Imageries Réunies de Jarville-Nancy

JarvilleCover600.jpg
JarnvilleNo1MonkeyJudgeCropped600.jpg
Jarville2WolfTurnedShepherdCropped600.jpg
Jarville3CatandOldRatCropped600.jpg
Jarville4HeronCropped600.jpg
Jarville5WolfMotherGoatKidCropped600.jpg
Jarville6CrowImitatingEagleCropped600.jpg
Jarville7THCROPPED600.jpg
Jarville8FSCropped600.jpg
Jarville9LMcropped600.jpg
Jarville10FGcropped600.jpg
Jarville11GAcropped600.jpg
Jarville12AssandDogCropped600.jpg
Jarville13DWcropped600.jpg
Jarville14DScropped600.jpg
Jarville15HareandPartridge600.jpg
Jarville16WolvesandSheepCropped600better.jpg
Jarville17WCcropped600.jpg
Jarville18UPcropped600.jpg
Jarville19SunandFrogsCropped600.jpg
Jarville20AcornPumpkinCropped600.jpg
Jarville21MilanRossignolCropped600.jpg
Jarville22OysterandLitigantsCropped600.jpg
Jarville23FoxandGoatCropped600.jpg
Jarville24TMCMcropped600.jpg
Jarville25ADcropped600.jpg
Jarville26MonkeyCatCropped600.jpg
Jarville27FCcropped600.jpg
Jarville28LittlefishandAnglerCropped600.jpg
Jarville29Wl2ndtryCropped600.jpg
Jarville30LaborerandKidsCropped600.jpg

Dublin Core

Description

1935? Thirty stapled handbills of La Fontaine’s fables printed by Imageries Réunies de Jarville-Nancy. Heavy paper featuring a framed text on the left half and an image on the right half. Each verso is plain except for a stamped advertisement for Roger Schilling, Coiffeur, in Tours. €40 from Librairie Traits et Caractères, Sens, France, through ABEbooks, April, ’21.

Several things are unusual about this collection. It is understandable that the vendor labelled it as “Imagerie d’Epinal,” since it is definitely in that category; I believe that it may be a competitor to Epinal. The most unusual feature is the stapling together of these thirty handbills. I had been tempted to catalogue it as a book. Lastly, I find the diversity of style and quality surprising. GA reminds me of Paul Colin, who was already famous in 1925. Typical and typically colorful is FS. Surprisingly creative in its composition is DW. Perhaps not as well executed is “The Kite and the Nightingale” – though a quick check finds this very illustration on a trade card posted for the fable as presented on a prominent La Fontaine website! Perhaps also not as skillfully done, though wonderfully conceived, is “The Monkey and the Cat.” These handbills have lasted well these 85 years! Heavy stock. The images seem to be identical with the fifteen that appear in the pamphlet by the same publisher “Fables de La Fontaine, Album No. 2,” for which I have guessed the same date. The vendor dates these about 1905.

Date

Citation

“Imageries Réunies de Jarville-Nancy,” Creighton University Libraries: Archives & Special Collections, accessed November 15, 2024, https://creightonarchives.omeka.net/items/show/1146.

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