Session
One
6
– 12 July 2008
The Elegance of Italics:
An Introduction to Calligraphy
Cheryl Jacobsen
Stems and Béziers:
An Introduction to Typeface Design
Peter Bain
Letterpress Printing from
A to Z
Katherin McCanless Ruffin
Making Books: The Beginning!
Shanna Leino
Session
Two
13
– 19 July 2008
Calligraphy: The Dynamics
of Movement
Ewan Clayton
East Meets West: Traditional
Japanese Printmaking and Western Techniques
Keiji Shinohara
Moving Parts: The Book
as Kinetic Sculpture
Dolph Smith
Session
Three
20
– 26 July 2008
More than the Sum of its
Parts: Turning Letters into a Typeface
Sara Soskolne
Considering Text and Image
Inge Bruggeman
Boxed In: Creating Custom-built
Enclosures
Anna Embree
Session
One
The Elegance of Italics:
An Introduction to Calligraphy
Cheryl Jacobsen
The elegant and versatile
italic hand is an excellent introduction to calligraphy because this basic
form is legible and establishes essential calligraphic skills, as well
as providing a basis for continued study of other hands. Consistent changes
to this hand make it adaptable enough to take on any personality and allow
for creative expression. We will start at the very beginning and work our
way through the basic tools, terms, textures and forms. We’ll talk about
layout, paper, writing fluids and resources. We’ll do a lot of practice
with one-on-one instruction, see many examples, get a bit of history and
end up with several small pieces, one final project and a reference folder
to look back on after our week is over. This is a great chance to concentrate
on the basics in a lovely, well-equipped scriptorium.
Cheryl Jacobsen is an artist
& freelance calligrapher in Iowa City, Iowa, who has been working with
lettering, illustration, fine and book arts for over twenty years. As an
adjunct assistant professor at the University of Iowa, she teaches a variety
of classes for the University of Iowa Center for the Book including a History
of Western Lettering, and several in basic and advanced calligraphic hands.
Her work has been seen nationally and internationally in shows and publications,
and has been in many Letter Arts Review annuals.
Stems and Béziers:
An Introduction to Typeface Design
Peter Bain
Typefaces are letters, symbols
and marks that work together as a coherent set. In this workshop, participants
will learn typeface design through development both on paper and on screen.
The class will start with informal lessons and continue with group discussion
and critique. The format will encourage individual hands-on time in the
Book Arts Center’s Digital Imaging Classroom. We will be using TypeTool
for its simplicity in the design and production process. Your point of
departure may be your ideas, favorite pens or brushes, or a digital sketch;
bring them all. Topics to be covered include a functional analysis of familiar
types, test words for evaluation, typographic drawing, control characters,
fitting and trial settings. Expect live bézier curve wrestling as
well as appreciation for the subtle and the brash. Basic knowledge of Adobe
Illustrator is recommended.
Peter Bain has been a Madison
Avenue type director, avid student of letterforms, and historian of typography.
Incipit, his design studio, has produced wordmarks, digital typefaces,
handlettering and typographic design. He has taught typography and lettering
in New York at Parsons/The New School for Design and at Pratt Institute,
written form Communication Arts magazine, co-curated the exhibition ‘Blackletter:
Type and National Identity’ at The Cooper Union; and served as chair for
the Type Directors Club Typface Design Competition. He finds type speaks
with many accents, including those heard in Richmond, Virginia.
Letterpress Printing
from A to Z
Katherin McCanless Ruffin
Learn the fundamentals of
letterpress printing by exploring the subtleties of inking and impressing
metal and wood type into paper. Typography and page design will be taught
as you use the concrete design tools of traditional hand printing – metal
type, composing stick, and press – to create and refine beautifully printed
pages. Each student will print a broadside or small artists’ book during
the course of the week using metal & wood type and Vandercook presses.
There will be a field trip to Boxcar Press to learn about printing from
polymer plates, and a collaborative, creative exchange with Shanna Leino’s
bookbinding class across the hall. Designed for those with no printing
background, this course offers an excellent opportunity to learn about
letterpress printing, and will include historical perspectives on the art
and craft of letterpress, as well as practical tips for pursuing further
letterpress work. Come get inky!
Katherine McCanless Ruffin
is Book Arts Program Director at Wellesley College Library where she integrates
the book arts and the history of the book with various facets of the humanities.
She publishes limited editions under her own imprint of Shinola Press.
