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Themes & Variations: The Publications of Vincent FitzGerald & Company
COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY LIBRARIES, March 2000 Click here for series events
During the New Year 2000 festivities, much was said of the
importance that New York City will have in the coming century. In
the January 2 edition of Bernard Stamler's New York Times
column entitled "Will New York Be Necessary In the 21st
Century?," prominent New Yorkers from diverse fields such as
Columbia President George Rupp and Felix Rohatyn spoke of the
confluence of creative people here that allows for things to happen
that otherwise would not.
Vincent FitzGerald, a Columbia alumnus, is the embodiment of
that nexus of creativity. Now, thanks to the generosity of Sylvia
and Joseph Radov, the Rare Books and Manuscript Library of Columbia
University owns a nearly complete run of the publications of
Vincent FitzGerald & Company.
The exhibition, entitled "Themes & Variations: The
Publications of Vincent FitzGerald & Co." is also in honor
of the 20th anniversary of the beginning of what has grown to be a
very remarkable repertory company. As Village Voice theater critic,
translator, and Columbia alumnus, Michael Feingold, a member of the
company, has written: "In our degraded age of uncaring mass
manufacture ... one artist was able to find so many kindred souls
to share his love for works that are beautiful, meaningful,
individual and scrupulously made."
FitzGerald has brought together the work of such authors as
Jalaluddin Mohammad Rumi, James Joyce, Franz Kafka, Edith Sitwell,
Lee Breuer, and David Mamet, with artists such as Susan Weil,
Judith Turner, Edward Koren, also a Columbia alumnus, Neil
Welliver, Dorothea Rockburn, and James Nares. Texts have been newly
translated by Zahra Partovi, yet another graduate of Columbia, and
Michael Feingold. Other members of the company include artisans
such as book designer and calligrapher Jerry Kelly, paper artist
Paul Wong of Dieu Donné Papermill, and printer Daniel
Keleher of Wild Carrot Press, in addition to Zahra Partovi, who is
also a book binder.
The accompanying catalog, published by Columbia University and
Vincent FitzGerald & Co., is divided into seven sections, with
essays discussing various works of the Company. These are:
"Theater, Music and Translation" by Michael Feingold;
"A Poet's Voice" the work of Jalaluddin Mohammad
Rumi, by Zahara Partovi; "Creating Connections" by Judith
Turner; "Drawn to the Music of James Joyce" by Susan
Weil; "Views of David" the work of David Rattray, by
Eileen Myles; "Alternatives to the Traditional Illustrated
Book" by Donna Stein; and a final section on the Company's
most recent publication, a new edition of Gertrude Stein's
Tender Buttons with etchings by Susan Weil.
The exhibition will also be divided into the same sections as
the catalog. All thirty-six books that have been published to date
by Vincent FitzGerald & Company will be on display. This will
be the first comprehensive exhibition in any research library of
the works of the Company. Separate copies of title pages,
individual prints, and accompanying boxes will also be shown. The
exhibit will also include a wide variety of complementary material
such as correspondence, working drawings, and printing plates.
Events
A series of events will be held at Columbia during the course of
the exhibition. On April 12, 2000, the Library will sponsor an
evening of the works of Rumi, given by translator Zahra Partovi,
reading in Persian and in English, Mathew McClanahan, reading in
English, and Homa Partovi, declaiming in Persian. Other events, to
be arranged by Michael Feingold, include a staged reading by
members of The Atlantic Theater Company of David Mamet's The
Frog Prince and Harry Kondoleon's The Cote d'Azur Triangle;
a performance of Robert Schumann's song cycle "A
Woman's Love and Life" by Joan Morris and William Bolcom;
and readings of the works of Gertrude Stein and James Joyce.
For further information, see our Web site:
http://www.columbia.edu//cu/lweb/indiv/rbml/index.html
In addition to the selections on display in the Kempner Gallery
exhibition, a full set of Judith Turner's portfolio The
Parthenon Pediments, Selected Fragments will be on view at
Columbia's Avery Hall, 100 Level, from March 27 - May 1,
2000.
This exhibition of the work of Vincent FitzGerald & Co. is
also an opportunity to bring attention to the spectacular book arts
collections held by Columbia's Rare Books and Manuscript
Library. When the Rare Book Department was established in 1930,
material that had been collected since the founding of the
University finally had a place where it could be preserved and
used. Hellmut Lehmann-Haupt, the first Rare Books Curator, was
appointed that same year and began the Library's Book Arts
Collection. By 1941, this collection was greatly augmented by the
purchase of the library of the American Type Founders Company, one
of the greatest collections of its kind in the world. Added to
through gift and purchase, the Collection is rich in the working
tools of the graphic arts as well as the final products of
commercial and fine press printers.
Hours during the spring semester are:
Monday, 12:00 - 7:45 p.m.
Tuesday through Friday, 9:00 a.m. - 4:45 p.m.
Monday hours, beginning on May 8, are 12:00 - 4:45 p.m.
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