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1975 Titus Map and Vignettes of Napa Valley Wineries, California

NapaValleyWineries-titus-1975
$375.00
The Napa Valley. - Main View
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1975 Titus Map and Vignettes of Napa Valley Wineries, California

NapaValleyWineries-titus-1975

Napa's debut as a wine superpower.

Title


The Napa Valley.
  1975 (dated)     29.25 x 24 in (74.295 x 60.96 cm)     1 : 130000

Description


This is a 1975 Sebastian Titus map of the Napa Valley wine region, California, surrounded by vignettes of the wineries. The map appeared as California wines were gaining international recognition, having beaten French wines in a blind taste test for the first time just the previous year.
A Closer Look
At the center of the sheet is a tall map, oriented towards the northwest, covering from Mount Saint Helena and Calistoga in the north to Napa in the south. Running roughly parallel north-south through the valley are Highway (State Route) 29, the Napa River, and the Silverado Trail. Towns and roads are labeled, along with the location of some 42 wineries, including Charles Krug, Robert Mondavi, Beringer, and Stag's Leap (today, there are more than 400 wineries in Napa Valley). 40 of these are illustrated in charming vignettes along the sides, top, and bottom of the map.
A Brief History of Northern California's Wine Industry
The history of California's wine industry dates to Spanish missionaries, who cultivated grapes for sacramental wine. Following the Gold Rush, new arrivals to Northern California, many of them from Europe, recognized the suitability of the climate and soil for grape cultivation and built a thriving wine industry. However, this first fluorescence was brought to an abrupt end by Prohibition in 1919. A small handful of wineries (including Beringer) were allowed to continue operating to provide churches with sacramental wine, though they typically sold wine illicitly as well. After Prohibition was repealed, a long, slow recovery began, led by academics and dedicated viticulturists. A full-scale renaissance was underway by the 1960s, and by the mid-1970s, California wines were beating French wines in blind taste tests, most notably at a legendary 1976 blind taste test in Paris dubbed the 'Judgment of Paris'. Today, California wines from the area seen here, as well as Paso Robles and other small centers of production, are celebrated worldwide for their quality.
Publication History and Census
This map was prepared by local artist Sebastian Titus, about whom little is known (the artist maintains a spare website with images of his art, and little else), and published by Vintage Image in 1975. There are at least two other editions of the map, dated 1977 and 1987, respectively. The 1977 edition changes several of the vignettes and adds two more for a total of 42. Titus and Vintage Image collaborated on several publications related to Napa wineries and other wine-producing regions in California (e.g., OCLC 1042169324), one of which is this map without the vignette illustrations. In any event, no examples of this work with the vignettes are cataloged in any institutional holdings, and it only occasionally comes to market.

Condition


Very good. Light soiling.