Category Archives: Events

Printers Unite!

0733-022-001Birmingham City University, Marx Memorial Library, Newman University, The Centre for Printing History and Culture and the University of Birmingham are jointly sponsoring an interesting conference in November entitled: Printers Unite! Print and Protest from the Early Modern to the Present. To register: https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/printers-unite-tickets-27724132627

‘Printers Unite!’ is a phrase that evokes the historic solidarities and struggles of printers and their eventual consolidation into a single trade union, Unite. On the 90th and 30th anniversaries of the General Strike and the Wapping Dispute, this two-day conference at the Marx Memorial Library will explore the role of printers and print as agents and vehicles of protest.

The General Strike, which was triggered by an unofficial strike by printers at the Daily Mail, and the Wapping Dispute, in which 6000 printers were sacked by News International, represent only one of the themes that emerges out of an examination of ‘print and protest’: that of the labor history of printing.

General-Strike-1926
The keynote address will be delivered by Andrew Pettegree, University of St Andrews, author of The Invention of News and Reformation and the Culture of Persuasion.51h9bOhp-8L._SX340_BO1,204,203,200_For more information see: http://www.cphc.org.uk/events/2015/11/10/printers-unite

A long list of papers includes
Dr Marie-Céline Daniel, Paris-Sorbonne University, London Printers v. Elizabeth I: How a group of London stationers tried to lobby in favour of a change in Elizabethan diplomacy, 1584-1589;
Kat Lowe, University of Manchester, The importance of female education to public health in the prefaces of Richard Hyrde;
Sally Jeffery, Independent researcher, Art and mystery: descriptions of seventeenth-century printers’ working practices;
Dr Lucy Razzall, Queen Mary, University of London, ‘Thrust into the trundle-bed of the last two lines’: printing theological debate in the 1640s;
Dr Bess Frimodig, Independent researcher, Domestic upheaval: women wallpaper printers and the French Revolution;
Eva Velasco Moreno, King Juan Carlos University, Censorship and the control of printing in eighteenth-century Spain;
Brian Shetler, Drew University, Advocate and abuser: John Wilkes’ relationship with his printers;
Karenza Sutton-Bennett, University of Ottawa, Hogarth’s act: a printer’s protest of society’s consumerism;
Julie Mellby, Princeton University, Edward Osborne and the Jamaica Rebellion broadside;
Dr Patricia Sieber, Ohio State University, Peter Perring Thoms (1755-1855) and the Radical opposition to the Opium War (1839-42);
Catherine Cartwright, Absence and Presence (evening exhibition);
Dr Anil Aykan, Independent researcher, Deeds and printed words;
Martin Killeen, University of Birmingham, Between the war zone and the Home Front: cartoons in military hospital magazines;
Alison Wilcox, University of Winchester, Defiant, dissenting, and disobedient women of the Great War;
Professor David Finkelstein, University of Edinburgh, Irish Typographical Union networks and the Great Dublin Strike of 1878;
Alexandra Heslop, Royal College of Art and V&A Museum, ‘Open Shop’: A re-assessment of London’s Printing Trades, 1980-1992;
Dr Patricia Thomas, Massey University, Lockout: insubordinate print and the New Zealand 1951 Waterfront Dispute;
Anthony Quinn, Independent researcher, Duplicating machines, dashes across Europe and nunneries: how emergency issues were produced by newspaper and magazine managements in response to strikes (1926-56);
Jessica Baines, London School of Economics and London College of Communication, Radical printshops, 1968-98;
Mark Dennis, Coventry University, Art & Language’s ‘Support School Project’ and inter-college networks through posters and pamphlets, 1974-79;
Dr Cathy Gale, Kingston University, Collective protest in print;
Dr Ian Horton, London College of Communication, The Grafische Werkplaats, hard werken and cultural protest;
David Sinfield, Auckland University, The serigraphic voice of the worker: stories of the underpaid worker through serigraphic printed posters;
Dr Mark Johnson, Independent Researcher, The work of Jamie Reid – prophet, provocateur and protester.

Wild Lives, save the date!!

cotsen wild livesWild Lives: Catesby, Audubon, Lear, and Ford

Sunday, 16 October 2016, 2:00 to 4:30 in Guyot Hall Auditorium, Princeton University.

An afternoon of talks by Robert M. Peck, Class of 1974, Drexel University; Aaron M. Bauer, Villanova University; Neal Woodman, USGS Patusent Wildlife Research Center; and Walton Ford, contemporary artist from New York City.

