2014 University Library Printer-in-Residence Project, 1–31 August

Friday, June 6th, 2014 | Shef Rogers | Comments Off on 2014 University Library Printer-in-Residence Project, 1–31 August

This year’s Printer-in-Residence programme will feature Peter Vangioni, curator at Christchurch Art Gallery and owner-operator of Kowhai Press. He will be printing text and images by the Port Chalmers based artist/lyricist and sound artist, Michael Morley. The work to be produced is tentatively titled XXXXXWords.

Stop by regularly to observe the progress.

Venue: Otakou Press, 1st floor Central University Library

Hours: Variable, but the printer welcomes visitors who wish to learn more about the project or the printing process.

For further enquiries, please contact Dr Donald Kerr, Special Collections, University of Otago.
Email: Donald.kerr@otago.ac.nz
Phone: (03)-479-8330

Australasian Rare Book School 2015 in Wellington

Friday, June 6th, 2014 | Shef Rogers | Comments Off on Australasian Rare Book School 2015 in Wellington

The 10th anniversary Australasian Rare Books Summer School will be held 26-30 January 2015 in Wellington, New Zealand. The event is hosted by Victoria University of Wellington and the Alexander Turnbull Library, National Library of New Zealand.

Three exciting courses are on offer, each of which runs for five full days:

History of Cartography/Maps
Tutor: Julie-Sweetkind Singer, Stanford University, USA

Geographic Information Systems for Digital Humanities
Tutor: Ian Gregory, Lancaster University, UK

Artistic Printing
Tutors: Marty Vreede, Quay School of the Arts, Whanganui and Sydney Shep, Wai-te-ata Press, Victoria University of Wellington

The cost of each five-day course is NZD $800 + gst per person. Places are strictly limited.

For more details about RBSS 2015 visit http://wtap.vuw.ac.nz/wordpress/digital-history/events/rare-books-summer-school/

If you would like to attend, please visit http://bit.ly/rbss2015 to express your interest, and a member of the RBSS team will contact you with more information.

Italy Exhibition in Special Collections, Central Library, 11 June to 5 September 2014

Friday, June 6th, 2014 | Shef Rogers | Comments Off on Italy Exhibition in Special Collections, Central Library, 11 June to 5 September 2014

Italy – what dreams and romantic longings the name conjures up. Florence, Venice, Rome – landmarks of European history and civilization. The country of Caesar, Cicero, Horace, and Virgil: the land which gave birth to Michelangelo, Raphael, Titian, Dante, Ariosto, and Tasso. The list would be endless if it also encompassed ‘modern’ day celebrities such as Giuseppe Verdi, Enrico Fermi, Sofia Loren, Giorgio Armani, Dino Zoff (considered the best goalkeeper in the history of football), and the controversial Silvio Berlusconi. Renowned for its architecture, its complex historical past, its literature, fashion, and cuisine, Italy is now sub-divided into 20 regions, where most speak Italian (a Florentine variety of Tuscan).

 An exhibition entitled Viva l’Italia. A Regional Romp through Italy will start on 11 June 2014 at the de Beer Gallery, Special Collections, University of Otago. The exhibition is constructed around images of Italian cities from a seventeenth-century copy of Pietro Bertelli’s Theatro delle Citta d’Italia (1629). By utilising these images, the viewer ‘romps’ through the various regions of the country cabinet by cabinet, from Piedmont in the north, to Puglia in the southeast, Sardinia in the west, and Sicily in the southwest. The Republic (formed in 1946) encompasses some 301,338 kilometres.

Although by necessity selective, the exhibition will display some wonderful books, primarily from the collections of Esmond de Beer and Charles Brasch, who both thoroughly enjoyed what Italy offered to the world. Notable items will include: William Thomas’ The Historie of Italie (1549); Pietro Bertelli’s Theatro delle Citta d’Italia(1629); Thomas Martyn’s The Gentleman’s Guide in his Tour through Italy (1787); Alexandre de Rogissart’s Les Delices de l’Italie (1706); Henry Kipping’s Antiquitatum Romanarum, Libri Quatuor [(1713); and Jean-Jacques Boissard’s Pars Romanae Urbis Topographiae & Antiquitatum (1597). Modern publications such as D. H. Lawrence’s Sea and Sardinia (1921) and Samuel Butler’s Alps and Sanctuaries of Piedmont and the Canton Ticino (1923) also feature. Interspersed are Italian recipes, carnival characters, and works by Giovanni Battista Piranesi.

The exhibition will run to 5 September 2014

Venue: de Beer Gallery, Special Collections, 1st floor Central University Library

Hours: 8.30 to 5.00 Monday to Friday

For further enquiries, please contact Dr Donald Kerr, Special Collections, University of Otago.
Email: Donald.kerr@otago.ac.nz
Phone: (03)-479-8330

Nicolas Barker’s Address

Friday, June 6th, 2014 | Shef Rogers | Comments Off on Nicolas Barker’s Address

Nicolas Barker generously agreed to share the text of his talk to the Centre for the Book, for those who were unable to attend.  His rich experience attests to the power of books, and to the deep personal connections that books can represent.  Enjoy, and many thanks to Nicolas for his generosity and for a very enjoyable talk.

Click on the link below to read the full text.
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