Página inicial da ABER - Associação Brasileira de Encadernação e Restauro  www.aber.org.br
Receba nosso informativo!
Seu nome:
Seu email:
APOIO


Encadernação em exposição

Museu e Biblioteca Morgan, em Nova York, exibem sua coleção de encadernações raras, de 5 de dezembro de 2008 a 29 de março de 2009. Veja aqui exposição virtual

Exposição: Protecting the Word: Bookbindings of the Morgan
De 5 de dezembro de 2008 a 29 de março de 2009

A famosa coleção da Biblioteca Morgan conta com encadernações históricas e artísticas colecionadas por Pierpont Morgan na virada no século XX. A coleção chega a mais de mil volumes, que abordam mais de 1.600 anos e várias regiões do globo.

A mostra "Protecting the Word: Bookbindings of the Morgan", que será exibida entre 5 de dezembro e 29 de março, apresenta uma coleção inigualável. Entre os destaques, há uma encadernação com jóias do século VIII usada no Lindau Gospels, um suntuoso trabalho copta do século VII ou VIII, e uma bíblia bordada do século XVII. A coleção de 50 peças que será reunida para a mostra representa o melhor da encadernação artística e histórica.

A exposição conta também com trabalhos do século XIX e XX, além de encadernações artísticas contemporâneas.

Galeria de fotos das encadernações em exposição

1. Embroidered Binding
English, ca. 1640–50
On: The Bible
London: Deputies of Christopher Barker, 1599
Purchased by Pierpont Morgan, 1910
The Morgan Library & Museum; PML 17197


2. Binding by Paul Bonet
1959
On: André Suarès, Cirque (illustrated by Georges Rouault)
Paris: Ambroise Vollard, 1939 (not published)
Purchased as the gift of Mr. and Mrs. Hans P. Kraus, 1979
The Morgan Library & Museum; PML 76385

3. Plato, Works
Germany, 16th Century
Basel, Switzerland: Johann Walder, 1534
Purchased with the assistance of the Fellows, 1951
The Morgan Library & Museum; PML 42590

4. Jeweled upper cover of the Lindau Gospels
ca. 880
Court School of Charles the Bald
On: Lindau Gospels, in Latin
Switzerland, Abbey of St. Gall
Purchased by Pierpont Morgan, 1901
The Morgan Library & Museum; MS M. 1

5. Roger Bartlett Mosaic Binding
Oxford, 1678
On: The Holy Bible
London: J. Bill, C. Barker, R. T. Newcomb, & H. Hills, 1678.
Purchased as the gift of Julia P. Wightman, 1969.
The Morgan Library & Museum; PML 59412


6. Dante Gabriel Rossetti, Poems
Binding dated 1891
London: F. S. Ellis, 1879
Purchased by Pierpont Morgan, ca. 1902
The Morgan Library & Museum; PML 7242

7. Coptic Tracery Binding
Egypt, the Fayum, 7th or 8th century
Cover of a Gospels, Monastery of Holy Mary
Mother of God, Perkethoout, the Fayum
Purchased by Pierpont Morgan, 1911
The Morgan Library & Museum; M. 569

Mais detalhes sobre as obras expostas (em inglês)

The Lindau Gospels, purchased by Pierpont Morgan in 1901, was the Morgan´s first truly significant acquisition in the field of medieval manuscripts. The value of the manuscript itself, however, is rivaled if not surpassed by its jeweled covers. The lower cover is one of the most important of all medieval bindings. It is one of three contemporary pieces of Carolingian goldsmithing ascribed to the so-called court school of Emperor Charles the Bald, grandson of Charlemagne. The upper cover is dominated by a large gold repoussé figure of Christ crucified within a jeweled cross. Surrounding Christ are ten repoussé figures in lower relief, all in mourning poses.

Another work in the show, the Coptic cover of the Gospels, is one of sixty Coptic bindings that Pierpont Morgan purchased in 1911, the year after they were found near the Monastery of St. Michael in Egypt. Almost all works were found with their original bindings and constitute an essential collection for the study of Coptic bookbinding. The Coptic Tracery Binding is regarded as the finest surviving Coptic binding. At its center is a cross surrounded by interlaced designs composed of two intertwined squares within a circle. All of these elements were cut from a single piece of red leather and sewn over gilt parchment.

Also on view is a Roger Bartlett mosaic binding (1678). The Restoration, the period following the return of the English monarchy to the throne in 1660, was a grand era of English bookbinding. Perhaps the best documented binder of that age was Roger Bartlett. One of his finest works is this Bible, which is bound in red goatskin with colored leather onlays in black, white, and brown. The cottage-roof or split-pediment pattern is characteristic of his bindings.

