AHIS 503 – Categories and Collections: Print

AHIS 503 – Categories and Collections: PRINT
Spring 2006 / Dr. Daniela Bleichmar
GRI, Mondays 2-5p.m. /
Office hours by appointment

Course description

The starting point for this course is a recognition that collections are often formed or organized by category.

The seminar will consider how print functions as a category of collecting, focusing on the early modern period, 1450-1800. Over the last thirty or so years, cultural and social historians have emphasized the enormous importance of print in the early modern world, proposing the much debated notion of a “print revolution” of equal or greater importance to political, religious, and scientific revolutions. The study of print has shed new light on old topics, such as the production and circulation of ideas, and sparked active lines of research, most notably on the history of the book and reading. However, the history of print has concentrated almost exclusively on the history of the printed word and tended to ignore the printed image (even if there were many more viewers than readers in the early modern period). Similarly, while the history of collecting has gained new momentum over the last few decades, very little attention has been paid to the history of collecting prints when compared to the history of collecting other media. The course will focus on the intersection of these two historiographical lacunae.

The course is divided into three parts. The first part will introduce students to print as medium, discussing on the production of woodcuts, engravings, and etchings; the idea of print as a reproductive medium and issues of originality, authenticity, and copy both in the early modern period and in twentieth-century historiography; and the current state of scholarship on the history of collecting, the history of prints, and the history of the book. The second part will consider the process of collecting prints, principally in the early modern period and to a lesser degree in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, by examining the print market, guidelines for collectors, and individual collections as case studies. The third part will further explore connections between the history of print collections and the history of the book by considering the illustrated book as a print collection in itself, focusing on the encyclopedia (a single book as a collection of all knowledge); the library (as collection of books); the connections between text, image, and epistemology; and the body in print.

Course Mechanics

Each week, we will devote the first half of the seminar to discussing the readings and the second half to discussing primary materials from the Getty’s Special Collections that pertain to the week’s topics. This means that in preparation for each meeting, students will be responsible for two tasks:

(1)  Conducting the assigned readings for classroom discussion; and

(2)  Making an appointment in Special Collections the week prior to each meeting, in order to examine the items that we will be discussing in seminar. A list of items to be studied in Special Collections will be distributed prior to each meeting; all items will be set aside for the class in a special cart labeled with my last name and the class title.

In addition, we will visit the print collections at the Huntington Library and LACMA.

Course Requirements

The success of the seminar format depends on your attendance, dutiful completion of the reading assignments (which are challenging in both length and content), and active participation during our meetings.

Oral assignments (50% of final grade): Each student will act as discussion leader twice over the course of the semester, preparing a short (ca. 10-min.) introduction to the week’s readings and setting up questions for discussion. Each student will also give one short presentation on an item from special collections that relates to the week’s readings. This item may be selected from the week’s primary materials (a list will be distributed each week) or be the student’s own choice.

Written assignments (50% of final grade): The major requirement for the seminar is a final research paper (about 30-pages in length) on a topic of relevance to the course. Students will submit an abstract of their final paper and an annotated bibliography on Monday 04/17. Abstracts will be discussed at the final meeting of the seminar (Monday 04/24), when students will be asked to give a short presentation on their research paper.

Readings

Books will be placed on reserve at the USC AFA library and the GRI library. (NOTE: since USC does not own all of the books we will be using, please make sure to check Homer before searching for a title at AFA. All titles should be at the GRI.)


A course reader with all articles will be available for purchase from Magic Machine.

Seminar schedule

WEEK 1 (01/09): Introduction to the seminar

Course overview, discussion of seminar mechanics.

------PART 1: AN INTRODUCTION TO PRINTS ------

WEEK 2 (01/16): No class (Martin Luther King Jr. Day)

WEEK 3 (01/23): The renaissance print

1.  Landau, David and Peter Parshall, The Renaissance Print: 1470-1550 (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1996)

ADDITIONAL READING / REFERENCE:

Ivins, William, How Prints Look: Photographs with Commentary, rev. and expanded ed. by Marjorie B. Cohn (Boston: Beacon Press, 1987)

Griffiths, Antony, Prints and Printmaking. An Introduction to the History and Techniques (London: British Museum, 1980)

WEEK 4( 01/30): A reproductive medium? Print as original and copy

1.  Pon, Lisa, Raphael, Dürer, and Marcantonio Raimondi: Copying and the Italian Renaissance Print (New Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press, 2004)

2.  Karpinski, Caroline, “The Print in Thrall to its Original: A Historiographic Perspective,” in Kathleen Preciado (ed.), Retaining the original: multiple originals, copies, and reproductions (Washington: National Gallery of Art, 1989), pp. 101-109