This program is sponsored by the Cotsen Children’s Library, the Graphic Arts Collection, and the Friends of the Princeton University Library. No reservations are necessary but for more information, contact Ian Dooley at 609-258-1148 or idooley@princeton.edu

Here’s a map of Guyot Hall: http://www.princeton.edu/pei/contact/guyot-map/

Closest parking is on Ivy Lane, lot no.14, open to everyone on Sunday afternoon.

parking

To Serif or Not To Serif

serif-Sans-SerifIf you are around the UK in September, you might consider attending the one-day conference sponsored by The Centre for Printing History and Culture entitled “The Song of the Sans Serif,” to be held on 30 September, 2016, at Birmingham City University. https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/song-of-the-sans-serif-tickets-24805565113

They write “From printing types to digital typography the sans serif resonates across both page and screen; and from the advent of Caslon IV’s Two Lines English Egyptian in 1816* to the present day the voice of the sans serif has greatly influenced communication.”

Sans+serif+02
Speakers include James Mosley, University of Reading; John A. Lane, Netherlands; Chiara Barbieri, Royal College of Art, London; Robin Fuller, Trinity College, Dublin; Jessica Glaser, University of Wolverhampton/Birmingham City University; Jon Melton, Anglia Ruskin University, Cambridge; Sebastien Morlighem, Ecole superieure d’art et de design, Amiens; David Osbaldestin, Birmingham City University; Ann Pillar, University of Reading; and Vaibhav Singh, University of Reading.

The Typographic Hub part of the Centre for Printing History & Culture: www.typographichub.org

The Graphic Arts Collection Moves, Again

moving sept8The Graphic Arts Collection is being transferred into the new vaults. Above, Mrs. Beulah Rollins, wife of Philip Ashton Rollins (1869-1950), the founder of the Friends of the Princeton University Library, waits patiently to move down to her new home. Below, Virgil Thomson is getting bored waiting for the elevator.

moving sept11

moving sept4Even the movers are enjoying the collection.

moving sept5
moving sept3Clearing out one space, as the empties fill up another.

moving sept9

moving sept7Pausing for a conference. Drawer = 48 inches; door it needs to go through = 36 inches.

moving sept6Finished. Thank you to all who stayed to help while the rest of the world took a long weekend.

“It’s About Time” and “On Time”

Now in its eleventh year, the New York Art Book Fair will take place September 16 to 18, 2016 at MoMA PS1 in Long Island City, Queens. On Sunday, September 18, Princeton’s Lecturer in Visual Arts, David Reinfurt will speak with Karel Martens from 2:00 to 3:00 pm, a discussion they are calling “It’s About Time.” The talk will be moderated by Prem Krishnamurthy. http://arts.princeton.edu/people/profiles/reinfurt/

NYABF_1Here’s their blurb:

“Dutch graphic designer Karel Martens joins New York-based designer David Reinfurt for a conversation around questions of time and creative practice. . .  Although primarily focused on different media — Martens on printed matter, and Reinfurt on software-based works — both designers extend the core activities of the field through their independent investigations, which range from experimental prints, edited publications, video and interactive works, and spatial installations.

This aspect of both Martens’ and Reinfurt’s practice has led them to develop ideas and projects over durations that span years or even decades. Clocks themselves figure prominently in each body of work, as a way to mark time while also perform its passing. Since the 1960s, motorized clock mechanisms have played a crucial role in Martens’ kinetic sculptures, which use continuous movement to create shifting optical effects.

Reinfurt (as Dexter Sinister and O-R-G) has published a suite of objects and apps since 2000 that tell time in novel and often perverse ways, asking viewers to slow down. Bringing two key figures into public dialogue, this event raises questions about design, contemporary visual practice, and the long gestation period of independent ideas.”

http://nyartbookfair.com/

It is curious that another exhibition this fall will also focus on time. On Time: The Quest for Precision is curated by Bruce Bradley at the Grolier Club in New York City from September 14 to November 19, 2016. The show features books on time and timekeeping from the Linda Hall Library of Science, Engineering and Technology in Kansas City, Missouri.

“From sundials to atomic clocks, the exhibition On Time: The Quest for Precision explores the history of precise timekeeping through rare books that taught readers techniques of timekeeping, announced new inventions, and provided instructions on the construction and use of timekeeping instruments.”

time
For more information see: http://www.grolierclub.org/Default.aspx?p=DynamicModule&pageid=289914&ssid=169184&vnf=1#On%20Time

If you’re seeking Rare Books, don’t get sore…

front doorIf you’re seeking Rare Books, don’t get sore.
We’re not where we were before.
Don’t tear out your hairs, just come down the stairs—
And see us at our new space on C-floor!

