Thursday, May 10, 2012

Rise of the Living Type

Stylised 17th century floriated letterforms
&
grotesque mask sprinkles


stylised grotesque organic Letter 'A' IN: 'Libellus novus elementorum Latinorum cum aeneis picturis usui aurifabrorum inservientib'



Letter 'A' (Jan Chrystian Bierpfaff + Jeremiasz Falck, 1656) - 'Libellus novus politicus emblematicus civitatum'



Letter 'B' - engraved fantasy, organic, botanical letter design



Letter 'C' - baroque fantasy design (Bierpfaff + Falck, 1656)



fantasy floral Letter 'D'



Letter 'E' designed by Jan Chrystian Bierpfaff, 17th century)



stylised Letter 'F' formed out of fantasy plants 1656)



absurd, organic, ornamental Letter 'G' (Jan Chrystian Bierpfaff + Jeremiasz Falck, 1656)



Letter 'H' - fantasy foliage letterform - 17th century engraving



Title page - designs by Jan Chrystian Bierpfaff, 1645-1650



Baroque absurdities or genius ornamental typeforms? Take your pick.

The prints above and below were designed in the mid-1600s by the Polish goldsmith, Jan (or Johann) Christian Bierpfaff (1600-?1690). He apprenticed with the Mackensen family of metalworkers in Cracow who introduced the Dutch auricular ('shell or ear-like')^ style of ornament into the Polish gold and silver workshops.

Bierpfaff's organic alphabet (dedicated to the patriarch of the Mackensen clan) blends the newly discovered shell patterns with grotesque botanical styling to produce extraordinary, abstracted figures in which the ornament itself comes to life. These are wonderful and astonishing print designs to my way of thinking. In fact, I'd go even further and suggest that the first image right up the top - the 'A' - is just about the most ingenious piece of printed artwork that that has ever been featured on this site.

The design is whimsical, imaginative and exquisite, all while being restrained within the confines of a recognisable alphabetical form. We see and feel dynamic, emergent shapes of plant and monster life-forms. Glance away and the appearance might change. It is a remarkably 'fluid' perspective. And a bizarre, autonomous child-form stands alongside its presumptive mother; the artist is no longer required. We have achieved self-replicating ornament. Now that's what I call proto-surrealism.

Although the background information online seems a little ambiguous as to publication dates, I believe the series above (released as a suite of 20+ prints called: 'Libellus Novus Elementorum Latinorum..') was the first appearance of Bierpfaff's innovative designs. His fellow-countryman, Jeremias Falck (a renowned artist in his own right), engraved the suite, and it's worth clicking through to see them in a larger format.

The image series below appears to be absolutely identical to the Falck engravings, except for the addition of grotesque masks and similar, odd accoutrements (as well as the text in the title page cartouche). This second suite of prints was engraved by the Strasbourg artist, Peter Aubry.
  • An incomplete series of alphabet prints (above) from 'Libellus Novus Elementorum Latinorum' can be found at the Rijksmuseum website. Strangely, I could only find the images via a google image search using Bierpfaff's name {they didn't even turn up searching through the museum site itself for reasons that escape me; some local search poltergeist I assume ---- I can't even find them all now as I'm about to post this entry, so I don't know what I did to find them last week!}
  • The majority of images below come from The Art Institute of Chicago and, although modestly sized, I think the collection is approximately complete.
  • The two images with double letters each came from MAK^ via Ornamental Prints Online ("Bierpfaff")
  • Short bio on Bierpfaff.
  • Jeremias Falck at Wikipedia.
  • Previously: a few Falck prints appear in Grab Bag.
  • Previously: the general bookmark of calligraphy.
  • Follow along at Twitter. I'm also using Pinboard for blog summaries AND significant collection bookmarks, in addition to the regular tagged summaries on Delicious.
  • LATER: Actually, one very relevant post from late 2011deserves linking here: Satyr Taxis features another (amazing/extraordinary) collection of prints - this time from the 16th century - in which the ornament came to life.


pair of fantasy botanical baroque letterforms



pair of fantasy letterforms - 'l' + 'm'



17th century engraving of floral letterform - letter 'n'



letter 'n' - proto-surrealist organic engraving



grotesque style foiate letter 'q' engraving, 1650s



engraved letter 'r' - 17th cent.



The letter 'X' - foliated design engraved in 1600s



grotesque alphabet letter engraving - 'y'



absurdist organic letterform

Monday, April 30, 2012

The Bookplate Collection

The Ex Libris (bookplate) illustrations below were selected from the first half of the enormous John Starr Stewart Collection at the University of Illinois. Will from 50Watts sampled the back half of the same database: [The Bookplate Collection: Second Half].



ancient-Egypt themed bookplate engraving

George Clulow (undated)
"Against starry sky, bare-breasted Egyptian goddess wearing ankh pendant and holding sheaf and quill; ouroboros (snake with its tail in its mouth) surrounded open book with owner's initials, book press and ink balls. Motto on banner: Lux in tenebris (Light in the shadows)"


stylised 1904 art nouveau ex libris illustration plate
Carolta Campins - bookplate by Joaquim Renart, 1904

"Tree eradicated (showing roots) with shield upon which is a lyre."



fun bookplate engraving with man reading book sitting in a triangle
Denver Athletic Club Library - bookplate by Leota Woy, 1904

"Within triangular space, bald man in waistcoat and checkered pants
reads a book; below, a man runs with football, 'DAC' on his jersey."



