Amelia Hugill-Fontanel, Associate Curator in the Cary Collection at RIT, Historian, and Letterpress Printer

14/06/2021 49 min Episodio 12

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Episode Synopsis

Amelia Hugill-Fontanel, the Associate Curator in the Cary Collection at the Rochester Institute of Technology, discusses the history of the collection, the nature of preserving the past, and the rapid development of printing—especially how quickly reproduction sped up—across the early part of the 19th century.She’s held her position at RIT since 2009, and her time working with collection dates back a further decade. She’s an active artist and letterpress printer. She manages the Cary Collection’s extensive set of historical presses and type, which are used actively in teaching and research, and also lectures extensively printing history and practice. Amelia is the vice president of programs at the American Printing History Association.Notes from This Episode:Cary Collection at RITRIT’s Digital Collections, which includes holdings from the Cary CollectionGeorge Eastman MuseumDr. Therese Mulligan, chair of school of photo at RITKodak Center for Creative Imaging (and the controversy behind it, only in part)London’s St Bride Printing LibraryLetter from the FBI to Martin Luther King, Jr.Robert Bringhurst’s short book on Arrighi, The Typographic Legacy Of Ludovico Degli ArrighiRIT students discovered palimpsest on manuscript pageA Collation of Facts Related to Fast TypesettingThe iron hand pressMoxon’s Mechanick Exercises: The Doctrine Of Handy Works Applied To The Art Of PrintingStanhope didn’t patent his press“Flong Time, No See,” my monograph on flongs and stereotypesEd Folsom’s monograph “Whitman Making Books/Books Making Whitman: A Catalog and Commentary”Making Printer’s Type by Rich HopkinsStephen O. Saxe, who bequeathed his collection to RIT