She has taught at The Center for Book Arts in NYC, Penland School of Crafts,
and the San Francisco Center for the Book, and worked as a printer and
designer at Firefly Press in Boston. Katherine is a graduate of the University
of Alabama MFA Program in the Book Arts.
Making Books: The Beginning!
Shanna Leino
How a book functions is affected
by factors like size, paper, covering, sewing method & thread, and
board construction. Understanding how these elements behave in bookbinding
provides the ability to make a book, be it traditional or non-traditional,
that works in the manner intended.
We will explore the balance
between the technical aspects and the conceptual development of book projects.
The choices of structure, book action, and materials are always an integral
part of how a book is experienced or read. We will look at how they enhance,
or perhaps detract from, a book’s functioning. It sounds serious, but this
will be a week of fun! We will make several types of bindings and enclosures,
creating books that address both content and structural principles. We’ll
also take part in a creative exchange with Katherine McCanless Ruffin’s
letterpress class.
Shanna Leino is a studio
artist living and working in Harrisville, New Hampshire, where her time
is divided between building historic book models, one-of-a-kind carved
bone books, and in producing a small line of hand tools of steel and bone
for book makers and craftspeople. Shanna had taught workshops for the Garage
Annex School for Book Arts, Scrub Oak Bindery, The Guild of Book Workers,
Penland School of Craft, and for the University of Georgia’s Study Abroad
Program in Cortona, Italy.
Session
Two
Calligraphy: The Dynamics
of Movement
Ewan Clayton
This class is about basics.
How pen & ink make contact with the paper, how a movement is initiated,
with what kinds of force it can flow and along what paths. As an a-typical
introduction to calligraphy, this class can be enjoyed by novice and advanced
participant alike. Our calligraphic vehicle will be a particular letterform
family: uncials. As a transitional form, uncials remain open to a variety
of interpretations. Our emphasis will be on using them as a spring board
for our own calligraphic development, discovering the range of movements
we can make, their sequencing & contrast, and in the process learning
more about how an alphabet works and what it is that makes even simply
written artefacts meaningful and significant. Participants will create
a portfolio of pieces that explore the beauty and versatility of uncials.
Ewan Clayton lives in Brighton,
U, where he runs his own calligraphy studio. A Professor of Design at the
University of Sunderland, he also consulted at the Xerox PARC in new technology
and quality of life issues. He and his family worked in a guild of craftspeople
founded by Eric Gill. Ewan has exhibited in the UK, Europe, North America
and Asia. Interested in trans-cultural dialogue, in 2000 he curated the
exhibition ‘Spring Lines: Contemporary Calligraphy East and West.’ Ewan
enjoys working consciously with heart & spirit as well as technical
excellence.
East Meets West: Traditional
Japanese Printmaking and Western Techniques
Keiji Shinohara
Woodcut is the oldest technique
for printmaking and combines with today’s technologies in many exciting
ways. This course will explore Western and Eastern techniques as we examine
the print work of Rembrandt, Goya, Picasso and Munch, along with the Japanese
masters Hiroshige, Utamaro, and Hokusai.
Students will learn about
using various types of wood for different effects. Carving techniques using
knives, gouges, Dremel tools, etc. will be taught, as well as surface-building
techniques. Our printing process will include the Western use of rollers
and of printing multiple color blocks at once, and the Japanese technique
using watercolor, rice paste and a baren. All processes will be by hand;
no presses will be used.
Students will start with
a black and white image, then use one block with multiple inking techniques,
and finally create a Japanese-style color woodcut with multiple blocks.
Keiji Shinohara was a Master
Printmaker n Japan before moving to the United States. His natural abstractions
are printed from woodblocks in the traditional Ukiyo-e style of 600 C.E.
He diverges from tradition by experimenting with ink application and different
materials to add texture to his prints. Elegantly understated, these works
are a fusion of Japanese aesthetic and Western moderism. Keiji teaches
printmaking at Wesleyan University and has been a visiting artist at over
100 venues. His work is in museums in San Francisco, Cleveland, at Harvard
and in the Library of Congress.
Moving Parts: The Book
as Kinetic Sculpture
Dolph Smith
We will approach the book
as a small kinetic sculpture with moving parts. Twenty pages plus the covers
makes twenty-two moving parts. Using the traditional multi-sectioned binding,
we will find ways to set these ‘parts’ in motion. Wooden covers for example,
may have odd materials moving about behind etched glass windows. Our books
will be built of wood, copper, leather, and/or found and made materials,
and then they will be finished in milk paint, graphite, book cloth, veneers
and lots of imagination. It is fair to say that the book block will be
considered ‘blank,’ challenging the maker to fill it. We will be using
simple power tools: scroll saw, drill press, Dremel, and wood burning tool.
