[Libri] Printer and Oliphant Press Founder Ronald Gordon Will Lecture at Amherst College Friday, Sept. 21
Prof. James Wald (der Geist, der stets verneint)
jwald at hampshire.edu
Mon Sep 17 00:41:42 EDT 2007
August 21,
2007
Contact: Stacey Schmeidel
For immediate
release
Director of Public Affairs
413/542-2321
Printer and Oliphant Press Founder Ronald Gordon Will Lecture at
Amherst College Friday, Sept. 21
AMHERST, Mass.—Ronald Gordon, a leading printer and typographic
designer who founded the Oliphant Press in New York, will speak on
“The Oliphant Press: Tradition & Transformation” at 4 p.m. Friday,
Sept. 21, in the Archives and Special Collections of Robert Frost
Library at Amherst College. A reception will follow. Both events are
open to the public at no charge.
Gordon studied printing and book design with Leonard Baskin as an
undergraduate. He has written: “Amherst played an essential role in
my becoming a graphic designer and printer.” He founded the Oliphant
Press shortly after graduating from Amherst in 1965. In the four
decades since its founding, the Oliphant Press has carried on a
tradition of fine printing and typographic design. Beginning as a
letterpress printer and designer, Gordon has adapted his style and
his design skills as the craft shifted to computer typesetting,
offset printing and now, digital printing. The press name is an
archaic form of “elephant”; its logo appears almost exclusively on
advertising rather than on books.
Gordon’s talk coincides with an exhibition, “The Seahorse and the
Elephant: Amherst and Fine Printing,” which will be held in the
Amherst College Archives and Special Collections from September 1
through December 16. The exhibition features the work of Gordon and
another Amherst graduate, Roland Wood ’20, who (with John Fass) co-
founded The Harbor Press. The Harbor Press was synonymous with fine
printing in New York for almost two decades (1925-1942). Its seahorse
logo appeared in dozens of versions on many Harbor Press productions.
Thanks to generous gifts from Gordon and Wood, Amherst College’s
Archives and Special Collections holds a comprehensive collection of
the productions of the Oliphant Press. The Archives and Special
Collections also holds the archival collection of the productions of
the Harbor Press, including not only the books they published, but
also much of the ephemera—advertising material, job printing and
privately printed books and pamphlets.
“The Seahorse and the Elephant” is co-curated by Daria D’Arienzo,
head of archives and special collections, and John Lancaster, retired
curator of special collections. The exhibition is part of “Bookmarks:
A Celebration of the Art of the Book,” a region-wide festival from
September 2007 to January 2008 that will bring to life the Pioneer
Valley’s great literary traditions through film, family events,
lectures and readings. The initiative is sponsored by the Amherst
College Library (http://www.amherst.edu/library/) and Museums10, a
partnership of 10 museums and friends (including Amherst College’s
Mead Art Museum, the Emily Dickinson Museum and the Museum of Natural
History) within the Pioneer Valley. More information about
“Bookmarks” is available on the Museums10 Website, www.museums10.org.
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