— Miriam Jankiewicz, Special Collections Assistant V, Rare Books & Special Collections Department

new home6
front door2

new home5Before

after reading roomAfter (end of week no. one)

 

The move begins

new home7Monday, 15 August 2016, Rare Books and Special Collections begins its move out of the first floor of Firestone Library and into the lower level C floor, see below. Here’s just a peak at our adventure.

new home6Our new home.

new home5Our temporary reading room for the fall semester. Later, a classroom.

new home4Curatorial offices, this is where you will find me.
new home

new home8Technical services are on the move already.
new home2Lovely new workstations.

The Art Library as Place

aic3This morning, the Art Section of IFLA (The International Federation of Library Associations and Institutions) opened its 2016 conference “The Art Library as Place” in the auditorium of The Art Institute of Chicago. The three day event was organized thanks to the collaboration with IFLA, the University of Notre Dame, and the Midstates and Ohio Valley Chapters of ARLIS/NA (Art Libraries Society of North America). Our focus is on modern and historic art library facilities, with papers, panel discussions, site visits, and tours of Chicago area architecture.

aic
IFLA is the leading international body representing the interests of library and information services and their users. It is the global voice of the library and information profession. Founded in Edinburgh, Scotland, 1927, they now have over 1300 Members in approximately 140 countries around the world.

The Art Section endeavors to represent libraries and organizations concerned with all formats of textual and visual documentation for the visual arts, including fine arts, applied arts, design and architecture. The Section strives to improve access to information about these subjects for users of independent research libraries, museum libraries, art libraries attached to educational institutions art departments within national, college, university and public libraries, government departments and agencies, libraries in cultural centers and other collections of art information.

aic4
Speakers include Geert-Jan Koot, Curator of Library Collections and Former Head of the Research Library, Rijksmuseum; Soledad Canovas del Castillo, Head Librarian, Museo Thyssen-Bornemisza; Javier Docampo, Director of the Department of Manuscripts, Incunabula and Rare Books, Biblioteca Nacional de España; Jan Simane, Head of the Library, Kunsthistorisches Institut in Florenz, Max-Planck-Institute; Lucile Trunel, Conservatrice en chef, Directrice de la Bibliothèque, Bibliothèque Forney; and many others. I am talking about contemporary artists who embed their work into library architecture.

aic5For more information, see http://ifla2016arts.arlisna.org/

Flying an umbrella plane to Washington DC

umbrella plane5For many years, the model of the McCormick “Umbrella Plane,” ca. 1910, lived in the tower at Firestone library under difficult physical and environmental conditions. Recently, it was transported to a secure location but remained unique among our object holdings. https://blogs.princeton.edu/graphicarts/2012/05/umbrella_plane.html

towerIt has never been fully studied, conserved, or appreciated, until now…

umbrella plane12

The model of the McCormick umbrella plane has been accepted into The National Air and Space Museum in Washington D.C.  Their collection holds in trust over 60,000 artifacts and more than 20,000 cubic feet of archival materials. Historic aircraft and space artifacts, such as the 1903 Wright Flyer and the Apollo 11 Command Module Columbia, highlight the National Collection. Thousands of additional artifacts—including engines, rockets, uniforms, spacesuits, balloons, artwork, documents, manuscripts, and photographs—document the richness of the history of flight.

 

umbrella plane packed
nasmhttps://airandspace.si.edu/

The National Air and Space Museum is perhaps best known for their collection of rare and historically significant aircraft and spacecraft. The object collection also includes engines, medals, trophies, instruments, and equipment, models, artwork, spacesuits, uniforms, and much more. Altogether, the collection includes more than 30,000 aviation and 9,000 space objects.

Under their care, the Umbrella Plane model will receive the conservation, research, and interpretation it deserves, ultimately making it available to an international  public within the whole context of world aviation.
umbrella plane packed2

 

Moving (again). Wish us luck.

moving

 

The Graphic Arts Collection is moving (again). We are almost packed, the computers will be turned off on August 15, and the entire move will be done around September 9, 2016. Please note the reading room will be closed to researchers on Thursday and Friday, August 18 and 19, so they can move also.

moving 2016b moving 2016a moving 2016

Hope you will find us on the C floor in the fall. Numbers and email addresses remain the same. Wish us luck.