Center for Book Arts

Center for Book Arts (CBA) is the first organization of its kind in the United States dedicated to contemporary interpretations of the book as an art object while preserving traditional practices of the art of the book.[1]

The Center for Book Arts
Location
28 West 27th Street, 3rd Floor
Manhattan, New York 10001

Coordinates40°44′41.38″N 73°59′23.6″W
Information
TypeArt Not-for-Profit
Established1974
FounderRichard Minsky
Executive DirectorCorina Reynolds
Classes offeredBookbinding, letterpress printing, paper marbling, typography
Campus typeUrban
Websitecenterforbookarts.org

Letterpress shop at the Center for Book Arts

Founded in 1974 by book artist and master bookbinder Richard Minsky,[2] the non-profit organization offers over 100 classes and workshops in bookbinding, letterpress printing, paper marbling, typography, and related fields.[1] The 5,000-square-foot (460 m2) center in Manhattan features a 900-square-foot (84 m2) exhibition space which is open to visitors.[2][3]

This organization also offers opportunities beyond these classes, including an annual Poetry Chapbook Competition, Artist Residencies, free workshops for writers, and scholarships. Their work is channeled through five program areas: exhibitions, publications, studio access for artists, collections, and educational programs.

In 2017 the Center for Book Arts was awarded a New York City Cultural Tourism Grant.[4]

Collections Initiative

According to their 2011 Annual Report,[5] the Center for Book Arts debuted their digitized collections in October 2010. This Collections Initiative was intended to advance their collections and make them digitally accessible to artist members and teachers alike. It was launched in 2007.

The collections include a Fine Art Collection of over 2500 artist's books, a Reference Collection, and an Archives Collection. Each of these collections can be viewed through the CBA online catalogue paired with a detailed record of the item.[6] While Center of Book Arts emphasizes the creative, newly interpreted forms of their artists' works, there are a significant amount that appear traditional.

Fine Art Collection
This collection presents new interpretations of the book form and other media as art. Works range from postcards with three dimension adornments, to recycled over-used paper and books that fold out from cases.
Reference Collection
This collection includes works that are meant for instructional use. Works can be physically traditional but present creativity within the text. For example, having text in parallel lines of English and Hungarian or simple hand-lettering.
Archives Collection
This collection documents the distinctive history of the Center’s programmatic and administrative activities as the first non-profit book arts organization of its kind in the United States. This collection includes ephemera and institutional records relating to historical exhibitions, classes, publications, and events. [7]

Publications

Exhibition catalogues from Center for Book Arts' long history can be purchased online through the organization's online book shop and through the distributor Oak Knoll Press. Visitors to the organization's website can also purchase letterpress printed poetry broadsides, chapbooks, artist's books and one-of-a-kind bookworks. Thirty percent of all sales is given back to the organization for advancement.[8] In addition to individual artists' sales, a special edition artists' book is published each year, in a similar fashion to the prize poetry chapbooks determined by the annual Poetry Chapbook Competition.

Exhibitions

Center for Book Arts hosts 8-12 exhibitions annually of contemporary and historical book art. The 900 square foot gallery is reserved for group exhibitions focussing on larger thematic topics in the field. Recent examples of this include Americans Looking In (2020),[9] Poetry is not a Luxury (2019),[10] and Inside/Out Self Published Photobooks (2018).

Past exhibits include:

