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Regional Chapters > New York The New York Chapter Current Officers Upcoming Events
Monday, February 25, 6 p.m. Please join the New York Chapter of the American Printing History Association in a tour of the corporate archives of the Associated Press. The AP Corporate Archives is the official repository for all records of enduring historical value created by AP, regardless of format. The records span the years 1848 to the present and are organized into 40 record groups totaling 2,000 linear feet. They include personal papers, organization, editorial and governance records, wire copy, photographs, recordings, artifacts, oral histories, film, video and rare books. The tour will be led by Valerie Komor, Director of the AP Corporate Archives, who will present items of interest in the history of printing, communication, and journalism. On view in the Corporate Archives gallery is an exhibition on the history of the AP logo, which was recently redesigned. Light refreshments will be served after the tour. Past Events: New York Chapter December 14, 2011 Curator H. George Fletcher, lectured on this major exhibition at the Grolier Club. APHA members were welcome to attend. APHA members were also invited to join Mr. Fletcher for three noon tours of the exhibition on December 12, 14 or 15. Printing for Kingdom, Empire, and Republic surveys the history of the French national printing establishment, the Imprimerie Nationale, arguably the most important printing house in Europe. Drawn from the vast and comprehensive archives of the Imprimerie Nationale, the exhibition will document the significant influence of the press, not only on printing and the book arts, but on French—and therefore European—literary culture from the mid-sixteenth century to the present day. The exhibition is being organized by the Grolier Club, the Groupe Imprimerie Nationale, S.A., and the Institut Mémoires de l’Édition Contemporaine (IMEC), France’s largest archive of authorial and publishing materials. December 10, 2011 APHA members and their guests were invited for a guided walk-through of the exhibition, For Decoration and Agitation: Stencil and Pochoir Books and Prints, with its curator, Jared Ash, Acting Head, Special Collections Division. Drawn almost entirely from the Library's Special Collections, the exhibition is international in scope, and explores stencil and pochoir in book and journal illustration (children's literature, fine press, and fashion design), fine art, and political and social action-oriented prints and posters. Artists in the exhibition include: Guy Arnoux, Georges Barbier, W.A. Dwiggins, Shepard Fairey, Serge Gladky Albert Gleizes, E. McKnight Kauffer, Jane Kent, Ivan Maliutin, Vladimir Mayakovsky, Joan Miro, Georges Lepape, E.A. Seguy, Keisuke Serizawa, Anthony Velonis, and M.P. Verneuil, among others. Following a tour of the “official” exhibition, APHA members had the opportunity to see additional pochoir works from the Library's collections, not included in the exhibition.{Exhibition on view from October 18, 2011, through January 14, 2012} December 1, 2011 A few bottles of prosecco, nibbles, and good cheer were on hand! November 12, 2011 Photogravure artist Lothar Osterburg will take APHA members on a tour of his studio, where he makes photogravures of small, sculpted models of windmills, lighthouses, sailboats among others, staged in evocative settings. Osterburg photographs the models through a magnifying glass or with a macro lens, creating scenes of ambiguity and mystery. Working in the tradition of the master photographers from the turn of the last century, Osterburg is not only the photographer but has also mastered the difficult technique of photogravure platemaking and printing, thus controlling all the steps in his artistic process. October 26, 2011 From the Parson's website: “Starting in 1949 Bruno Munari (1907–1998) launched his Libri illeggibili (Unreadable books), a series of design experiments on the form, materials, and purpose of the book as an object. A key feature of these publications with no text or images is that the medium itself becomes the message, leaving the ‘narrative’ to the perception of the object in its materiality. Despite the fact they were made as limited editions (sometimes single copies), the Unreadable books received a wide critical acclaim, also at international level, attaining within a few years no less than twenty different editions. For Munari these leaflets were primarily research artifacts, an