![]() Offering proprietary analytics, digital strategy, and breakthrough creative campaigns paired with a powerful roster of personalities across fashion, entertainment, and culture, EWG is revolutionizing storytelling with speed, scale, and results that are unparalleled in the media industry – thereby reinventing the model management business from within as it enters its sixth decade.įor 50 years and counting, EWG has been the worldwide leader in model management, offering a diverse portfolio of agencies representing the icons of the fashion world. Today, EWG provides best-in-class management to its diverse rosters of culturally connected talent discovers the faces of the future and delivers cutting-edge, data-driven media programs on a global scale. ![]() As the enduring global leader in fashion talent management, EWG has built on its legacy to successfully converge the worlds of model representation with media and advertising, emerging as the world’s first talent media company. & MSS., entry P 2, p.330.ELITE WORLD GROUP IS THE WORLD'S FIRST TALENT MEDIA COMPANYĮlite World Group (EWG) has created industry icons and championed the faces of the future since 1972. No further information is available on its provenance. The volume was in the collection of the Army Medical Library in 1946. There are modern pastedowns and endpapers. The volume is bound in a modern library brown-leather binding. 1a has the title written in a later hand and numerous, now mostly illegible, owners' notes and stamps. The edges of leaves have been trimmed from their original size. Some repairs have been made, especially to corners. All but the last two leaves of the paper are waterstained slightly and soiled through thumbing. The last two folios (209-210) are replacement leaves of yet different unwatermarked paper. 33-41 is different from the paper of the rest of the volume, being softer, whiter, and watermarked, with visible single chain lines and laid lines. The thin, brittle, lightly glossed, fibrous, yellow-brown paper has horizontal laid lines but no chain lines. 91 and 92 (old fol.90 and 118) 2 leaves are missing between fols. The folios were numbered in Arabic numerals, at an early date when the manuscript was intact, with many misnumberings the volume has recently been refoliated using Western numerals. There are some marginalia with corrections. There are marginal diagrams, possibly added later, on fols. On several folios spaces for illustrations have been left blank or incomplete. More than 100 illustrations, in opaque watercolors and inks, are found throughout text. There is a narrow illuminated opening or headpiece on fol. 209 and 210 are replacement leaves, written in a large and more careful script, 21 lines per page., 1b and 2a are set within frames of black lines filled with gilt the texts on the other folios are set within frames of two red and one blue lines. ![]() The text is written in a small ta‘liq script using black ink, with headings and emphasized words in red and with some red overlinings. ![]() It is a nearly complete and highly illustrated copy, produced in provincial Mughal India, possibly in the Punjab. The appearance of the paper, handwriting, ink, suggests a dating of the 17th century. The title is repeated in a later hand on fol. The nature of paper, script, ink, illumination, and illustrations suggest that it was produced in provincial Mughal India, possibly the Punjab, in the 17th century. Neither the copyist nor illustrator is named, and the copy is undated. From a copy of ‘Ajā’ib al-makhlūqāt wa-gharā’ib al-mawjūdāt (Marvels of Things Created and Miraculous Aspects of Things Existing) by al-Qazwīnī (d. Four mythical creatures: a humanoid with his head in his chest, a human-headed turtle, and two half-sectioned women.
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