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About this volume
T.E. Lawrence commissioned illustrations for Seven Pillars of Wisdom
from leading artists of the day. They were reproduced in colour in his
lavish 1926 edition of the subscribers' abridgement. The most important
of the illustrations were portraits. These showed readers not just
faces, but also the exotic clothing worn by the Arab irregulars.
The forty-one Seven Pillars Portraits
are reproduced here
full-page in the original colours, together with
William Roberts' remarkable double-page 'Camel March'.
This
volume of Seven Pillars portraits is made up from sheets left
over in 1997, when The Fine Bindery bound the volume of
illustrations that accompanied the
large-format first edition of Seven Pillars of Wisdom, The Complete
1922 Text. The surplus sheets were discovered when The Fine Bindery
closed in 2007.
Page
dimensions 282 x 200mm. The plates were printed
in 1997 by The Burlington Press on art paper.
The preliminaries have been printed for this edition, in 2008.
Hardback binding by The Fine Book Bindery in quarter cloth with
paper-covered sides.
-
Spine: dark brown Canvas Extra made in Italy by Manifattura
del Seveso. This is the cloth used for the 2003 Castle Hill Press Library Edition
of the Oxford Seven Pillars
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Sides: beige Bugra mould-made paper from the Hahnemhle factory in Einbeck.
The title is printed on the front
History of this printing
In
1997 Castle Hill Press published T.E.
Lawrence's complete 1922 'Oxford' text of Seven Pillars of Wisdom
- seventy-five years after it was written.
The edition was a landmark in T.E. Lawrence scholarship.
Many now regard the 1922 text as the better of the two versions of
Seven Pillars.
There was, however, another exciting 'first'. Not long after Volume I of
the text was distributed we received a call from Maggs Bros, one of
London's leading antiquarian booksellers. They had just acquired a set
of printed proofs of the colour portraits Lawrence had used in his 1926
subscribers' edition of Seven Pillars.
These portraits
had been reproduced by the chromo-litho process - the best then
available - at unimaginable expense.
The proofs had come from the library of a partner Whittingham &
Griggs - the printers who had produced the plates. They were in mint
condition, having apparently spent the intervening years safely in a
protective envelope. The images were complete, without the titles
that were overprinted for Lawrence before the subscribers' edition was bound.
The
news was astonishing. The chromo-litho plates were the best
imaginable source for reproducing the portraits in colour. That had
not been done since 1926, when Lawrence ordered just 200 copies of
each plate for his subscribers' Seven Pillars. After that,
the original pastel portraits had been dispersed. In 1997 we did not know where they all
were. Moreover, pastels often deteriorate over time. By the
late-1990s some at least of the originals would have have lost intensity.
The
discovery put us in a quandary. We were already committed to a
subscription price for the 1922 Text edition - but the opportunity to print the plates in
colour was too good to miss. So we decided to do it. One consequence
was that we had to substantially increase the price of copies of the edition that had not
been sold on advance subscription. The subscribers got a bargain!
High-quality colour printing in short runs is extremely expensive. The volume of illustrations ended up
costing far more than either of the text volumes. To
obtain new high-quality origination, colour transparencies were made
from the plates. These were scanned, and the scans then corrected
against the plates.
List of contents
Emir Feisal by
Augustus John, oils, full colour
General Allenby
by Eric Kennington, pastel, full colour
Camel March by
William Roberts, double-page, pen and wash, full colour
Wilson by Eric
Kennington, pastel, full colour
Boyle by Eric
Kennington, pastel, full colour
Storrs by Eric
Kennington, pastel, full colour
Lawrence by Eric
Kennington, pastel, full colour
Lloyd by William
Roberts, oils, full colour
Emir Abdullah by
Eric Kennington, pastel, full colour
Jaafar Pasha by
Eric Kennington, pastel, full colour
Shakir by Eric
Kennington, pastel, full colour
Auda Abu Tayi by
Eric Kennington, pastel, full colour
Ali ibn el
Hussein by Eric Kennington, pastel, full colour
Nawaf Shalaan by
Eric Kennington, pastel, full colour
Ghalib by Eric
Kennington, pastel, full colour
Matar by Eric
Kennington, pastel, full colour
Mukheymer by
Eric Kennington, pastel, full colour
Saad el Sikeini by Eric Kennington, pastel, full colour
Mohammed el
Sheheri by Eric Kennington, pastel, full colour
Mahmas by Eric
Kennington, pastel, full colour
El Zaagi by Eric
Kennington, full colour
Seif by Eric
Kennington, pastel, full colour
Alayan by Eric
Kennington, pastel, full colour
Hameid Abu Jabir
by Eric Kennington, pastel, full colour
Obeid el Raashid by Eric Kennington, pastel, full colour
Hussein Mohammed
Bagdaddis by Eric Kennington, pastel, full colour
Abd el Rahman
by Eric Kennington, pastel, full colour
Hogarth by
Augustus John, charcoal, black and white
Storrs by John
Singer Sargent, charcoal, black and white with tinted border
Joyce by Frank
Dobson, pencil, black and white
Young by R.M.
Young, chalk, black on tinted ground
Bartholomew by
Colin Gill, chalk on coloured ground
Guy Dawnay by
Lamb, pencil, black and white
Junor by Gilbert
Spencer, pencil, black and white
Newcombe by
William Roberts, pencil, black and white with tinted border
Buxton by
William Roberts, black and white on tinted ground, with tinted
border
Wingate by
William Roberts, chalk on tinted ground, with tinted border
McMahon by
William Roberts, pencil on tinted ground, with tinted border
Winterton by
William Roberts, pencil, black and white
Alan Dawnay by
William Rothenstein, crayon on tinted ground
Clayton by
Nicholson, pen and wash on tinted ground
Lawrence by
Augustus John, pencil, black and white.
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