Box 1
Contains 28 Results:
"The Unsuccessful Decoy" (ink, published in The World), 1900
This collection contains original art and prints by or related to Max Beerbohm, dating from approximately 1890 to 1964, and collected by UCLA English Professor Majl Ewing in the 1950s-1960s.
"Southampton Docks" (ink, published in The World), 1900
This collection contains original art and prints by or related to Max Beerbohm, dating from approximately 1890 to 1964, and collected by UCLA English Professor Majl Ewing in the 1950s-1960s.
"Controllers of our Naval Policy" (ink, published in The World), 1900
This collection contains original art and prints by or related to Max Beerbohm, dating from approximately 1890 to 1964, and collected by UCLA English Professor Majl Ewing in the 1950s-1960s.
"Napoleon Crossing the Alps" (ink, published in The World), 1900
This collection contains original art and prints by or related to Max Beerbohm, dating from approximately 1890 to 1964, and collected by UCLA English Professor Majl Ewing in the 1950s-1960s.
Big fish caught on hooks resembling a soldier and a sailor (ink, published in The World), 1900
This collection contains original art and prints by or related to Max Beerbohm, dating from approximately 1890 to 1964, and collected by UCLA English Professor Majl Ewing in the 1950s-1960s.
Two ink and wash studies of Max Beerbohm from Suzanne and Edgar Ewing, 1965-1966
This collection contains original art and prints by or related to Max Beerbohm, dating from approximately 1890 to 1964, and collected by UCLA English Professor Majl Ewing in the 1950s-1960s.
William Rothenstein, pencil sketch of Max Beerbohm (unsigned)
This collection contains original art and prints by or related to Max Beerbohm, dating from approximately 1890 to 1964, and collected by UCLA English Professor Majl Ewing in the 1950s-1960s.
Charles Conder portrait of "Max", 1905
This collection contains original art and prints by or related to Max Beerbohm, dating from approximately 1890 to 1964, and collected by UCLA English Professor Majl Ewing in the 1950s-1960s.