3.  Muller, Jeffrey M., “Measures of Authenticity: The Detection of Copies in the Early Literature on Connoisseurship,” in Kathleen Preciado (ed.), Retaining the original: multiple originals, copies, and reproductions (Washington: National Gallery of Art, 1989), pp. 141-149

4.  Link, Anne-Marie, “Carl Ludwig Junker and the Collecting of Reproductive Prints,” Print Quarterly XII no. 4 (December 1995): 361-74

LOOK THROUGH:

5.  Zorach, Rebecca and Elizabeth Rodini (eds.), Paper Museums: The Reproductive Print in Europe, 1500-1800 (Chicago: Smart Museum of Art, The University Of Chicago, 2005)

WEEK 5 (02/06): The history of prints, the history of collecting, and the history of books: a historiographical blitzkrieg

1.  Fun with journals! In order to get a sense of the state of the field, hit the stacks and browse through the last fifteen years of at least two journals in the history of collecting prints and books (more if you have the time and stamina). The point of the exercise is to get a quick historiographical overview (not to go crazy). Choose one article that encapsulates either (a) some of the most important concerns of that journal during those years or (b) an aspect of the publication that strikes you as particularly worthy of discussion, and come ready to talk to the seminar about it for a couple of minutes.Look at a minimum of one of these primary journals:

a)  Print Quarterly

b)  Journal of the History of Collections

c)  Book Collector

And look at either another of those three journals, or one of the secondary journals available at the GRI (from a list I’ll distribute in class).

2.  Ivins, William, Prints and Visual Communication (New York, Da Capo Press, 1969)

3.  Benjamin, Walter, “The work of art in the age of mechanical reproduction”

ADDITIONAL READING:

4.  McKitterick, David, Print, Manuscript, and the Search for Order, 1450-1830 (Cambridge, UK, and NY: Cambridge University Press, 2003), ch. 3: “Pictures in Motley,” pp. 53-96, notes pp. 252-265

5.  Griffiths, Antony, “The Archaeology of the Print,” in Christopher Baker; Caroline Elam; and Genevieve Warwick (eds.), Collecting Prints and Drawings in Europe, c. 1500-1750 (Aldershot, England and Burlington, VT: Ashgate Publishing, 2003), pp. 9-27

------PART 2: COLLECTING PRINTS ------

WEEK 6 (02/13): The market

  1. Clayton, Timothy, The English print 1688-1802 (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1997), selections
  2. Lippincott, Louise, Selling Art in Georgian London. The Rise of Arthur Pond (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1983), pp. 1-10, 55-74, 98-165

3.  Martin, Sylvie, “Robert-Menge Pariset.The Difficulties of a Lyon Printseller in the Eighteenth Century,” Print Quarterly XII no. 3 (September 1995): 231-52

4.  Jones, Malcolm, “How to decorate a Room with Prints, 1674,” Print Quarterly (2003), vol. XX, no. 3, pp. 247-9


WEEK 7 (02/20): No class (President’s Day)

*** EXTRA MEETING*** VISIT TO THE HUNTINGTON LIBRARY: EXTRA-ILLUSTRATED BOOKS

1.  Pointon, Marcia, Hanging the head: portraiture and social formation in eighteenth-century England (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1993), ch. 2: “Illustrious Heads,” pp. 53-78

2.  Peltz, Lucy, “The Pleasure of the Book: Extra-illustration, an 18th-century Fashion,” Things (Summer 1998), v. 8, pp. 7-32

WEEK 8 (02/27): Early modern print collectors (1)

1.  Parshall, Peter, “Art and the Theater of Knowledge: The Origins of Print Collecting in Northern Europe,” in Print Collecting in Sixteenth and Eighteenth Century Europe, Harvard University Art Museums Bulletin, vol. II no. 3 (Spring 1994): 7-36

2.  Griffiths, Antony, “Print Collecting in Rome, Paris, and London in the Early Eighteenth Century,” in Print Collecting in Sixteenth and Eighteenth Century Europe, Harvard University Art Museums Bulletin, vol. II no. 3 (Spring 1994): 37-58

3.  McDonald, Mark P., The print collection of Ferdinand Columbus (1488-1539): a Renaissance collector in Seville (London: British Museum Press, 2004), selections

4.  McDonald, Mark P., “The Print Collection of Philip II at the Escorial,” Print Quarterly (1998), vol. XV, no. 1, pp. 15-35

Primary sources available electronically through “Eighteenth Century Collections Online” (ECCO). From a USC-networked computer, go to http://was.usc.edu/eresources/isd/ and do a keyword search for ECCO.

