25-29 September 2017 and 2-6 October 2017
Apply here: http://www.ligatus.org.uk/summerschool
The Ligatus Summer School is to be hosted this year in Norwich, UK, by
the Cathedral Library, located on the upper floor of the north range of
the cloister. The historic collections contain the Dean and Chapter’s
Library of mostly printed books from the fifteenth century onwards,
augmented by the long-term deposit of the parish libraries of Swaffham,
given to Swaffham Parish church by the family of the historian Henry
Spelman in the early eighteenth century and that of Great Yarmouth, with
a significant collection of 16th and 17th-century books.
The classes will be held within the historic library itself, and in the
first week there will be in addition a one-day visit to Cambridge
University Library to examine a selection of Byzantine and Islamic
bindings and in the second week visits to the National Trust libraries
at Blickling Hall and Felbrigg Hall. Blickling Hall houses the
collection of the bibliophile and scholar Sir Richard Ellys (died 1742),
the finest library in the National Trust portfolio and a library of
international importance, with finely bound copies of books from the
fifteenth century until Ellys’s death, with some later additions.
Felbrigg Hall, the sixteenth-century home of the Wyndham family has an
outstanding collection of books accumulated by the family over three
centuries.
Background:
The contribution that bindings can make to our understanding of the
history and culture of the book is often neglected, but they can offer
insights into the study of readership, the book trade, and the
provenance of books that are often not available elsewhere. In order to
realise this potential, it is important to learn not only the history of
the craft but also how to record what is seen in a consistent and
organised way. Librarians, cataloguers, conservators, book historians,
book collectors and all scholars who work with early books can benefit
from understanding the structure and materials of the bindings they
encounter and knowing how to record and describe them.
Clear descriptions of bindings are invaluable for the management of
library collections, pursuing academic research and making informed
decisions about conservation. They are also important for digitisation
projects, as they can radically enrich the potential of image and text
metadata. It is our belief that bindings should be seen as an integral
part of the book, without which our understanding of the history and use
of books is often greatly circumscribed.
The main purpose of the Summer School is to uncover the possibilities
latent in the detailed study of bookbinding. Both courses offered in
this Summer School look at bindings from different geographical areas
and with a different approach.
The first course looks at the development of bookbinding in the eastern
Mediterranean and gives instruction in a) the development and
manufacture of specific aspects of Byzantine and Post-Byzantine bindings
and b) the development of methodologies and tools for recording
bindings, working with examples from the collections in Cambridge. The
second course looks at the history of bookbinding as it was carried out
in Europe in the period of the hand press (1450-1830). During the
afternoons there will be an opportunity to look at examples from
different collections.
Course outlines:
Week 1 (25-29 September): Identifying and Recording Bookbinding
Structures of the Eastern Mediterranean
Tutors: Dr Athanasios Velios and Dr Georgios Boudalis
This course is divided into two interconnected sessions.
In the first section, Dr Georgios Boudalis, will focus on the major
structural and decorative features of the different bookbinding
traditions that have developed in the eastern Mediterranean – including
the Coptic, Syriac, Armenian, Georgian and Islamic – with special focus
on the Byzantine and post-Byzantine bookbindings. The aim is to follow
the evolution of these closely related bookbindings and establish their
similarities and differences during lectures, slide-shows and
demonstrations of real bookbindings from local collections. This part of
the course will consist of six 90-minute presentations from Monday to
Wednesday.
The other part of the course will be taught by Dr Athanasios Velios and
will deal with the methodologies and techniques that can be used to
record bookbindings. After an introduction on the capacity and scope of
each methodology and technique, this session will focus on: a) the
semantic web and the CIDOC Conceptual Reference Model (CRM); b)
standardised vocabularies for book descriptions (Language of Bindings
and SKOS); c) the development of database schemas for book descriptions;
d) the advantages of various implementation tools; and e) photographic
records and workflows for large collection surveys. A part of these
sessions will be devoted to to the actual recording of specific
bindings. This session will consist of a combination of presentations
and hands-on workshops.
Week 2 (2-6 October): European Bookbinding, 1450-1830
Tutor: Professor Nicholas Pickwoad
This course will follow European bookbinding from the end of the Middle
Ages to the beginning of the Industrial Revolution, using the bindings
themselves to illustrate the aims and intentions of the binding trade.
A large part of the course will be devoted to identifying both broad and
detailed distinctions within the larger groups of plain commercial
bindings, and to the possibilities of identifying the work of different
countries, cities, even workshops, without reference to finishing tools.
We will examine identification and significance of the different
materials used in bookbinding, along with the classification of
bookbindings by structural type, and how these types developed over the
period. There will also be some discussion of how binding decoration
evolved.
The course consists of ten 90-minute sessions with PowerPoint
presentations (over 800 images will be shown). Actual examples of
bindings will be shown in the afternoon sessions in a variety of
historic collections.
Course Fees:
The School costs £350 per week. Participants can apply to do either one
or both weeks.
Please note that course fees cover tuition only. Participants are
responsible for arranging their own travel, accommodation, meals etc.
during the School.
About the Norwich Cathedral Library collection:
The Cathedral’s book collection was dispersed after the Reformation and
a library was reformed from the latter part of the seventeenth century,
the collection being developed largely through donation. It now numbers
around 8,000 printed volumes including nine titles printed before 1501
and around 1,000 from each of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries.
There are imprints from England and from around the continent. Little
rebinding work has been done since the books were added to the
Cathedral’s collections and so a variety of binding styles and materials
are in evidence. In addition to its own book collections, the Cathedral
also holds on deposit liturgical books from parishes of the Diocese of
Norwich. The largest single collection is around 300 volumes from
Swaffham, which began as the private library of the Spelman family and
was then rehoused in the upper room of the south porch of the church.
This collection includes a number of early books, some in original
bindings. The next largest collection is that of the parish of Great
Yarmouth, around 160 volumes, many of which date from the sixteenth and
seventeenth centuries. Whilst one wealthy parish (St Peter Mancroft)
rebound most of its books, others did little more that rudimentary
repairs in order to keep bindings functional. Manuscript pastedowns are
in evidence throughout the collection.
About Ligatus Research Centre (University of the Arts London):
Ligatus is a research centre of the University of the Arts London (UAL)
with particular interest in the history of bookbinding, book
conservation, archiving and the application of digital technology to the
exploration and exploitation of these fields. Ligatus’s main research
projects currently include the conservation of the books in the library
of St. Catherine’s Monastery on Mount Sinai and the development of the
Language of Bindings (LoB) thesaurus of bookbinding terms.
--
Dr. Athanasios Velios
Reader in Documentation - Ligatus
University of the Arts London
www.ligatus.org.uk
+44(0)2075146432
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