exploration of visual communication principles. Such an interest is directly related to his Futurist militancy during the 1930s, from which the Milanese designer assimilated an unprejudiced attitude to the creative process ...” October 22, 2011 George and Peter Pompilio, proprietors of the Gothic Press, a small, family-owned and Brooklyn-based print shop, have working Linotype and Ludlow typesetting equipment which they continue to use to print jobs for clients. Following demonstrations of their equipment and a Q and A session, we will adjourn to “Narjis Cafe,” a nearby local Russian restaurant for optional lunch. May 3, 2011 Pace Paper, the Brooklyn studio of Pace Editions, is dedicated to papermaking, relief printing and bookmaking. Under the helm of director, Ruth Lingen, Pace Paper has produced editions with artists such as Chuck Close, James Siena, Donald Baechler and Robert Ryman, working in handmade paper and large relief prints. Ruth and Akemi will gave a tour of the studio and talked about techniques and collaborations, both current and historic. April 13, 2011 This illustrated lecture told the story of the creation and growth of Deberny & Peignot, the most famous French typefoundry of the 20th century. Morlighem explained how the foundry was built by the Peignot family, first by accumulating the stock of several small Parisian foundries in the late 19th century and then, after World War I, merging with the venerable Deberny foundry. During the time the foundry was run by Georges Peignot it initiated a new era in French typefounding with punchcutters replacing artists as the instigators of new letterforms. In the Art Nouveau era it commissioned faces from Eugène Grasset and George Auriol, two of the leading artists of the period. Later, in the Art Deco era it worked with the brilliant poster artist Cassandre on several type designs that are still in use today. Sébastien Morlighem, a graphic designer specializing in books and records, studied type design at the École Supérieure Estienne in Paris. He created the Bibliothèque typographique collection for Ypsilon Éditeur and co-authored its two books on French type designers Roger Excoffon and José Mendoza y Almeida, both of which have been very well-received. March 16, 2011 March 7, 2011 June 10, 2010 The NY Chapter co-sponsored a talk with the Grolier Club Committee on Modern Fine Printing and the Typophiles. APHA member Paul Moxon will spoke on "Book Arts Hither & Thither." April 29, 2010 Lowell Bodger served as president of APHA’s New York Chapter from 1989 to 2006. Jointly hosted by APHA and the Columbia Rare Book & Manuscript Library, this special evening will celebrate Lowell’s life and achievements as a designer, typographer, filmmaker, collector, diarist, teacher, writer, and printer. Lowell’s family, friends and colleagues are invited to come and share their thoughts and memories. The evening will be accompanied by an exhibition of Lowell’s letterpress work. A reception will follow the tribute. April 8, 2010 Simon Loxley, author of Type: The Secret History of Letters spoke about the troubled life and brilliant work of book and type designer Frederic Warde (1894–1939). Warde is the subject of Loxley's forthcoming book, Printer's Devil: The Life and Work of Frederic Warde, which was based in part on research carried out using the Grolier Club's Frederic Warde archive. March 24, 2010 A discussion of what digital publishing can take from the traditions of print publications. With Dan Visel, The Institute for the Future of the Book. March 3, 2010 A panel discussion centered on the physical form of the book as an expression of technology. With Jeff Peachey, Book Conservator; Sarah Lowengard, Historian of Technology and Science, The Cooper Union; Maria Fredericks, Drue Heinz Book Conservator, Morgan Library & Museum; and John Townsend, Independent Bookbinder and Conservator. December 10, 2009 For more than 30 years in New York City, Chisholm–Larsson Gallery has offered a wide selection of original vintage posters. Its award winning collection includes Art Nouveau and Art Deco product and liquor posters by Cassandre, Cappiello, and others; travel posters of all kinds; fashion; politics (Spanish Civil War, WWI, WWII, Propaganda and Civil Rights); and theater and film. Specialties include classic European and American movie posters by artists such as Ballester, Martinati and Saul Bass. They also feature one of the largest collections of Italian, French, Swedish and Polish film posters in the world. The evening