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THE SEVENTH DAY

THE SEVENTH DAY by BARLACH, ERNST (Germany, Wedel, Holstein, 1870 - 1938)

7 to 14 days for delivery
Standard Shipping: $55.00
Details
$4,300.00
( US$)
Seller: L'Estampe Originale
Title
THE SEVENTH DAY
Creator
BARLACH, ERNST (Germany, Wedel, Holstein, 1870 - 1938)
Seller
L'Estampe Originale (United States)
Condition
Fine
Description
1922. Woodcut #7 from the suite: The Metamorphosis of God (Die Wardlungen Gottes). Edition of 110. Schult 171. Signed in pencil. Image: 10¼ x 14¼. Margins: 17 x 13. Die Wandlungen Gotes: Sieben Holzschnitte . Artworks within this Set The cathedrals The divine beggar Dance of death 2 The god "Paunch" The rocks The seventh day The first day
Your Victory Garden Counts More Than Ever

Your Victory Garden Counts More Than Ever by [Poster – War Food Administration; Hubert Morley (artist)]

7 to 14 days for delivery
Standard Shipping: $15.75
Details
$750.00
( US$)
Seller: Rabelais - Fine Books on Food & Drink
Title
Your Victory Garden Counts More Than Ever
Author
[Poster – War Food Administration; Hubert Morley (artist)]
Seller
Rabelais - Fine Books on Food & Drink (United States)
Description
[District of Columbia]: Government Printing Office, 1945. Poster, (48.3 x 53 cm.), folded as issued. Government Printing Office document 1945--O-629743. A government-issued poster encouraging Americans to grow victory gardens to support the war effort. The poster depicts an arrangement of various vegetables, including peas in the shell, cabbage, and carrots in the foreground. In the background is a view of a garden with a man and woman cultivating and weeding. In an official wartime activity begun two and a half decades earlier in the Great War, Americans were urged to supplement the food they had available for personal use by planting vegetable gardens, both to support the war effort and due to food shortages and rationing. The gardens, known as "victory gardens", were promoted widely by both the government and industry. Gardens were planted during World War I as well, but were called "war gardens" until the end of the war, when the term "victory garden" came into use. Creased at the folds otherwise very near fine.