  • The Art of Booklyn (April — June 2002).
  • From Bande Dessinee to Artist's Book: Testing the Limits of France-Belgian Comics (April – June 2013).
  • Featured Artist Project: 2012 Workspace Artists in Residence (April – June 2013).
  • Featured Artist Project: Elena Costelian (April – June 2013).
  • Al-Mutanabbi Street Starts Here (July – September 2013).
  • Pamela Spitzmueller: 2013 Master Faculty Fellow (October – December 2013).
  • Scholars for the Advanced Study in Book Arts 2013 (October – December 2013).
  • My Gallery is the World Now / Books and Ideas after Seth Siegelaub (October – December 2013).
  • Valerie Blackwell Hird: The Maiden Voyages Project (October – December 2013).
  • Silence Unbound: The Artist's Lexicon in the Making (January – March 2014).
  • Featured Artist Project: SP Weather Reports (2008–2013) (January – March 2014).
  • Featured Artist Project: Aqui en la lucha-Steven Daiber (January – March 2014).
  • Once Upon A Time, There Was the End (April – June 2014).
  • Featured Artist Project: Diane Stemper-Sample Close at Hand (April – June 2014).
  • 2013 Workspace Artists-in-Residence (April – June 2014).
  • Zines+ and the World of ABC No Rio (July – September 2014).
  • Livre d'Artiste d'Aujourd'hui: Interdisciplinary Collaborations (July – September 2014).
  • The Internal Machine (October — December 2017).
  • Look, Look, Look…A Playful Book (July — September 2018).
  • CULTIVATING BOOK AND LAND: SALLY ALATALO (October — December 2018).
  • INSIDE/OUT: self-published photobooks (October — December 2018).
  • New Book Art: Laura Byrne, Elizabeth Castaldo, and Ben Denzer (January — March 2019).
  • Dignidad: Maria Veronica San Martin (January — March 2019).
  • RISING TOGETHER: An Exhibition of Artists’ Books, Prints and Zines with a Social Conscience (April — June 2019).
  • NEW BOOK ART: Shelly Bahl, Milcah Bassel, Charlotte Becket, Alix Pentecost Farren, Bundith Phunsombatlert (April — June 2019).
  • Deposits: INGE BRUGGEMAN (April — June 2019).
  • Poetry is not a Luxury (July — September 2019).
  • The Reverse of Landscape: Catalina De La Cruz (July — September 2019).
  • SANCTUARY: IOULIA AKHMADEEVA, AILEEN BASSIS, LEOPOLDO BLOOM, ELIZABETH CASTALDO, PAM COOPER, BÉATRICE CORON, GAIL SMUDA (July — September 2019).
  • Walt Whitman’s Words: Inspiring Artists Today (October — December 2019).
  • The Traveling Artist: Journals by Lydia Rubio (October — December 2019).
  • Clarissa Sligh: Witnessing Through Artist’s Books (October — December 2019).
  • “I open my eyes and see myself under a tree laden with fruit that I cannot name.” (January — March 2020).
  • Warren Lehrer: Books, Animation, Performance, Collaboration (January — March 2020).
  • The Private Life of Rag Dolls: Faride Mereb (January — March 2020).
  • Remembering Walter Hamady: Selections from The Perishable Press (January — March 2020).
  • Makes/Reads: Morcos Key (October 2020-December 2020)
  • Americans Looking In (October 2020-December 2020)
  • Construction Site: Viviane Rombaldi Seppey (October 2020-December 2020)

References

  1. "About The Center for Book Arts". Center for Book Arts. 2010. Retrieved June 28, 2010.
  2. "The History of the CBA". Center for Book Arts. Retrieved June 28, 2010.
  3. "Richard Minsky – Book Artist". Artschools.com. Archived from the original on June 23, 2010. Retrieved June 28, 2010.
  4. "The Center for Book Arts is Awarded a NYC Cultural Tourism Grant - In The News". www.finebooksmagazine.com. Retrieved August 22, 2017.
  5. "Center for Book Arts 2011 Annual Report" . Center for Book Arts. Retrieved November 30, 2014.
  6. "Collections" . Center for Book Arts. Retrieved November 3, 2020.
  7. "About the collection"
  8. "Artist Marketplace" . Center for Book Arts. Retrieved November 30, 2014.
  9. Ahern, Emilie (June 29, 2020). "Americans Looking In". Center for Book Arts. Retrieved November 3, 2020.
  10. Farhat, Maymanah (September 18, 2019). "Poetry is Not a Luxury". Center for Book Arts. Retrieved November 3, 2020.
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