SVIN'IN PAUL (1787-1839) Sketches of Russia: illustrated with fifteen engravings. London: Printed for R. Ackermann, 1814. In English

Lot 942
400500
[6], X, 112 pp., [16] ill., portrait, notes; 22×13.5 cm. 15 engraved illustrations on separate plates: portrait of Emperor Alexander I as frontispiece, portrait of Empress Elizaveta Alexeyevna, views of Russian cities, and genre scenes. In a contemporary full leather binding. Wear to the binding, loss of the spine, boards detached, the text block split into several parts, some leaves detached; pages and plates in good condition. Engraved bookplate of Martin Winkler by A. Kravchenko on the flyleaf ‘Sketches’ consists of 15 chapters, each accompanied by an engraving. Pavel Petrovich Svin’in (1787–1839) – writer and artist, dip-lomat and traveller, founder and publisher of the journal ‘Otechestvennye Zapiski’. During his stay in America in 1811–1813, whilst serving as secretary to the Russian Consul General, he published ‘Sketches of Moscow and St. Peters-burg’ (1813) in English. During his stay in England, Svin’in, in collaboration with the famous London publisher Rudolf Ackermann (1764–1834), published ‘Sketches of Russia’ in 1814. Bibliography: Soloviev. Catalogue No. 105. No. 454. Provenance: Martin Winkler (1893–1982) – German cultural and art his-torian, professor, specialist in Old Russian art, member of the German Society for the Study of Eastern Europe.