= Year 2, no.11 w. portrait of Douglas Fairbanks from The Thief of Bagdad tipped onto frontwr.
- A few lvs. sl. dogeared. Otherwise fine. = Rare Ukrainian periodical devoted to cinema.
- Sl. yellowed and sl. occas. foxing. Spine sl. worn; wrappers a few tiny chips in fore-edge. Fine.
= Global Avantgarde Brazil 1; Diagramming Modernity p.188 and 191; Les Fonds Paul Destribats 169; Futurisms in the World p.154f (all incl. other issues w. diff. colours). Issue of the rare and most important Brazilian avantgarde periodical of which In total 9 issues (in 8 vols.) of the periodical were published in 1922-1923.
- Backstrip sl. worn; wr. trifle fingersoiled. = Global Avantgarde Estonia 38. Work on modern architecture.
- Spine-ends sl. worn/ splitting.
= Bimonthly periodical devoted to the publications of the State Military Publishing House. Wrapper design possibly by Solomon Telingater.
- Small stamp on title-p. and frontwr.
= Global Avantgarde Latvia 2; Fraser L97: "Another periodical with an even shorter life [than the periodical Taurētājs] was the single-issue Kolektīus (The Collective, September 1920), a social-democratic art and literature effort edited by Kārlis Dzelzītis, a lawyer, parliamentary deputy, and veteran of the Russian Imperial Army. The Strunke-designed cover image appears to be a version of yet another example of Latvian graphic cubism (...)".
- All but two lvs. strengthened/ repaired w. tape on (weak/ torn) horizontal middle fold; strengthened w. tape in inner margin; first and last leaf sl. creased; first leaf strengthened along upper margin and last leaf lacks sm. portion from upper margin.
= Global Avantgarde Sweden 20. The only issue published of this rare avantgarde periodical (monoskop.org); not in Le Fonds Paul Destribats.
- Margins of wrappers restored/ strengthened; closed tear in frontwr. = Global Avantgarde Russia 26.
= Global Avantgarde Latvia 29; cf. Fraser L262. Kreisā Fronte (Left Front) was one of the first Latvian-language socialist periodicals. "Olga Laicena and Jūlijs Ķipers recall a meeting in the Laicens' apartment, choosing the name of the journal and following the concept of Vladimir Mayakovsky's LEF (1923-1925). Although by the time that Kreisā Fronte began, it was more likely inspired by the design and content of Novyj LEF (The New LEF, 1927-1928)" (Fraser).
= Global Avantgarde Latvia 30; cf. Fraser L262. Kreisā Fronte (Left Front) was one of the first Latvian-language socialist periodicals. "Olga Laicena and Jūlijs Ķipers recall a meeting in the Laicens' apartment, choosing the name of the journal and following the concept of Vladimir Mayakovsky's LEF (1923-1925). Although by the time that Kreisā Fronte began, it was more likely inspired by the design and content of Novyj LEF (The New LEF, 1927-1928)" (Fraser).
= Global Avantgarde Latvia 31; cf. Fraser L262. Kreisā Fronte (Left Front) was one of the first Latvian-language socialist periodicals. "Olga Laicena and Jūlijs Ķipers recall a meeting in the Laicens' apartment, choosing the name of the journal and following the concept of Vladimir Mayakovsky's LEF (1923-1925). Although by the time that Kreisā Fronte began, it was more likely inspired by the design and content of Novyj LEF (The New LEF, 1927-1928)" (Fraser).
= Global Avantgarde Latvia 32; cf. Fraser L262. Kreisā Fronte (Left Front) was one of the first Latvian-language socialist periodicals. "Olga Laicena and Jūlijs Ķipers recall a meeting in the Laicens' apartment, choosing the name of the journal and following the concept of Vladimir Mayakovsky's LEF (1923-1925). Although by the time that Kreisā Fronte began, it was more likely inspired by the design and content of Novyj LEF (The New LEF, 1927-1928)" (Fraser).
- Very vaguely waterst. in lower blank margin.
= Global Avantgarde Latvia 33; cf. Fraser L262. Kreisā Fronte (Left Front) was one of the first Latvian-language socialist periodicals. "Olga Laicena and Jūlijs Ķipers recall a meeting in the Laicens' apartment, choosing the name of the journal and following the concept of Vladimir Mayakovsky's LEF (1923-1925). Although by the time that Kreisā Fronte began, it was more likely inspired by the design and content of Novyj LEF (The New LEF, 1927-1928)" (Fraser).
= Global Avantgarde Latvia 34; cf. Fraser L262. Kreisā Fronte (Left Front) was one of the first Latvian-language socialist periodicals. "Olga Laicena and Jūlijs Ķipers recall a meeting in the Laicens' apartment, choosing the name of the journal and following the concept of Vladimir Mayakovsky's LEF (1923-1925). Although by the time that Kreisā Fronte began, it was more likely inspired by the design and content of Novyj LEF (The New LEF, 1927-1928)" (Fraser).
- Loose in wrappers. Wrappers sl. yellowed; frontwr. very vague waterst. in upper and lower margin; backwr. sl. worn/ dam. in upper corner; spine-ends trifle dam. and backstrip some tiny imperfections.
= Global Avantgarde Czechoslovakia 63 (variant colours).
- This copy without the illustration by Klucis on backwrapper. Final textleaf w. some brownish offsetting (also sl. affecting backwr.). Spine restored.
= Rowell/ Wye 700 and ill. p.204; Gaßner/ Nachtigäller V, 62.
- Some gluestains on backwrapper along spine.
= Offprint from Kruchonykh's Na Bor'bu s khuliganstvom v Literature (Against hooliganism in literature). Cf. Rowell/ Wye 645 and ill. p.204; Gaßner/ Nachtigäller V, 55.
- Owner's entry(?) on title-p. Backstrip worn; frontwr. creased and restored in upper corner.
= Global Avantgarde Georgia 35.
- Paper ticket on frontwr.; sm. stain on backwr.
= Global Avantgarde Bulgaria 34. Periodical dealing with culture and politics. After 1944 it was denounced as "pro-fascist" and many copies were seized and destroyed.
= With AUTOGRAPH DEDICATION on htitle. Global Avantgarde Latvia 14; Fraser L316. "This title suffered a confiscation fate like that of the publisher's other titles. No designer is given, although it has an "Ernests Kālis look"". (Fraser).