all in it - the awful part to me at present is that of course I can only make an artistic success - people must be supported by their own country until they are world famous, and as my country does not seem able to do this, my position in the near future is one in which my art must be second to other ideas. This is why, my dear Felix, I put so much time and money and thought into my Circe, knowing the chance would not come to me again perhaps for some time, to do a serious large work. I took my opportunity and stinted nothing that I had to push this work through, you know me Felix. But I wanted to justify myself to you and my friends in Australia, and I know if you could see my statue, it would be with annoyance that you would contemplate my position. Still, if I get any money I will send you a photo of her and also to Stuart (Frank Stuart). You mention in your last that you understand Stuart sent on some cash to me after receiving my letter. I have only received 50 pounds by telegraph within the last five months so you can imagine my position, especially when I owed it all. Tell me Felix, what about the bronze of Miss M. Hood. You do not mention it in your last letter. Of course, I would be willing to go anywhere to do it. You can understand my anxiety to know whether I am to do it or not....Oh Felix I often think of the drives we had together there in the summer. I suppose when you drive along the Heidelberg Road you sometimes think of Dodo....I know the day must come to me when I shall be lifted above all this, and I won't owe it to Australia but to a few men there that I can count on the fingers of one hand. I shall never forget what I owe to these men but as to my country I wish to God I had been born English or American. Goodbye Felix. My love to Theodore (Fink) when you meet him and to Stuart. Yours, Dodo".