The Society of Bookbinders International Bookbinding Competition 2015, Edited
by Arthur Green and Hannah Brown, Dorchester, UK: printed by Henry
Ling, Ltd.; published by The Society of Bookbinders, 2015. GBP 22.50,
available from the
Society of Bookbinders.
Reviewed by Barbara Adams Hebard
In
the age of electronic devices, on-line exhibitions have frequently
become the chosen venue for displays of bookbindings. While I completely
understand the usefulness of this mode – wider audience, less cost,
global curators and exhibitors, possibility of showing large numbers and
multiple views of books, running the exhibit for an extended period of
time, and so forth – I still appreciate seeing images of books in print
form.
The Society of Bookbinders International Bookbinding Competition 2015
catalogue, printed to accompany a physical exhibit of the same title
which ran from August 20-23, 2015, is a lasting legacy of that show held
at Keele University. The award-winning books could later be seen
through November 5, 2015 at George Bayntun, Fine Bindings and Rare
Books, Bath, and then, in a final venue, at Shepherds, London, November
14, 2015 through January 8, 2016. If you missed the show in August and
will not be travelling to London in the near future, all is not lost;
this catalogue beautifully captured the eighty-five bookbindings in the
exhibit. [Publisher's note: The online version of the catalog linked to above only shows the competition's award winners]
Since I am a bookbinder, I immediately began
my investigation of the catalogue by poring over the pages containing
the book images. Right off, I was delighted to find that prize-winning
entries in all five entrance categories were shown with good-sized whole
book images and a second, closer view of a detail of the book. At least
one book in each of the entrance categories was given two images as
well. The fact that there were five categories is marvelous, including
fine binding, complete book, case binding, restoration, and historical
binding. The judges must have had a challenging time choosing the
prize-winning entries; the catalogue is filled with fantastic bindings. I
have to say, though, that
Andrew Sims’s sumptuous Harleian-style
binding in Morocco covering the
Book of Common Prayer stands out as a masterful example of hand-tooling, and so expertly resembles 18
th century style that it is not surprising as the selection for the
Fine Cut International Award for Finishing. This is the sort of binding that inspires the admiration of fellow bookbinders as well as book collectors.
|
The Book of Common Prayer by Andrew Sims |
|
Visite au Petit Matin by Ingela Dierick |
Sims’s
binding featured a number of floral decorative motifs; several other
books also had floral themes, albeit very different in style.
Ingela Dierick created a lovely, delicate bouquet of onlaid leather flowers in a
design that charmingly sweeps from the front board to the back,
suggestive of a guest handing flowers to a hostess, as in the theme of
the book,
Visite au Petit Matin. Abigail Bainbridge’s journal,
Herbarium, covered in a vellum binding entrapping pressed flowers and foliage, dramatically evokes lavishly illuminated 15
th century manuscript leaves or early embroidered bindings.
|
Herbarium by Abigail Bainbridge |
|
Pan by Peter D. Verheyen |
Bainbridge
was not the only one who imaginatively used vellum to convey a theme in
deceptively simple-appearing binding style. Peter Verheyen, whom I have
long considered a master of subtle, elegant bindings, has achieved this
with the natural-toned vellum covering
Eight Wood Engravings on a Theme of Pan.
The variation of color on the surface of the vellum reveals the
markings of the fur originally attached to that skin, quickly reminding
an observer that Pan, the subject of the engravings, has the
hindquarters, legs, and horns of a goat. Additionally, the use of
snakeskin with a pattern boldly resembling vertebrae on the spine of the
binding, and the placement of the sewing supports, make this a
pleasingly proportioned design. Karen Hanmer, too, exploits the
character of vellum in a limp binding used to encase
The Anatomical Exercises of Doctor William Harvey: Concerning the Motion of the Heart and Blood.
While she used only four illustrations from the text to embellish the
cover (arms with accentuated veins), the prominent veining on the vellum
surface completes the message.
|
The Anatomical Exercises of Doctor William Harvey by Karen Hanmer |
|
A Midsommer Nights Dreame by Dominic Riley |
In bright contrast to
the vellum bindings, books in variegated hues are represented in this
catalogue as well. Using black goatskin with multicolor onlays and gold
tooling for the cover of
A Midsommer Nights Dreame,
Dominic Riley skillfully put together a bookbinding which is both
eye-catching and displays admirable control of technique. The
gold-tooled lines forming the shape of the palace arches introduce depth
to the flat plane of the boards, causing the bright colors of the trees
and banner to appear to hover dreamily over the surface.
Erin Fletcher,
the only North Bennet Street School Bookbinding Program graduate whose
work was in the exhibit, did her school proud with a nicely executed
binding for
The Nightingale and the Rose. An inlaid
scarlet goatskin line visually pierces the book’s spine, and the
embroidered feathers of the bird onlaid to the upper board add dimension
to the cover.
You can read about it being bound here.
|
The Nightingale and the Rose by Erin Fletcher |
One could go on describing other
excellent books, but the truth is, bookbinders need to see the catalogue
for themselves. The bookbindings, made using multiple techniques and
materials, signal that this is not a dying craft and that binders are
still experimenting/experiencing new ways to use their skills and design
arts to create unique books.
Once I had savored the
books, I returned to the beginning of the catalogue to discover that, in
addition to the beautiful images of books, there are other enjoyable
features to this catalogue. The warm-hearted tone of the introduction
draws the reader in, and the brief history of the society will be useful
to those who are not bookbinders. Listing sponsors up front is a good
move and having the entrance categories spelled out is very helpful. The
images of the tools of the trade tucked in the gutters and margins of
the introductory pages nicely balance out the text. I had a couple of
minor quibbles: the Contents page repeats the case binding
category and the names of the bookbinders in that category, which is
confusing; and the countries of origin of the binders are printed in
faint grey tone—since it was an international exhibit, I thought that
should be emphasized more.
The Society of Bookbinders
has produced a great catalogue to accompany their 2015 international
bookbinding competition. It will remain a record of that show and those
who enjoy bookbindings or books about bookbinding should consider adding
this volume to their collection.
Barbara Adams Hebard was trained in bookbinding at the North Bennet Street
School. She was Book Conservator at the Boston Athenaeum for 18 ½ years
and became the Conservator of the John J. Burns Library at Boston
College in 2009. Ms. Hebard writes book related articles and book
reviews, gives talks and presentations, exhibits her bookbindings
nationally and internationally, and teaches book history classes. She is
a Fellow of IIC, a Professional Associate of AIC, and an Overseer of
the North Bennet Street School.