Print

Print


Bibliographical Society of America sponsored session

College Art Association Annual Conference



*PRE-RECORDED PRESENTATIONS*

with

*LIVE ONLINE DISCUSSION*: *Wednesday, 10 February, NOON – 12:30 PM*



*The Print in the Codex ca. 1500 to 1900*



*Presentations:*

Larisa Grollemond, The J. Paul Getty Museum: “Reading Between the Lines:
Passion Prints in a Hybrid Book of Hours, ca. 1480-1490”


Sarah C. Schaefer, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee: “Bibles Unbound: The
Material Semantics of Nineteenth-Century Scriptural Illustration”


Silvia Massa, SMB-Kupferstichkabinett, Berlin: “Crossed Gazes: Prints in
Books in Parma and Berlin”


Julie Park, New York University: “Making Paper Windows to the Past:
Extra-Illustration as the Art of Writing”


*Discussant: *

Madeleine Viljoen, The New York Public Library


*Chair: *

Jeanne-Marie Musto, Independent Scholar, NYC



This session considers books transformed through the incorporation of
independently printed images. The session focuses on the production and
reception of such books between the late fifteenth and nineteenth
centuries. These books are investigated both as unique items and as
exemplars of continually evolving creative and curatorial practices.



A theme running through the session is the challenge these works have posed
when they have entered institutional collections: their intermedial nature
has placed them at odds with the increasingly standardized and discrete
organizational systems developed by public museums and libraries. A second
theme is the opportunity these volumes have provided to those wishing to
interpret the intimate interface between book, image and audience, whether
for intellectual or practical purposes.



A fifteenth-century manuscript book of hours into which contemporary
engravings were pasted offers an early example of “extra illustration” that
uses mass-produced images to suggest illumination *en grisaille*. A study
of nineteenth-century Bibles considers extra-illustration from the other
way around, that is, as a means of personalizing mass-produced books, and
how the results informed publishers who were developing standard
illustrated Bibles.



The session also considers codices without text, created to house
single-sheet prints. Private collectors often stored their prints in this
way. Integrating these volumes into public collections has frequently meant
removing the prints from the bindings altogether and, thereby, removing
their historical context. The session concludes with an examination of the
materiality of inserting prints into books to discern how the practice can
inform our understanding of writing and of co-authorship.


-- 
Jeanne-Marie Musto, PhD, MLS
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929-294-5870 (cell)
MustoObservatory.com


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