5.  Piles, Roger de, The art of painting, and the lives of the painters (London, 1706) [English translation of Abrégé de la vie des peintres, 1699], ch. 27, “On the Usefulness and Use of Prints,” and ch. 28, “Of the Knowledge of Pictures,” pp. 69-92

6.  Richardson, Jonathan, Two discourses (London, 1719), vol. II, pp. 193-200 (on prints)

7.  Dubos, abbé (Jean-Baptiste), Critical reflections on poetry, painting and music, (London, 1748), vol. I, pp. 392-3

WEEK 9 (03/06): Early modern print collectors (2)

1.  Bury, Michael, “The Taste for Prints in Italy to c. 1600,” Print Quarterly (March 1985) vol II, no. 1, pp. 12-26

2.  Brookes, Anne, “Richard Symonds and Thomas Isham as Collectors of Prints in Seventeenth-Century Italy,” in Edward Chaney (ed.), The evolution of English collecting: the reception of Italian art in the Tudor and Stuart periods (New Haven and London: Yale University Press, 2003), pp. 337-395

3.  Bury, Michael, “Giulio Mancini and the organization of a print collection in early seventeenth-century Italy,” in Christopher Baker; Caroline Elam; and Genevieve Warwick (eds.), Collecting Prints and Drawings in Europe, c. 1500-1750 (Aldershot, England and Burlington, VT: Ashgate Publishing, 2003), pp. 79-84

4.  Dethloff, Diana, “Sir Peter Lely’s Collection of Prints and Drawings,” in Baker, et al., Collecting Prints and Drawings in Europe, c. 1500-1750 (Aldershot, England and Burlington, VT: Ashgate Publishing, 2003), pp. 123-139

5.  Christopher Baker, “The Aldrich Prints: A Late Seventeenth-Century Collection, its Sources and Arrangement,” in Edward Chaney (ed.), The evolution of English collecting: the reception of Italian art in the Tudor and Stuart periods (New Haven and London: Yale University Press, 2003), pp. 396-426

6.  Robinson, William W, “‘This Passion for Prints’: Collecting and Connoisseurship in Northern Europe during the Seventeenth Century,” in Clifford S. Ackley, Printmaking in the Age of Rembrandt (Boston: Museum of Fine Arts, 1981), pp. xxvii-xlviii

7.  Véronique Meyer, “The Inventory of Gilles Rousselet (1610-1686),” Print Quarterly (1985), vol. 2, no. 4, pp. 299-308

8.  Cohn, Marjorie B., A Noble Collection: The Spencer Albums of Old Master Prints, Cambridge, Massachusetts, Harvard University Art Museums, 1992, pp. 11-55, 288-292
LOOK THROUGH catalogue, artist checklist pp. 293-365

WEEK 10 (03/13): No class (Spring Break)

WEEK 11 (03/20): Collecting prints in the 19th and 20th centuries

1.  Griffiths, Antony, Landmarks in print collecting: connoisseurs and donors at the British Museum since 1753 (London: British Museum Press and Houston: The Museum of Fine Arts, 1996), selections

2.  Choose your own adventure: Look through at least one of the following guides for the print collector, taking note of the categories they use, the attributes they emphasize, the recommendations they make to potential collectors. (All on reserve at the Getty.)

a)  Willshire, William Hughes, An introduction to the study & collection of ancient prints, 2nd ed. (London: Ellis & White, 1877)

b)  Whitman, Alfred, The Print-Collector’s Handbook [1901] (Detroit: Tower Books, 1971)

c)  Bayard, Émile, L’art de reconnaître les gravures anciennes (Paris: E. Gründ, 1925)

d)  Smith, André, Concerning the education of a print collector; with a technical supplement illustrating the different methods of print making by Harry Sternberg and Will Barnet (New York, Harlow, Keppel & co., [1941?])

e)  Zigrosser, Carl and Christa M. Gaehde. A guide to the collecting and care of original prints, sponsored by the Print Council of America (New York: Crown Publishers, 1965)

f)  Brown, J.H.U. A guide to collecting fine prints (Metuchen, NJ: Scarecrow Press, 1989)

g)  Turner, Silvie, Print collecting: selecting, evaluating and caring for fine prints (New York, NY: Lyons & Burford, 1996)

3.  LOOK THROUGH: Lawrence’s dealer print prices international (Phoeniz, AZ: Gordon’s Art Reference, Inc., 1998-2002), on reserve at the Getty and also available as an electronic resource

------PART 3: PRINTS AND BOOKS ------

WEEK 12 (03/27): Books as collections: the rise of reference works and the encylopedia

1.  Heesen, Anke te, The World in a Box: The Story of an Eighteenth-century Picture Encyclopedia (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2002)

2.  Chartier, Roger, “Libraries without Walls,” Representations (Spring, 1993), no. 42, Special Issue: Future Libraries, pp. 38-52

3.  Yeo, Richard R., “A Solution ot the Multitude of Books: Ephraim Chambers’s Cyclopaedia (1728) as ‘The Best Book in the Universe’,” Journal of the History of Ideas (Jan., 2003), vol. 64, no. 1, Special Issue: Early Modern Information Overload, pp. 61-72