Subject: Rare Book School
Rare Book School (RBS) is pleased to announce its Summer Sessions 2001, a collection of five-day, non-credit courses on topics concerning rare books, manuscripts, the history of books and printing, and special collections to be held at the University of Virginia from 4 June - 8 June, 16 July - 20 July, 23 July - 27 July, 30 July - 3 August, and 6 August - 10 August 2000. The educational and professional prerequisites for RBS courses vary. Some courses are primarily directed toward research librarians and archivists. Others are intended for academics, persons working in the antiquarian book trade, bookbinders and conservators, professional and avocational students of the history of books and printing, book collectors, and others with an interest in the subjects being treated. The tuition for each five-day course is $745. Air-conditioned dormitory housing (about $35/night) will be offered on the historic Central Grounds of the University, and nearby hotel accommodations are readily available. For an application form and electronic copies of the complete brochure and the RBS Expanded Course Descriptions (ECDs), providing additional details about the courses offered and other information about RBS, visit <URL:http://www.virginia.edu/oldbooks> Or write Rare Book School 114 Alderman Library University of Virginia Charlottesville, VA 22903-2498 804-924-8851 Fax: 804-924-8824 oldbooks [at] virginia__edu Subscribers to Conservation DistList may find the following Rare Book School courses to be of particular interest: 31. History of European and American Papermaking (Monday-Friday, 4-8 June) Papermaking from its introduction in Europe through the Industrial Revolution, emphasizing changes in technology and the economics of the trade. Topics include: labor and management, the identification and description of paper in early books and manuscripts, and the revival of hand-papermaking in the c20. The course will include demonstrations of manufacturing techniques, and sessions in which students will date and localize early papers on the basis of watermark and other physical evidence. Instructor: John Bidwell. John Bidwell,is Astor Curator of Printed Books and Bindings at the Pierpont Morgan Library, before which he was Curator of Graphic Arts in the Princeton University Library. He taught an earlier version of this course at RBS five times with Timothy Barrett between 1987 and 1997. 32. Physical Evidence in Early Printed Books (Monday-Friday, 4-8 June) The use of a wide variety of evidence S paper, type, rubrication and illumination, bindings, ownership marks, and annotations S to shed light both on questions of analytical bibliography and wider questions of book distribution, provenance, and use. There will be a fairly detailed discussion and analysis of both good and bad features in existing reference works on early printing. The seminar assumes a basic knowledge of descriptive bibliography and some familiarity with Latin. Instructor: Paul Needham. Paul Needham became Scheide Librarian at Princeton University in 1998, before which he worked at Sotheby's and at the Pierpont Morgan Library. Among his books is Twelve Centuries of Bookbinding: 400-1600 (1979). He has given RBS Master Classes on early printed books both at the Morgan and at the Huntington 72. Introduction to Codicology (Monday-Friday, 6-10 August) The principles, bibliography, and methodology of the analysis and description of Western medieval and Renaissance manuscripts. The course includes a survey of the development of the physical features of manuscript books and practical work by the students on particular points. This is a course for non-specialists, but applicants must have considerable background in the historical humanities; in admitting students to the class, the instructor will prefer those with at least an introductory knowledge of Latin. Instructor: Albert Derolez. Albert Derolez is Emeritus Professor at the Free Universities of Brussels; he was formerly Curator of Manuscripts and Rare Books at the Library of the State University of Ghent. He is the author of Codicologie des manuscrits en icriture humanistique sur parchemin (1984) and other books, and he is President of the Comiti International de Paliographie Latine. He holds the Kenneth and Shirley Rendell Chair in Manuscript Studies at Rare Book School. 73. Medieval and Renaissance Bookbinding Structures (Monday-Friday, 6-10 August) An explanation of the diversities of European bookbinding structures, up to and including the early period of more generalized practice and division of labor. Topics: identification (where possible) of the main types of binding structures; their dating and provenance; the recognition and recording of materials and techniques. Instructor: Christopher Clarkson. Christopher Clarkson has held conservation positions at the Bodleian Library, the Walters Art Gallery, and the Library of Congress. An internationally renowned consultant on the care of medieval manuscripts and bindings, he is now in independent practice in Oxford. Book Arts Press 114 Alderman Library University of Virginia Charlottesville, VA 22903 804-924-8851 Fax: 804-924-8824 oldbooks [at] virginia__edu <URL:http://www.virginia.edu/oldbooks> Michael Kidd *** Conservation DistList Instance 14:52 Distributed: Friday, April 6, 2001 Message Id: cdl-14-52-013 ***Received on Wednesday, 4 April, 2001