will be hosted by Robert Chisholm. December 3, 2009 Drawn from the Morgan’s extensive holdings of works by William Blake (1757–1827), this exhibition is the Morgan's first in more than twenty years devoted to the breadth of Blake’s literary accomplishments and artistic influence. Former director Charles Ryskamp and curators Anna Lou Ashby and Cara Denison have assembled many of Blake’s most spectacular watercolors, prints, and illuminated books of poetry to dramatically underscore his genius and enduring influence. The show includes more than 100 works and among the many highlights are two major series of watercolors, rarely displayed in their entirety. November 5, 2009 APHA tours NARA (National Archives and Records Administration–Regional Archives, Northeast Region) 201 Varick Street @ Houston, New York NARA is the Federal Agency that, by law, preserves and provides access to permanently valuable noncurrent Federal records with historical, legal or fiscal value. A national resource in a local setting, it contains over 83,000 cubic feet of historical records dating from 1865 to the 1990s, among them photographs, maps and architectural drawings, created or received by nearly 80 Federal agencies. This behind-the-scenes tour conducted by NARA Archivist Dorothy Dougherty, will give APHA members access to NARA’s rich and varied collections. May 26, 2009 A unique opportunity to hear and see an illustrated talk on MacKellar, Smiths & Jordan, the biggest and most influential American type foundry of the nineteenth century, and the ingenious eccentricities of the artistic printing movement that challenged the limitations of letterpress printing. Angela Voulangas and Doug Clouse are the authors and designers of The Handy Book of Artistic Printing: A Collection of Letterpress Examples with Specimens of Type, Ornament, Corner Fills, Borders, Twisters, Wrinklers, and other Freaks of Fancy (Princeton Architectural Press, May 2009). Doug Clouse is also the author of MacKellar, Smiths & Jordan: Typographic Tastemakers of the Late Nineteenth Century (Oak Knoll Press, 2008). Co-sponsored by the Type Directors Club. February 26, 2009 A show and tell with letter designer and book artist Russell Maret; part of the Society of Scribes' 2009 annual meeting. Event co-sponsored by APHA-New York and the Type Directors Club. January 27, 2009 John Randle, proprietor of the Whittington Press (UK) and publisher of the legendary journal Matrix, will be accepting APHA's 2009 Institutional Award on behalf of the Whittington Press at APHA's annual meeting this Saturday, January 24. Mr. Randle's talk is co-sponsored by APHA-New York, the Grolier Club's Committee on Modern Fine Printing, and The Typophiles. All of John and Rosalind Randle's books printed at Whittington have been illustrated, and images have always been an important part of their lives. This talk brings together images from various sources and in various genres but all sharing a particularly strong visual impact. December 9, 2008 Don Carli is the President of Nima Hunter, a consultancy providing strategic planning, marketing research, and technology assessment. An expert in printing technologies, he is the technology editor of Print on Demand magazine and consulting editor to Digital Imaging and Aktuel Grafisk Information magazines. Carli is research director of The Greening of Print, a research project investigating environmentally preferable procurement and production of printing and packaging in North America. Carli has given lectures on sustainability, corporate social responsibility, environmentally preferable procurement, recycling, responsible enterprise printing, and stakeholder relationship management, and he has been a speaker at several conferences in the United States as well as in Brazil, Sweden, and Italy. Co-sponsored by the Rare Book & Manuscript Library of Columbia University. October 15, 2008 Elaine Lustig Cohen was married to the graphic designer Alvin Lustig from 1948 until his death in 1955. She was his office manager and carried out his designs for him after diabetes left him blind. After his death she became a graphic designer in her own right, designing stationery, catalogues, books and architectural signage for Meridian Books, the Whitney Museum, the Museum of Modern Art, Philip Johnson and other clients. In 1973 she and Arthur Cohen, her second husband, established Ex Libris, an antiquarian bookstore dealing in the books and printed ephemera of the European avant-garde of the early 20th century. May 29, 2008 Gordon