Sale 2467 Part II: Vintage Posters, March 1, 2018

DESIGNER UNKNOWN 296 c HOLLAND - AMERICA LINE / ROTTERDAM. Circa 1899. 24x34 1 / 2 inches, 61x87 1 / 2 cm. Ocean Publishing Co, New York. Condition B+: repaired tears at edges, some into image; tape on verso; time-staining and minor skinning at edges; small holes in right margin; stain in upper left image. Paper. Matted. In 1896, the Dutch-American Steamship Company officially adopted the name “Holland America Line,” which is printed on the building in the background of this poster. This event, combined with the company adding yellow to the funnels of their ships around 1900, allow us to date this poster to around 1899. The Rotterdam was actually the third ship in their fleet to bear that name, which was changed when she was sold to the Scandinavian Line in 1906. [1,000/1,500] CARLO CUSSETTI (1866-1949) 297 c PARIS LYON MÉDITERRANÉE. Circa 1900. 42x30 3 / 4 inches, 106 3 / 4 x78 cm. Hugo d’Alesi, Paris. Condition A-: restoration in image. A classic, early travel poster from France’s renowned PLM railway, showing off the many fine sights in the major Italian cities through which the trains run. This kind of literal style was in vogue at the turn-of-the-century, spearheaded by Hugo d’Alési, who created a vast ouevre of similar images and ran an eponymous printing house. [800/1,200] 296 297

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