Subject: Book Arts Press
15 tons and what do you get? **** Moderator's comments: The following appeared on Exlibris and reappears here with the knowledge and consent of the author. Many readers of EXLIBRIS will know that from 1972-1992 the Book Arts Press (BAP) was the teaching laboratory for the Columbia University School of Library Service (SLS) programs in rare books, programs which comprised a master's degree in librarianship (its graduates include David Ferris, Alice Schreyer, Samuel Streit, Suzy Taraba, Daniel Traister, Peter VanWingen, and David Warrington); an annual summer institute, Rare Book School (in which the above are currently instructors); a series of public lectures, including the annual Malkin Lecture, and a lecture bureau; a modest publication program, including G. T. Tanselle's bibliography course syllabus; and the production of videotapes on bibliographical subjects, including FROM PUNCH TO PRINTING TYPE and HOW TO OPERATE A BOOK. The BAP is supported by a vigorous Friends group of about 525 members, of whom about 125 subscribe to this bulletin board. They and others will I hope be interested to know that on Friday Mayflower movers took a fourth and final load of Book Arts Press property out of Butler Library at Columbia, delivering it yesterday to the Alderman Library at the University of Virginia, the BAP's new home. Together, the weight of the four shipments was slightly over 31,000 pounds, or 15+ tons. Absorbing this stuff into an excellent but not-yet-fully-renovated space in the Alderman Library has been time-consuming: the BAP has a staff of two persons of which I am half, a proportion which may help to account for my curmudgeonly [PG's word] disinclination these days to read aimless EXLIBRIS messages. The complexity of this move from the perspective of a staff-of-two is suggested by the fact that the BAP's well-known collection of about 3500 chronologically-arranged cloth bookbindings, formerly in the SLS classroom bookcases at Columbia and now at U.Va. on bookshelves in the Dome Room of The Rotunda, occupied less than 10% of the 12x12x18" boxes of teaching materials moved from New York City to Charlottesville. The 15+T total weight included a heavily-built Washington-style flatbed 20x26" platen press (1T); 120 cases and ca. 50 galleys of type (2T); and miscellaneous equipment (including a 40" board shears, a large standing press, a small Vandercook proof press, and an etching press: 1T). But the bulk of the materials moved was bookish, consisting in considerable part of an accumulation of incomplete or damaged or discarded or otherwise unloved and unwanted books, pamphlets, prints, and related material donated over the years to the BAP. (This procession to the dump never stops: since mid-December alone we have received more than 50 boxes of such material, not part of the 15 tons...nor are the more than 3000 books received this fall as inaugural presents.) One result is that we now have a sufficient supply of books both post- and pre-1800 so that we can teach the principles of format and collation in lab sessions which draw for examples on the BAP's own collections, without having to raid neighboring stacks. In our business there's never enough especially of certain kinds of materials (though old hands will be interested to know that we finally now do have sufficient supplies of c18 mezzotints and Baxter prints on hand to make Illustration Packets out of them), and contributions are always welcome. Rare Book School 1993 is, no doubt, going to be a mess ("who's got the Cottonian binding?" "where are the mezzotint rockers?" "who took the 66-point Futura wood type?" "where's the bathroom?" "which way's town?"), but I think it will be an exciting mess: in some ways the best and most stimulating classes I ever taught at SLS were in my first year there, when I didn't know much about anything let alone where it was kept. And I'd be grateful if you would pass on the electronic summary of RBS I put onto Exlibris earlier today to potentially interested persons. -tb *** Conservation DistList Instance 6:43 Distributed: Thursday, February 4, 1993 Message Id: cdl-6-43-013 ***Received on Wednesday, 3 February, 1993