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Article
Rediscovering Celia Anna Levetus
01/2018 | 1378 | 160
Pages: 31-37
related names
Author:
Mitchell, Rebecca N. (Mitchell, Rebecca N.)
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Illustrations
Attributed works:
1. Death of the tulip, by Celia Anna Levetus. Illustration from Commonwealth 1, no.2 (1896), facing p.64.
Attributed works:
2. Headpiece by Celia Anna Levetus for ‘The Art of Prose Story’, The Quest 2, no.4 (November 1895), p.16.
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3. The cinder-youth and the three damsels, by Celia Anna Levetus. Illustration from Ignácz Kúnoz’s Turkish Fairy Tales and Folk Tales, trans. R. Nisbet Bain, London 1896, p.90. (Photograph courtesy the Cadbury Research Library, University of Birmingham).
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4. The dawn of love, by Celia Anna Levetus. Illustration from English Illustrated Magazine (September 1896), p.502.
Attributed works:
5. The Hanuca hymn, by Celia Anna Levetus. Illustration from E. de Haas: ‘Men and women of mark in modern Judea’, leather-bound album, Jewish Museum, London, C 1997.1, p.267 (© Jewish Museum, London).
Attributed works:
6. Illustration by Celia Anna Levetus for ‘Introduction’, from W. Blake: Songs of Experience, London 1902, facing p.3.
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7. A reading from Herrick, by Celia Anna Levetus. The Yellow Book 9 (1896), p.103. (Photograph courtesy the Cadbury Research Library, University of Birmingham).
Attributed works:
8. Bookplate for Joe Burroughs, by Celia Anna Levetus. Reprinted in ‘Modern book-plate designers, no. 14—Miss Celia Levetus’, Ex-Libris Journal (1897), p.111.
Attributed works:
9. Bookplate for Violet Holden, by Celia Anna Levetus. Reprinted in ‘Modern book-plate designers, no. 14—Miss Celia Levetus’, Ex-Libris Journal (1897), p.113.