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News
Featured Link:  • 2008 Summer Institute Brochure (PDF) • 

New Victor Hammer Fellow 
 
The Book Arts Center’s sixth Victor Hammer Fellow was chosen in March from a pool of fifteen very qualified applicants.  For the first time, we had applicants from other countries, including Korea, Russia, and Mexico!
 
Sarah Bryant is a candidate for the MFA in the Book Arts Program at the University of Alabama, and expects to complete her thesis project this summer. She is currently teaching Introduction to Book Arts/Papermaking in Cortona, Italy, through the University of Georgia’s study abroad program there. Sarah interned at the Press and Letterfoundry of Michael and Winifred Bixler in Skaneateles,  New York, in the summers of 2006 and 2007, learning to cast type on the supercaster under Michael’s watchful eye. As the proprietor of Big Jump Press, she produces editions of letterpress printed artist’s books.
 
Concerning her approach to teaching, Sarah says,
“Craft is at the heart of Book Arts. A rigorous curriculum of practice and repetition is necessary in order to develop students’ binding skills. But a Book Arts course should be more than a series of binding demos, and students who are beginning to study the book as an expressive form should not be limited to sewing diagrams and paper grain exercises. 

Books have evolved over thousands of years to be vessels of information. In learning to create books, we should not forget that content is the very reason for their existence. While a teacher in the Book Arts must be able to train students in a high level of craft, there is also an obligation to make students aware of the links between content, structure and materiality. Encouraging students to bring their own content to the structures they are learning enables them to move beyond craft and think about book structures in a more comprehensive way. It also changes the dynamics of a Book Arts classroom into a more student-focused environment. ”

Sarah will teach one section of Introduction to Hand Bookbinding each semester of the two-year fellowship, as well as a third course of her choice each year in the spring semester.

The Victor Hammer Fellowship was established in 1998 to benefit the College by offering courses in the practice and history of the book arts. Designed to help emerging book artists establish themselves in the larger book arts world, the Victor Hammer Fellowship continues to attract excellent book artists from around the nation and the world.
 

Susan Garretson Swartzburg ’60 Memorial Book Arts Lecture
 
The Wells College Book Arts Center is pleased to announce that Martin Antonetti will present the 27th Susan Garretson Swartzburg ’60 Memorial Book Arts Lecture, entitled “Arrighi’s ‘New Invention of Letters:’ Scribes, Printers, & Patrons in Renaissance Rome.” The lecture will be given at 8:00 pm on Thursday,  April 17th in the auditorium of Stratton Hall. The event is free and open to the public; a reception for the speaker will follow.
 
Ludovico degli Arrighi,  or Vicentino (1480?-1527?), printer, scriptor in the Papal Chancery, and calligrapher of luxury manuscripts, was active in Rome in the early decades of the 16 th century. His experience in calligraphy led him to create an in?uential pamphlet on handwriting in 1522 called “La Operina,” which taught italic type script in the chancery style. This work, a 32-page woodblock printing, was the ?rst of several such publications.  Fewer than ?fteen manuscripts have been attributed to him, of which only two are signed. An examination of a hitherto unknown illuminated manuscript of the works of Petrarch, signed by Arrighi and bearing the date 1508, now adds substantially to our knowledge of Arrighi's early days in Rome and alters some of our basic assumptions about his professional life.
 
Martin Antonetti is the curator of rare books in the Mortimer Rare Book Room at Smith College, where he also teaches courses in the history of the book and in contemporary artist’s books for the Smith College Art Department. Antonetti has written and lectured on many aspects of these ?elds including ?ne printing, the evolution of letterforms, bookbinding, and book collecting. Before coming to Smith College, he was librarian of the Grolier Club in New York City, the country’s premiere organization for bibliophiles. Between 1986 and 1990, he was head of Special Collections at Mills College, where he regularly taught courses in the history of books and printing. Antonetti is also on the faculty of the University of Virginia’s Rare Book School and is currently vice-president for publications of the American Printing History Association. He took his library degree from Columbia University where he specialized in bibliography and special collections librarianship.
 

Summer Institute 2008 

Check out the Summer Institute page for information on our classes for the 2008 Summer Institute! We will be offering courses in everything from Japanese wood block printing to italics, kinetic book structures, letterpress printing, box making, font design, and uncials during our three one-week sessions. Our classes are filling up fast and space is limited, so get your registration in soon!

2008 Summer Institute Brochure (PDF)

 
Summer Institute 2009 
 
Looking ahead to the future and another summer of hands-on experience in the book arts, our confirmed faculty for Summer Institute 2009 thus far include Carol Barton, Hedi Kyle, Monique Lallier for binding; Steve Miller and Rachel Wiecking for printing; and Nancy Culmone and Susan Skarsgard for lettering arts. Check back soon to see who else will join our faculty for 2009.
 
 

Last updated 04/01/2008
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