Title: Ten Days In Japan / Written and Illustrated by Berll Lum for the Canadian Pacific Author: “Berll Lum” (pseudonym of Bertha Lum) Place: "Printed in Canada" Publisher: Date: ca. 1931 Description: First and Only edition. Original color-illustrated wrappers (detached from spine and somewhat chipped). 5x7”, 39pp. Illustrated with double-page end papers in color (“Gay Procession in the Streets”), 15 black-and-white text drawings (several full-page), and 2 full-page color drawings. A prolific illustrator, Lum published only two hardcover books of her own, but also wrote and illustrated two soft-cover travel booklets for Canadian Pacific Railways – the Japan piece offered here and another about Peiping (Beijing) China. Very rare; WorldCat locates only one copy in the US, and no copy was seen by Lum’s 1990 biographers. Lum, a white woman artist from Idaho who frequently traveled to the Far East, helped to popularize Japanese and Chinese woodblock printing in the United States about the same time that architect Frank Lloyd Wright began to collect and deal in ukiyo-e prints. Lum's own woodblock prints, produced between 1900 and 1936, now bring up to $2,000 each at auction in the U.S. Lot Amendments Condition: Very good. Item number: 276171
Title: Ten Days In Japan / Written and Illustrated by Berll Lum for the Canadian Pacific Author: “Berll Lum” (pseudonym of Bertha Lum) Place: "Printed in Canada" Publisher: Date: ca. 1931 Description: First and Only edition. Original color-illustrated wrappers (detached from spine and somewhat chipped). 5x7”, 39pp. Illustrated with double-page end papers in color (“Gay Procession in the Streets”), 15 black-and-white text drawings (several full-page), and 2 full-page color drawings. A prolific illustrator, Lum published only two hardcover books of her own, but also wrote and illustrated two soft-cover travel booklets for Canadian Pacific Railways – the Japan piece offered here and another about Peiping (Beijing) China. Very rare; WorldCat locates only one copy in the US, and no copy was seen by Lum’s 1990 biographers. Lum, a white woman artist from Idaho who frequently traveled to the Far East, helped to popularize Japanese and Chinese woodblock printing in the United States about the same time that architect Frank Lloyd Wright began to collect and deal in ukiyo-e prints. Lum's own woodblock prints, produced between 1900 and 1936, now bring up to $2,000 each at auction in the U.S. Lot Amendments Condition: Very good. Item number: 276171
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