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Auction archive: Lot number 10

Asia, The American Magazine on the Orient, 13 issues, 1931-1935

Estimate
US$400 - US$600
Price realised:
US$264
Auction archive: Lot number 10

Asia, The American Magazine on the Orient, 13 issues, 1931-1935

Estimate
US$400 - US$600
Price realised:
US$264
Beschreibung:

Title: Asia, The American Magazine on the Orient, 13 issues, 1931-1935 Author: Place: New York Publisher: Asia Magazine Date: Various Dates Description: Feb. and June 1931; January and November 1932; January-May 1933; April, May and December 1934; and May 1935. 9 x 12 inches, approximately 50 to 70 pages each: The most “collectible” American “travel” magazine of the 20th century, as desirable for its broad range of articles on “the Orient” before World War II as for its striking Art Deco cover illustrations. “Asia, the American magazine on the Orient”, was founded in 1917 by Willard Straight, Wall Street banker and diplomat, married to a New York heiress, who promoted American investment in China, while also co-founding the progressive political magazine, the New Republic. After Straight’s death at the end of World War I, his wealthy widow entrusted the magazine to experienced Old Asia Hands, men and women who had lived and worked in the Far East, making “Asia” a “handbook” for wealthy American tourists, “advertising luxury goods, travel and promotion of American commerce in the Orient.” But by the 1930s, when these issues appeared, the magazine was transformed by Richard Walsh, the New York publisher married to Pearl Buck, famed author of novels on China, who shifted the emphasis to Asian culture and literature and the tumultuous political affairs of the region before World War II, which it reported with an increasingly liberal, anti-racist and anti-colonial eye and a broad definition of what encompassed the “Orient”; in these issues can be found articles on China, Japan, India, Burma, Siam, Vietnam, Cambodia, the Philippines, Hawaii, Afghanistan, Persia, Turkestan, Algeria, Ethiopia, Arabia, Palestine, and even Soviet Russia. What did not change between 1925 and 1937 were the memorable front cover illustrations by San Francisco artist Frank McIntosh – masterpieces in vibrant colors which have given “Asia” lasting fame among connoisseurs of Art Deco illustration. Lot Amendments Condition: Very good. Item number: 247808

Auction archive: Lot number 10
Auction:
Datum:
18 Jun 2015
Auction house:
PBA Galleries
1233 Sutter Street
San Francisco, CA 94109
United States
pba@pbagalleries.com
+1 (0)415 9892665
+1 (0)415 9891664
Beschreibung:

Title: Asia, The American Magazine on the Orient, 13 issues, 1931-1935 Author: Place: New York Publisher: Asia Magazine Date: Various Dates Description: Feb. and June 1931; January and November 1932; January-May 1933; April, May and December 1934; and May 1935. 9 x 12 inches, approximately 50 to 70 pages each: The most “collectible” American “travel” magazine of the 20th century, as desirable for its broad range of articles on “the Orient” before World War II as for its striking Art Deco cover illustrations. “Asia, the American magazine on the Orient”, was founded in 1917 by Willard Straight, Wall Street banker and diplomat, married to a New York heiress, who promoted American investment in China, while also co-founding the progressive political magazine, the New Republic. After Straight’s death at the end of World War I, his wealthy widow entrusted the magazine to experienced Old Asia Hands, men and women who had lived and worked in the Far East, making “Asia” a “handbook” for wealthy American tourists, “advertising luxury goods, travel and promotion of American commerce in the Orient.” But by the 1930s, when these issues appeared, the magazine was transformed by Richard Walsh, the New York publisher married to Pearl Buck, famed author of novels on China, who shifted the emphasis to Asian culture and literature and the tumultuous political affairs of the region before World War II, which it reported with an increasingly liberal, anti-racist and anti-colonial eye and a broad definition of what encompassed the “Orient”; in these issues can be found articles on China, Japan, India, Burma, Siam, Vietnam, Cambodia, the Philippines, Hawaii, Afghanistan, Persia, Turkestan, Algeria, Ethiopia, Arabia, Palestine, and even Soviet Russia. What did not change between 1925 and 1937 were the memorable front cover illustrations by San Francisco artist Frank McIntosh – masterpieces in vibrant colors which have given “Asia” lasting fame among connoisseurs of Art Deco illustration. Lot Amendments Condition: Very good. Item number: 247808

Auction archive: Lot number 10
Auction:
Datum:
18 Jun 2015
Auction house:
PBA Galleries
1233 Sutter Street
San Francisco, CA 94109
United States
pba@pbagalleries.com
+1 (0)415 9892665
+1 (0)415 9891664
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