Students should expect one-on-one
work with me and plenty of encouragement to create each book on their own
terms.
Dolph Smith has over 1,200
works in collections nationally and abroad, and was profiled with nine
other American bookmakers in The Penland Book of Handmade Books. His artwork
evolved from drawing and watercolors to paperworks and sculpture and finally
to one-of-a-kind handmade books, and he is currently creating unique books
as kinetic sculpture, animated three-dimensional objects with moving parts.
He says, ‘If a book has thirty pages, I see thirty moving parts plus the
covers. I believe the illustrations in a 3-D object should also be 3-D!”
Session
Three
More than the Sum of
its Parts: Turning Letters into a Typeface
Sara Soskolne
More than just creating a
matching set of individual letterforms, typeface design is about constructing
a system out of patterns of black and white. The rhythm created by the
repeated interplay of its positive and negative shapes defines a typeface
as much as any of its more obvious design details – and this is also its
innate challenge.
This course will introduce
the tools and principles of digital typeface design through one-on-one,
no-holds-barred engagement with an individual project of your own choosing-be
it the systematizing of your own lettering, the imagining of a complete
alphabet from a found fragment, the articulation of that ideal set of forms
in your mind, or the revival of a non-digital typeface you love. Experience
with bézier drawing and some degree of previous involvement with
lettering or typography are both strongly recommended.
Sara Soskolne is a typeface
designer working with the New York foundry Hoefler & Frere-Jones, an
as such has the good fortune to be allowed to draw typeforms all day long.
She received her MA with distinction in Typeface Design from the UK’s University
of Reading (really, no pun intended) in 2003, has taught the subject in
the graduate program of Yale University’s School of Art, and is a former
graphic designer who now has the annoying zeal typical of a convert. Warning:
it could happen to you, too!
Considering Text and
Image
Inge Bruggeman
In this course we will examine
the multiple relationships text and image can have on the printed page.
An image can illustrate a text, detract from or complement, or even contradict
it – in like manner a text can describe an image, detract from or complement
it, or have its own, separate visual significance. We will explore ideas
like these using hand-set type and various image-making techniques suitable
for letterpress printing, which may include photopolymer plates, linoleum
blocks, collagraphs and monoprints. Students should bring several favorite
tests, poetry and/or prose, from which they will chose one to use for several
different projects. As we work on our image-making, we will re-contextualize
the text with each technique while exploring the dynamic relationship between
printed text and image.
Inge Bruggeman lives in works
in Portland, where she teaches Book Arts at the Oregon College of Art &
Craft. She makes a variety of text-based artwork and runs Textura, a letterpress
printing business that published limited edition, fine press artist’s books
under her imprint INK-A! Press. Her work has been shown here & abroad
and is owned by a variety of institutions including the Getty Research
Institute, British Library, Minneapolis Institute of the Arts, and New
York Public Library. Her artist’s books are in collections at Yale, Harvard,
and Stanford.
Boxed In: Creating
Custom-built Enclosures
Anna Embree
Boxes serve both aesthetic
and functional purposes: they house and protect just as they present and
enhance. In this class we will create custom-built enclosures with an emphasis
on dynamic and complex forms. We will explore basic box making techniques
such as measuring, fitting, covering, and casing; these will be considered
also in connection with more complex components like partitioning and layering.
We will discuss aesthetics in the context of overall design as well as
selection of materials and structures appropriate for specific applications.
The structures we will construct will be suitable for housing individual
objects or for more complex applications such as accommodating items with
unusual shapes or larger collections of materials. Our goal will be to
construct sound, imaginative and exciting boxes.
Anna Embree teaches bookbinding
for the MFA in Book Arts Program at the University of Alabama School of
Library and Information Studies. She previously taught at the University
of Iowa Center for the Book, where she completed a 4-year apprenticeship
in Bo0okbinding and Rare Book Conservation. She has worked in conservation
at the University of Iowa Libraries and as a studio coordinator for the
Penland School of Crafts in North Carolina. She and Steve Miller have been
taking their Alabama book arts students to Cuba for collaborative work
there for several years.
Last updated 04/08/2008
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