Bizarre
- Lepic, Ce qui Restait du Puissant Guillaume de Naillac
- Claeaz, Dancers with Death
- Anonymous American, A Naked Man and Horse
- Klinger, Amor, Tod und Jenseits (Love, Death and the Hereafter)
- Surugue, La Folie pare la Décrépitude
- Legros, La Légende du Bonhomme Misère : La Mort dans le Poirier
- Rops, L’Enlèvement
- Sadeler, Allegory of Opulence, Fornication and Stupidity
- Mohlitz, La Vierge aux Étrons (The Virgin of Turds)
- Legrand, Épaves de Famille (Oddballs of the Family)
- Jacquemart, L’Écurueil (sic)
- Benassit, L’Absinthe!
- de Bry, Punishment of the Mutinous Indians
- Goncourt, Le Singe au Miroir (The Monkey at the Mirror)
- Callot, Les Martyrs du Japon
- Dillon, Les Mendiants (The Beggars)
- Barberis, The Witch
- Budzinski, The Thirsty Giant
- Meryon, Le Ministère de la Marine
- Torre-Bueno, Death’s Arrival
- van Meurs, Animals of America
- Redon, Félinerie
- Chagall, Le Vixe
- Martin, Indécision (Tête de Femme)
- Rops, Le Calvaire
- Rops, Les Frères de la Bonne Trogne
- Gillray, Tentanda via est qua ve quoque possim Tollere humo
- Underwood, Simian Ecstasy
- Veber, Beheaded!
- Strang, Death and the Ploughman’s Wife: Frontispiece
- Corman, The Temptation of Saint Anthony
- Bliss, Gargoyles Spouting
- Castellón, Of Land and Sea
- Eichenberg, Isaiah 11
- Rops, L’Idole (The Idol)
- Master MZ, Aristotle and Phyllis
- Bracquemond, “Hors de mon soleil, canailles!"
- Spare, Nemesis
- Higgens, Forgotten
- Anonymous, Jewish Amulet to Protect Mother and Child
- Daumier, Une Expérience Qui Réussit Trop Bien
- Seligmann, Le Roi du Charbon (King Charcoal)
- Braun, The Release of Force
- Callot, Le Grand Rocher
- Forest, Bâstard Foetus Hérédité, Comte D’Averton Mort-Né
- Jacque, La Souricière
- Veber, “Ah! Qu’il fait chaud"
- Pastelot, Les Sorcières
- Lepic, Le Verger du Roi Louis (The Orchard of King Louis)
- Grandville, Résurrection de la Censure
- Tidemann, The Earth Swallows Up the People of Korah
- Shields, The Descent
- Redon, C’est le diable
- Sadeler, Ita Erit et Aventus Filii Hominis
Of Land and Sea
Lithograph, 1939, 263 x 252 mm., Freundlich 7. A fine impression on thick wove paper with full margins, signed in pencil and from the edition of 30. Perhaps his finest print, this haunting, dream-like image is a milestone in the history of American graphic art, for Castellón’s early lithographs and drawings were the first surrealist images to be created by an American artist. Born in Spain, but raised and educated in New York, Castellón was largely self taught. The great New York museums were the major sources of his education, where he became familiar with the Old Masters as well as with Picasso, De Chirico, Dalí and others. His promising youthful work was noted by Diego Rivera, who did much to aid his career. Of Land and Sea might well be considered “classic” surrealism, its elements drawn realistically, their relation seemingly logical but inexplicable. There is no easily-apparent meaning. Instead, there are tugs at the subconscious, fragments of memory, a tableau taken from a dream whose prior and post actions are lost in time and only a single image remains to tell (or not tell) the story. The print is exceptionally rare today.