Thursday, March 20, 2008

Schemes: Printing Manuals

Joseph Moxon's Mechanick exercises on the whole art of printing (London, 1683) was the first printer's manual to be published in the English language. It is probably the most famous early modern printer's manual, having been treated to exhaustive bibliographic study by Herbert Davis and Harry Carter (Oxford University Press, 1958). However, there are other significant manuals from which one may glean distinctive practices associated with book production. In the late 1960s, Philip Gaskell published an annotated bibliography of printers' manuals to 1850. In 2005, David Pankow curated an RIT exhibition of seventeenth, eighteenth and nineteenth-century printers' manuals that focused on English and American works. More recently, the San Francisco Public Library has compiled an online bibliography of printers' manuals. In comparatively analyzing these extant works, one notices divergent perceptions about the origins of printing in western Europe, trade economics, and hieratic positions within printing shops. Some manual writers assess orthography and punctuation in addition to fundamental materials and technical production. As Frans Janssen has noted, Moxon's situation was by no means typical for a seventeenth-century printer. He was a Royal Hydrographer, Fellow of the Royal Society, a translator, a publisher of globes and maps.

[Pictured above: Lay scheme from Joseph Moxon's Mechanick Exercises, vol. 2 (London: 1683). Special Collections Department, Tulane University Library].

Monday, March 10, 2008

Spaces: Research Libraries

Terry Belanger will be speaking at Columbia University on Monday, March 24th 2008 on the topic of research libraries and teaching the history of the book. Since the title of his forthcoming presentation is "Noli me tangere," one would imagine that access restrictions are on his mind. Notable research collections focused on the history of books, printing, and related arts frequently have imposed handling and use restrictions in order to safeguard and preserve the scarce, the fragile and the rare. Pressing one's hands flat against the text block (as the Toledan cleric Francisco de Pisa does here) while posing long hours for a portraitist is generally not acceptable, unless you own the book. Using hand lotions, post-it notes, pens or markers is also offensive.

Some notable American collections for teaching the history of the early modern book are:

The Folger Shakespeare Library, Washington, DC

The Huntington Library, San Marino, CA

The Pierpont Morgan Library, New York, NY

The Daniel Berkeley Updike Collection, The Providence Public Library, Providence, RI

The John M. Wing Collection, The Newberry Library, Chicago, IL

[Pictured above: El Greco. Portrait of Dr. Francisco de Pisa. c. 1610-14. Kimball Art Museum, Fort Worth, TX]