Bond, an amateur historian, is the author of a new book on James Parker published by the New Jersey Heritage Press. He serves as co-chairman of the committee working to establish the Woodbridge Township History Museum and Vice President of Amateur Astronomers, Inc. in Cranford, New Jersey. Gordon is currently working on a folk grave marker survey project in New Jersey with Stephanie Hoagland. Free and open to the public. March 26, 2008 John Ross is a graphic artist and maker of artists’ books. He teaches printmaking at the New School. Claire Romano is a painter, graphic artist, and Professor Emeritus at Pratt Institute. In 1991 John and Claire established the High Tide Press, which issues limited editions of books designed, typeset, illustrated, and hand printed by John himself. Since 1998 John has worked at the Tipoteca Italiana in Cornuda, Italy, collaborating with its technicians to produce several new works. Free and open to the public. February 28, 2008 Scott-Martin Kosofsky, president of Boston’s Society of Printers, is a book designer, editor, and author well known for his work on complex books in Jewish studies, art, and music. As a writer, Scott’s The Book of Customs: A Complete Handbook for the Jewish Year (HarperCollins, 2004) was winner of the National Jewish Book Award. Free and open to the public. December 4, 2007 A tour of the MoMA exhibition with curator Christian Larsen, Department of Architecture and Design. November 2, 2007 Panel at 6:30pm -- "Production not Reproduction: The Influence of Offset Printing on Artists' Books" at the Center for Book Arts. Exhibition and artists' talk, moderated by the exhibition's curator, Tony White. The event is co-sponsored with the Center for Book Arts, and the suggested donation of $5/$10 is waived for APHA-New York members. October 27, 2007 Poetry into Print Panel and discussion including: Jerry Kelly, graphic designer; Mindy Belloff, Intima Press and Studio on the Square; and Alicia Martinez and Richard Kuczkowski, Poetry in Motion [subway project]. This is the inaugural meeting of the New York City Book Culture Seminar. Free admission. Tea and cookies to follow. Reservations are necessary since the seminar is limited to 44 participants. You will receive a confirmation of your registration. The New APHA poetry portfolio, Verse into Type, will be available for viewing. Sponsored by the American Printing History Association, with assistance from the Bibliographical Society of America, The Morgan Library and Museum, and the Palmer School of Library and Information Science of Long Island University. Tuesday, October 2, 2007 A hands-on session with selections from one of the country’s best collections of type specimens, and other wonderful things. May 22, 2007 Peter is joined by artist Mikhail Magaril in a meeting about their project together, The Nightingale, a book with Mikhail’s woodcuts in a Chinese style. In addition, Peter shows works he collaborated on with artists Lesley Dill, Shelagh Keeley, and Robert Peterson. Producers Champe Smith & Sally Gardner will be at the screening joined by the printers. May 2, 2007 In this illustrated survey of classical Dutch book and type design from Art Nouveau to the digital era, Mathieu Lommen traces the various trends during that time: from books inspired by William Morris and the Arts & Crafts aesthetic to the influence of programmatic modernism after World War II and beyond to the rediscovery of microtypographic refinements in recent years. Some of the designers whose work will be highlighted include Jan van Krimpen, Harry N. Sierman, Bram de Does and the type designers of The Hague Academy. December 11, 2006 W.A. Dwiggins is best known today as a type designer for Mergenthaler Linotype and a book designer for Alfred A. Knopf, Inc. But before he was associated with either of those two companies he had already established a reputation as one of the leading commercial artists in the country. In recognition of this, the AIGA awarded Dwiggins its gold medal in 1929. His experience working for jewelers, furniture companies, vacuum cleaner manufacturers, canned food purveyors, tobacco companies, paper mills and others led him to coin the phrase “graphic design” in 1922 and formed the basis for his 1928 book, Layout in Advertising. This talk will focus on Dwiggins’ early career, looking not only at his advertising work but also his close connection with Alfred Bartlett and D.B. Updike. Most of the work to be shown will be unfamiliar. Paul Shaw is both a graphic designer and a design