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Antique Lithograph: Mt. Trumball & Mt. Emma, Grand Canyon, 1882

1882 Lithograph Views from Mt. Trumball & Mt. Emma

Regular price $ 225.00

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By:  William Henry Holmes (drawings) Julius Bein (Lithographer)

Date:  1882 (published) New York, NY

Dimensions:  17.75 x 30.50 inches  (45 x 77.5 cm)

This is an amazingly detailed & accurate two-part view looking north from Mount Trumbull and northeast from Mount Emma. The views were published in 1882 as part of Edward Dutton's Atlas of the "Grand Canyon District."  

The upper image shows the view looking North from Mt. Trumbull towards Vermilion Cliffs, that are 50 miles away. Basaltic cinder cones can be found in the fore and middle-ground, the Sheavwits Plateau and Hurrican Ledge appear in the distance to the left, and the Vermillion Cliffs that reach a height of 2,000 ft reside in the ditant right hand portion. The lower image shows the view looking northeast from Mt. Emma towards Mt. Trumbull and extending to about 100 miles.

Edward Dutton was born in Wallingford, CT, on May 15, 1841, graduating from Yale in 1860.  He served in the Union Army during the Civil War, and then joined the U.S. Geological Survey.  He worked in a number of places, including Hawaii, Oregon, and the American Southwest, in particular surveying the Grand Canyon.  In 1882, he issued his Atlas of the Grand Canyon survey, a magnificent document of the exploration of one of the last surveyed  parts of the United States. 

William Henry Holmes (1846-1933) is responsible for the first-hand drawings from when he accompanied Dutton on his survey.  Holmes had first worked with Ferdinand V. Hayden, on the first survey of the state of Colorado, but his images of the Grand Canyon reached an unprecedented level of quality and realism. They are simply among the best images of the West make in the period of exploration.  

William Goetzmann wrote that Holmes was "the greatest artist-topographer and man of many talents that the West ever produced.........his artistic technique is like no other's.  He could sketch panoramas of twisted mountain ranges, sloping monoclines, escarpments, plateaus, canyons, fault blocks, and grassy meadows, that accurately depicted humdreds of miles of terrain........his illustrations for Dutton's 'Tertiary History of the Grand Canon District' are masterpieces of realism and draftsmanship as well as feats of imaginative observation."

Condition:  These two continuous  tinted lithographs are in A condition with warm beige colors, bordered in a thin black frame

Inventory  #12288

                    1932 S. Halsted  #200 Chicago, IL  60608  (312) 496-3622

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