5 volumes. Profusely illustrated with héliogravures by André Kertész, Germaine Krull, André Brassaï, and Man Ray among others. 30.5x23.5 cm (12x9¼"), universally bound in brown morocco-backed marbled boards. lettered in gilt on spines, raised bands, edges speckled, wrappers bound-in.
Art et Médicine was an odd, high-quality journal of photographs and essays on art and society, combined with medical and pharmaceutical advertisements, published in France during the 1930s, distributed primarily to physicians as a marketing vehicle for the publisher’s pharmaceutical products. Many photographers who were largely unknown but who later became prominent received their earliest assignments (and therefore, income!) from this and a few contemporaneous French publications. As in the case of VU, the negatives for the images that appeared in Art et Médicine disappeared during WW II and have never been found. Thus, the numerous photogravures contained in the following issues are among the only surviving examples of many of the earliest works by some of the most important photographers of the 20th century. Other prominent photographers whose early work is represented in the journal include Maurice Tabard, André Steiner, Rene Zuber, G. L. Manuel frères, Laure Albin-Guillot, Pierre Yves-Petit (called Yvon), Paul Nadar, Roger Schall, Ergy Landau, Eli Lotar, Pierre Boucher, and Francis Kollar.
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Condition:
Mild sunning to spines, a few light scuffs; hints of foxing to some edges, inkmark at bottom edge of Vol. II; leaves mildly toned; near fine.