historian. As the principal of Paul Shaw / Letter Design he has won awards from the AIGA, Type Directors Club, Art Directors Club and Print magazine. As a design historian he has written about written about blackletter type, Bartolomeo Sanvito, George Salter, Morris Fuller Benton and W.A. Dwiggins. Paul teaches the history of graphic design and the history of typography at the School of Visual Arts; and calligraphy at both Parsons School of Design and University of the Arts. He is currently working on a full-length biography of W. A. Dwiggins. June 2, 2004 Before founding Mark Batty Publisher in 2001, Mark Batty was president and CEO of the International Typeface Corporation, and director of marketing for Letraset. He is president of the Association Typographique International (ATypI), and a board member of the Fine Press Book Association. Free and open to the public. March 9, 2004 An account of the fierce debates which greeted the appearance of sansserif letterforms on London posters and store-fronts between 1803 and 1805. On this subject, Howes says "the topic emerged as a result of hunting down Updike's 1918 joke about the 'Fashionable Egyptian Sign-boards' that had quite shocked polite taste in London a century earlier: 'An Irishman describing the Egyptian letters, which at present deface the metropolis, declared that the thin strokes were exactly the same as the thick ones.' One writer (anonymous) said 'Yet let us hope it is merely the folly of the day, a fungi [sic] which will disappear as speedily as it has arisen.' It is through these debates that a modern vocabulary for the discussion of letterforms evolved." Howes is a British typographer, type designer and historian. His recent book design projects include the British Library's new study of the Dove's Press by Marianne Tidcombe; The Golden Cockerel Press, by Roderick Cave and Sarah Manson; editions of Wycliffe's and Tyndale's New Testaments; and bibliophile editions for the Roxburghe Club. December 10, 2003 The video is described as a visual journey covering letters in stone, manuscripts, paintings, signs, printing, typography, and calligraphy, incorporating photography by Erich Wronker and videography by Anita Weber and Michael Tiranoff. November 13, 2003 Peter Bain Film Type The Grolier Club, 47 East 60th Street, New York During the display type era in New York, wherein film and photographic media freed type design from the constraints of metal, designers embraced phototypesetting and made the city a center of new typeface design. Bain will discuss this period, present specimens and offer a critique of display typography. Peter Bain is a typographic designer, and principal of Incipit, a studio whose work includes typeface design, lettering, and typography. His interests include the history of typefaces. In 1998 he co-curated, with Paul Shaw, the exhibition "Blackletter: Type and National Identity," at the Herb Lubin Study Center for Design and Typography at Cooper Union. December 11, 2002 The Library of the American Bible Society includes more than 55,000 title in over 2,200 languages and dialects, dating from the thirteenth century to the present. Dr. Lupas will show and discuss a unique visual history of the art of the printed word. Liana Lupas is Curator of the Scripture Collection at the American Bible Society. She is past Professor of Classics at the University of Bucharest, Romania; at Columbia University; and at Hofstra University May 21, 2002 Virginia Smith with speak on relationships between typography of the Early Modernist period and design in other fields, including architecture and haute couture -- material covered in her forthcoming book Visual Set: Typography and the Design Arts. She will show results of her recent research in the Imprimerie Nationale in Paris, in the archives of the Louvre and in private collections, including original photographs of the famous Art Deco Exposition of 1925 in Paris, and rare period photographs taken when Le Corbusier's "white boxes" of the 1920's were first built. Virginia Smith is Professor of Art at the City University of New York, and a past president of the American Printing History Association. April 26, 2002 David Small's work presents a compelling vision of how computers can redefine the paradigm of printed typography. His experiments ask fundamental questions about how reading, writing and. expression are evolving in response to computer technology. The result is a personal vision of the future of computer-mediated typography. David Small is Principal of