André Suarès`s Cirque is a modern example of a work that combines the artistry of bookbinding, illustrations, and writing. The entire book, from its enormous scale to the quality of its paper and presswork, is a work of art in its own right. The Morgan`s copy contains original illustrations by Georges Rouault in the form of aquatint producing the effect of a drawing in watercolor or india ink and woodcut illustration. The renowned French art dealer Ambroise Vollard published the Morgan`s version in 1938, commissioning Paul Bonet, a great innovator in French luxury bindings and among the best-known twentieth-century French art binders, to design the cover. The binding is in a style Bonet called "à décor rayonnant" (in radiating decoration), to evoke the blaze of radiating circus lights. The Morgan`s volume, bound in black goatskin with onlays of various colored calf and gold-tooled in a sunburst pattern, succeeds brilliantly in achieving the binder´s intention.


PRINTED BOOKS AND BINDINGS AT THE MORGAN

Diversity and quality have been hallmarks of this collection, with works spanning Western book production from the earliest printed ephemera to important first editions from the twentieth century. The Morgan Library & Museum´s holdings encompass a large number of high points in the history of printing, often exemplified by a lone surviving copy or a copy that is perfect in every way. Areas of exceptional strength include incunables, early children´s books, fine bindings, and illustrated books.

The collection´s strong base derives from the major acquisitions of Pierpont Morgan, who sought to establish in the United States a library worthy of the great European collections. It is rich in special and unique copies, first editions of classical authors, and works of notable printers, such as Jenson and Caxton. Among the highlights are three Gutenberg Bibles, a strong collection of works by Lord Byron, Charles Dickens, Edgar Allan Poe, John Ruskin, Mark Twain, Herman Melville, and William Morris, and classic early children´s books. The Carter Burden Collection of American Literature, a major 1998 gift, strengthens the Morgan`s twentieth-century holdings with authors such as Ted Hughes, Sylvia Plath, Vladimir Nabokov, Gertrude Stein, and Tennessee Williams.

There are many beautiful and important bindings in the Morgan, but the bindings collection itself comprises about a thousand volumes acquired primarily to document the development of bookbinding. It is among the finest collections of bindings in the Western world, equally strong in quantity and quality. Areas of particular distinction are English, French, and Italian bindings of the sixteenth through the early nineteenth centuries.


PUBLIC PROGRAMS

Gallery Talk
Protecting the Word: Bookbindings of the Morgan
H. George Fletcher, Guest Curator
Friday, January 30, 7 PM
All gallery talks and tours are free with museum admission; no tickets or reservations are necessary.


Family Program
Build a Book
Join visual artist and educator Gema Alava for a journey through the world of bookbinding. Starting with a visit to the exhibition Protecting the Word: Bookbindings of the Morgan, children will explore the artistry of historical book covers. During the following workshop, every child will master a binding technique and create an original artist book using a selection of high quality materials, including hand-crafted papers.
Appropriate for ages 6-12.
Saturday, February 28, 2-4 PM
Tickets (per family; with two adults): $12 for Non-Members; $8 for Members; additional adults: $10 for Non-Members; $7 for Members.


Adult Workshop
Tools, Punches, and Stamps: Decorating the Book
Morgan book conservators Maria Fredericks and Frank Trujillo will demonstrate some of the decorative techniques applied to the book covers featured in the exhibition Protecting the Word: Bookbindings of the Morgan. After a tour of the exhibition, they will use traditional tools to show ancient techniques such as Coptic leather tracery, medieval blind tooling, as well as a variety of gold tooling and modern decorative techniques.
Friday, February 6, 6:30-8:30 PM
Tickets: $15 for Non-Members; $10 for Members


Serviço
The Morgan Library & Museum
Endereço: 225 Madison Avenue, at 36th Street, New York, NY 10016-3405
De terça a quinta, das 10h30 às 17h; sextas-feiras até 21h; sábados, das 10h às 18h e domingos, das 11h às 18h. Fechado às segundas, no Natal e Ano-Novo. Fecha às 16h no dia 24 e 31 de dezembro.
Entradas: US$ 12 e US$ 8 (reduzida)
Site: www.themorgan.org

Publicado em: 02/12/2008

 

Últimas notícias
ABER lança programação de cursos extensivos
Novo calendário traz cursos de conservação e encadernação de livros de diversos tipos e técnicas, de marmorização, douração, couro e papelaria artística. As inscrições estão abertas para as turmas de março e as vagas são limitadas

Faculdade de Direito da USP em São Paulo ganha nova biblioteca
Livros serão transferidos após reformas no prédio histórico

Iphan vai acelerar processo de tombamento de São Luís do Paraitinga
Para órgão, agilidade na recuperação será crucial para que a cidade volte a ser como antes da destruição de seu centro histórico

Assalto ao Masp: suspeitos denunciados
Após condenação anulada, Procuradoria denuncia quatro por furto de obras do Masp

Brasiliana: prédio tem entrega prevista para 2011
Enquanto obras da Biblioteca Brasiliana Guita e José Mindlin são realizadas na USP, coleção digital vai crescendo

listar todas as notÍcias
Procure uma notícia

Digite o que deseja pesquisar

 


Rua Machado de Assis, 222 cj 2 - Vila Mariana - SP | CEP 04106000 | TEL. (11) 5579-6200 | Email: aber@aber.org.br Mapa do website da ABER e outras informações úteisSobre o site