19th c. bookplate engraving : folded ribbon in ornate shell border
Henrietta Jane Adeane - bookplate by Harry Soane, 1883
"Printed in black and red. Within a picture frame, a lozenge escutcheon: vert (green) a chevron or (gold) charged with 3 mullets (stars) sable (black), between three griffin's heads erased or (gold). Banner with originator's name"


old bookplate (?18th c.) dove & ribbon banner
Robert Barclay - armorial (undated)
"Crest: a dove with an olive branch in its
mouth, perched on a straight wreath.
Motto: Cedant arma = Let military power give way"


engraved bookplate : ornate striped ribbon border topped by crossed quills
Barry H Jones (undated)

"Oil lamp, crossed quills, decorative border."



bookplate - Prussian eagle, ribbon banner + table with microscope and books
Arthur Wellington Clarke (1898)

**Who Borrow Books and Soon Restore
May Come Again and Borrow More**

"Armorial crowned eagle rising erased, above ledge
with books, scroll, ink pot and quill, microscope"



bookplate: Japanese themed with 3 ladies in traditional Japanese house
Mary Alice Ercolini - bookplate by SE Blake (undated)

"Japanese ukiyo'e scene with three women in a room.
Vignette lower left.
Note: Discolored by collector's glue."



stylised bookplate : clutter of abstracted letter, pictures, books, flowers and ribbon
F Bargallo - bookplate by André Henry(1895)
"Cipher: FB; books, music, portfolio of fashion plates; flower; snake and cup; Motto: Omnis homo mendax = Every man is a liar; In malis venenum, in mediocribus somnus, in egregiis solamen." 



b&w woodcut bookplate dominated by illustration of hanged man + flying bats
Georges Goury - bookplate by Georges Demeufe (undated)
"The motto, "Fert in omnia rutubam et tristitiam terribilis amor" (In all thing terrible love brings trouble and sadness"); depicts a man hanging from a gallows and a night landscape with trees, bats, and a crescent moon."



bookplate of solid blocked colourful illustration including armorial shield
H Danreuther - bookplate by Edmond des Robert
"Coat of arms. Armorial shield Crest: a woodsman holding an uprooted tree (also depicted on shield). Motto: Quantum est quod nescimus (How little we know). Multicolored. The motto was previously used by the Dutch scholar Daniel Heinsius (1580-1655)"



ex libris engraving : owl atop a tree held aloft by human arms
James T Tarbotton - bookplate by C Helard (undated)

"Raised arms hold uprooted oak tree with
owl in upper branch. Portrait bottom right."



Art Nouveau ex libris illustration - theosophical imagery + 2 women in mu-mu style ritual dresses
James Henry Darlington - bookplate by Louis Rhead, 1902

"Two women (Theology and Science) shake hands under symbol of the Holy Spirit"



dark, square-shaped ex libris illustration dominated by eagle head
Count Karl Emich of Leiningen-Westerburg - bookplate by A de Riquer, 1903

"Dramatic depicition of bird's head"



bookplate with stylised 'twee' putti in decorative fantasy setting reading books
Max Harrwitz - bookplate by SB (undated)
"Putto with open book; another putto on
chair of books; central tree with shield and motto.
(Harrwitz was a rare book dealer and publisher in Berlin)"


woodcut silhouette town scene within art nouveau-styled ex libris border/frame
Pio Freixa Aulet - bookplate by José Triadó (undated, ~1905)

"Town in winter landscape; shield with bars and wing."



engraving of home library scene with bookshelf, table, window - bookplate
Robert Hall, 1902
"Interior with wall of books, large reading table with
books (including open illuminated manuscript, chairs;
large window looking out onto building with spire tower."


fun, engraved bookplate scene - man running with book, hand reaching after him
Rudolf Benkard, 1895

Halt! Mein Buch!
Stop! My Book!

"Hand reaches out from cloud to nab a man running past "
a bookshelf with a book (Ex libris album) under his arm.



bookplate engraving : renaissance fellow (John Overholt) in library scene; title in ribbons
William Livermore Kingman - bookplate by David McNeely Stauffer, 1898

**I am but a Gatherer and Disposer of other Men's Stuff**
"Man in renaissance garb, with ruff, sash and sword; behind him, shelves of books, scientific instruments, decanter and glass; on the table, an envelope for prints marked 'Gravures', partially unfurled print marked 'H. Goltzius'; ink pot and quill, globe showing western hemisphere; open book resting on two closed books.
Note - Quote is by Sir Henry Wotton (1568-1639), from the preface to his Elements of Architecture (1624); name on print refers to Hendrik Goltzius (1558-1617)"


'busy' bookplate engraving with floral display, beehive + corner vignettes of books and musical instruments
SA Flint (undated)
"Floral frame with beehive against flint arrowhead in center; spires upper left; musical instruments upper right; books lower left; easel lower right, Motto: Sans hâte, sans repos (Without haste, without rest)"

Wednesday, April 25, 2012

World Designs

African, early Medieval, Greek, ancient Egyptian, Islamic, 
Pacific Island and Tibetan mandala line drawing designs



African design - stylised interlocking B&W worms(?)


detailed African floral roundel design (probably Berber in origin)
African Designs




medieval calligraphic letter 'S' : ornament of stylised animals and acanthus leaves


Early Medieval Celtic knotwork line drawing design
Early Medieval Designs




Greek design


Greek roundel design made of fish & squid with ornamental border
Greek Designs



line drawing of hippopotamus bearing stylised Egyptian floral motifs


Ancient Egyptian fish & stylised floral roundel design
Ancient Egyptian Designs



leaf + curved Islamic line drawing decal/ornament design


Islamic roundel design : stylised pheasant and background line decoration
Islamic designs




Pacific island design sketch of abstract drinking vessel decoration


B&W sketch of Maori tiki symbol (new zealand) - scanned from acetate render
Pacific Island Designs



circular Tibetan Mandala line drawing with shell border


serrated geometric Tibetan mandala line drawing

Tibetan Mandala^ Designs



 
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