Small Design Firm, Inc., in Cambridge. His Ph.D. at the MIT Media Labs focused on the display and manipulation of complex visual information. His thesis, Rethinking the Book, examined how digital models, in particular the use of 3-D and dynamic type, will change the way designers approach large bodies of information. November 9, 2001 Typographer and letterpress printer Alastair Johnston discusses his recent Alphabets to Order: The Literature of Nineteenth Century Typefounders' Specimens (published by Oak Knoll Press and The British Library). Johnston surveys the inseparable visual and literary experiments of the anonymous craftsmen who set English and American type specimen books during the "typographical explosion" of the 19th century. With the arrival of display types, the specimen books became the "playground of the compositors." Johnston will show "the controlled chaos" of 19th century typefounders' specimen books, and discuss some of the "labyrinthine byways" he traveled in exploring these texts. "Lost in the stacks I encountered poison candy, vice and superstition. Then found some peculiar books, lost to time, that revealed the reading habits, politics and whimsies of typestickers of yore" --some of which may be compared to the later work of concrete poets and dadaists. Alastair Johnston is a typographer and letterpress printer at the Poltroon Press in Oakland, California, which he founded in 1975 in partnership with Frances Butler. He is well known as a historian, lecturer, and author on books and type, and edits The Ampersand, published by the Pacific Center for Book Arts. October 11, 2001 John Randle, proprietor of The Whittington Press, will show and discuss two unique publications of his press: Fine Papers at the Oxford University Press. A descriptive catalogue, with text by John Bidwell, assembled in 1999 to present samples from among 20,000 sheets of hand- and mould-made papers dating from 1890, forgotten leftovers rediscovered and bought from Oxford University Press in 1986.This book remains the most comprehensive account of British hand-papermaking to date. British Private Press Prospectuses, 1891-2001. An account by David Butcher of the prospectuses issued by British private presses, both famous and less well-known, that traces the development of the private press during the twentieth century. This work contained a portfolio of rare, original prospectuses from a collection assembled by Randle over the past fifteen years. The Whittington Press, founded in 1971 by John and Rosalind Randle, will have published by early 2002 some 160 titles, including belles lettres, collections of wood-engravings and other imagery, bibliographies, type specimens, and the internationally acclaimed annual review for printers and bibliophiles, Matrix, now in its twenty-first year. December 15, 2000 Hermann Zapf, recognized as one of the foremost type designers, calligraphers, and typographers of the twentieth century, has designed more than 200 typefaces, including Palatino, Optima, Zapf Chancery and Michelangelo. His manual of calligraphic styles, Pen and Graver (1949), set a standard for several generations of calligraphers; his calligraphic broadsides, book jackets, and limited edition silk-screen prints have been reproduced widely. Jerry Kelly is a designer, printer and calligrapher working independently in New York, and a partner in the Kelly/Winterton Press. He has also been a designer/representative of the Stinehour Press, and The Press of A. Colish. He has taught at Pratt Institute, Parsons School of Design, and Queens College. He is author of articles in journals including AIGA Journal, Matrix, Fine Print, Calligraphy Review, and Bookways. He also co-authored with Martin Hutner, A Century for the Century (1999). November 13, 2000 The idea of enabling artists to prepare color work in a more readily printable form has been a century in realization. Jean Bourges will discuss the science and art of "getting color to the paper," color choice, specification of pigments, inks, paints, and other colorants. Her father Albert Bourges, at first an engraver, wanting to involve artists in platemaking and resolve the disparate viewpoints of artists, invented the Bourges Color Notation System, and later Bourges Artists' Shading Sheets. Jean Bourges is the author of Color Bytes (1997). Before joining her father to start a new company, she worked as an engineering draftsperson in the U.S. Army Map Service. April 3, 2000 March 31, 2000 |
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