“When
the auctioneer’s hammer landed on our high bid, I ducked out into
the lobby and did what was probably a very grotesque dance. I really
couldn’t believe we were successful”
-Steven
Galbraith, Curator at the Cary Collection at RIT
One
of its first projects was our broadside, featuring an original
portrait of Morris. This month we had short conversations with Steven
Galbraith, the Curator of the Cary Collection; Amelia
Hugill-Fontanel, the Associate Curator who restored the press; and
Steven Lee-Davis, the artist who designed and printed our broadside
on the press, about what it was like to obtain and work with this
glorious historical press. Today we'll start with Steven Galbraith:
watch this space as the story of the K-G press unfolds.
Part
I, Giving the Press a Home: Steven Galbraith, Curator of the Cary
Collection, RIT
What
was it like to procure this famous press? Was the process difficult?
Exciting?
The
Kelmscott/Goudy printing press had been on the Cary Collection’s
wish list for some time, but we were taken by surprise to learn that
it was going to be auctioned. Time was tight, but fortunately we
found a donor to be our sponsor. Without his support we likely
wouldn’t have had a chance.
The
auction was actually pretty stressful! The press was lot number 156.
I arrived with our bidding agent, Phil Salmon, around lot 80.
Although the Christie’s auctioneers keep things moving on a tight
schedule, the pace of auctioning the next 75 items seemed
unbelievable slow. It was like a build up of suspense. When it came
time to bid on the Kelmscott/Goudy press, the pace seemed to pick up
considerably. It was almost dizzying. When the auctioneer’s hammer
landed on our high bid, I ducked out into the lobby and did what was
probably a very grotesque dance. I really couldn’t believe we were
successful.
How
does the press fit into the broader collection there?
After
our acquisition of the press was announced, we received so many
messages of support and congratulations. It was wonderful. My
colleagues and I felt strongly that RIT was the right home for the
press, but to receive affirmation from printers, artists, and
historians just confirmed it in the nicest way.
I
think the Cary Collection offers the perfect home for the
Kelmscott/Goudy press. We are a special collections library with a
focus on the history of printing. More specifically, we have strong
collections relating to the former owners of the press, including
Frederic Goudy, who is the topic of 2015 spring exhibition. We also
maintain an active pressroom housing over fifteen historical printing
presses. So the press is in good company.
RIT
more broadly has a long history of teaching printing and graphic
design. Distinguished printers, designers, and book artists frequent
our campus and the Cary Collection. Our university also offers a
unique interdisciplinary environment for the press. For example, over
the past year our Associate Curator Amelia Hugill-Fontanel restored
the press with help from our Curator Emeritus David Pankow. During
this process, they found a few parts that were damaged or, in one
instance, missing. Amelia partnered with RIT’s Department of
Mechanical Engineering to recast new pieces. In this way, RIT and the
Cary Collection have the resources to study, use, and even repair a
nineteenth-century printing press.
Finally,
having the Kelmscott/Goudy press here at RIT is a homecoming of
sorts. The press once belonged to our namesake, Melbert B. Cary Jr.
What
are your plans for the future of the press?
The
Kelmscott/Goudy press has already been included in several RIT
classes, and that will continue to grow. Reaching off campus, we also
hope to host master printing classes on the press, perhaps beginning
this summer. The first broadside we printed on the press was a
collaboration between Amelia Hugill-Fontanel and a wood engraver
named Steven Lee-Davis, who prepared illustrations of five of the
press’s former proprietors. We were very pleased with it. Steven
printed a second broadside featuring just the Morris woodcut for the
US branch of the William Morris Society.
This
coming October 23-24, the Cary Collection will host the 2015 conference of the American Printing History Association. Inspired by
the Kelmscott/Goudy press, our theme will be “Printing on the HandPress and Beyond.”
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