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Dr. Seuss (Theodore Geisel)
Dr. Seuss, Secrets of the Deep Deluxe Book

About the Item

Secrets of the Deep: The Lost, Forgotten, and Hidden Works of Theodor Seuss Geisel Deluxe book with cloth-bound hardcover and a slipcase presentation Features more than 300 artworks Secrets of the Deep: The Lost, Forgotten, and Hidden Works of Theodor Seuss Geisel is a deluxe volume comprising the most comprehensive survey of Dr. Seuss’s nearly seventy-year artistic legacy. Secrets of the Deep presents not only these unpublished estate paintings, but also an array of little-known works spanning the twentieth century, and several rare findings from public and private collections – many being published here for the first time. DR. SEUSS (Theodor Seuss Geisel) Theodor "Ted" Seuss Geisel, most known by his pen name, Dr. Seuss, would often take different artistic genres and portray them in his inimitable style. Consider, for instance, the Cubism of The Rather Odd Myopic Woman, the Abstraction of The Joyous Leaping of Uncanned Salmon, and the Surrealism of Surly Cat Being Ejected. In a work such as Worm Burning Bright in the Forest in the Night, he even re-interpreted Pollock's drip paintings of the 1960s. An avid artistic and cultural sponge, it’s possible that Geisel, while on his annual New York trip to Random House, saw MoMA’s 1967 comprehensive Pollock exhibition. In ways such as this it is evident Dr. Seuss worked with an artistic tact that was more often than not surprisingly nuanced.
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    Titan Fine Art present this picture which formed part of a historic collection of an English aristocratic family, Lord and Lady Sandys at their magnificent baroque and Regency Grade-I listed family home, Ombersley Court. The house was among the most fascinating survivals of its kind in this country. The atmospheric interiors were distinguished above all for the works of art associated with two key moments in national history and, more specifically, to the roles of Colonel the Hon. John Russell in the Civil War and the reign of King Charles II and of Lord Arthur Hill, later 2nd Baron Sandys, in the Peninsular War. The collection was acquired or commissioned over five centuries and remained at Ombersley Court until its recent sale, the first in 294 years. This painting hung in The Great Hall (see photo). 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