Book Decoration in America 1890 - 1910
The following is taken from the exhibition catalogue, Book Decoration
in America 1890-1910 -- A Guide to an Exhibition by Laurie W.
Crichton. Revised by Wayne G. Hammond and Robert L. Volz.
(Williamstown, MA: Chapin Library, Williams College, 1979), pp. 45-47.
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THE GEORGICS, by Virgil. Portland, Me.: Mosher, 1899. 2 vols. 15.5 x 9 cm.
Vol. I shown: front cover pictorial design; title page and 93 text borders
(I repeated design); 3 ornaments as divisional endings.
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"Old World Series." Portland, Me.: Mosher, various dates. 18 x 10 cm.
Three volumes shown: THE TALE OF CHLOE, by George Meredith (1899);
AUCASSIN & NICOLETE, trans. Andrew Lang (1895), edition of 100 on Japan
vellum; and THE PEARL, trans. Marian Mead (1908). Front cover designs
(The Pearl signed "C"); 4 to 9 ornaments (some designs repeated) in
each volume as half-title and divisional title decorations and as head-
and tailpieces; 2 additional pictorial headpieces and a figured tail
ornament in AUCASSIN & NICOLETE, signed with "PH" monogram.
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"Vest Pocket Series." Portland, Me.: Mosher, various dates. 14.5 x 7.5 cm.
Four volumes shown: LAUS VENERIS, by Algernon Charles Swinburne (1900);
QUATTROCENTISTERIA, by Maurice Hewlett (I908); A LITTLE BOOK OF NATURE
THOUGHTS, by Fiona Macleod (I908); and the RUBAIYAT OF OMAR KHAYYAM,
trans. Edward FitzGerald (I909). Front cover designs by Frederic W. Goudy;
9 to 13 ornaments (some designs repeated) in each volume as half-title and
divisional title decorations and as head- and tailpieces.
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AN IDYL OF FIRST LOVE, by George Meredith. Portland, Me.: Mosher, I906.
14.5 x 10 cm. Cover design; 2 headpieces, 2 tailpieces, and 4 initials (3
designs, 1 repeated).
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MIMES, by Marcel Schwob. Portland, Me.: Mosher, 1901 21 x 13 cm. Front
cover, spine, and title page designs and lettering signed "C"; 24 initials
(9 designs, 4 repeated).
The typical book issued by Thomas Bird Mosher (I 852-1923) of Portland,
Maine,
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contains a few Renaissance-style headpieces coupled with other touches of
ornamentation and decorative initials. These decorations serve as accents
in the usually small volumes that otherwise feature clear printing with
small type and generous margins. Occasionally a book was more fully
embellished, such as the Georgics, with its deep green festoons on every
page, but the decoration was always applied with restraint.
The greatest decorative variation and originality in the Mosher books is
in their covers. Of the fourteen series issued, the most widely
distributed (more than 100,000 copies) was the Old World Series
(1895-1909), for which covers were designed by a number of different
artists, most of them unidentified. These covers are not masterpieces;
nevertheless, their almost limitless variety from title to title gives to
each book an artistic mark of distinction. Most of the volumes bear on the
front cover a two-and-one-half inch-square vignette of simple composition:
for example, the symmetrical intertwining vine, adapted from Renaissance
ornamentation, of The Talc of Chloe (Plate V), the asymmetrical
decoration of Aucassin & Nicolete, and the flowing Art Nouveau
vignette of The Pearl (Plate V). Mosher's placement of a discreet
ornament works well because of his concept of a book's design as one of
clean, timeless elegance with which almost any simple adornment would be
appropriate.
In contrast, for the Vest Pocket Series (1899-1913), issued in simple
grayish-blue wrappers, Mosher utilized variations upon a theme. Each
volume in this series has on its front cover one of four different but
similar red-orange intertwining vines, randomly printed within one of four
different but similar rectilinear black borders (Plate V). The vines in
these covers are the signed work of Frederic W. Goudy, then (1899-1900) a
commercial artist and free-lance designer. The decorations exhibit the
obvious influence of Morris and other English designers, from whose work
Goudy drew through his avid reading of contemporary literature dealing
with the decorative arts.
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In later reprints and repeats the "G" signature was dropped from the
designs. Whether Goudy also drew the borders is not clear.
Though the name "Mosher" rarely conjures up an image of Art Nouveau,
covers for the Mosher books were occasionally decorated in this style, and
none more completely than the cover of an Idyl of First Love
Together with its eleven companion pieces in the Ideal Series of Little
Masterpieces (1906-09), this cover features an abstract pattern formed by
undulating gold lines with attached leaf-like forms, with part of the
spaces between the lines filled with small circles, but with bulbous
openings left bare, through which the rich green of the cover paper shows
through. A look a second longer, however, reveals a different pattern,
with the undecorated spaces as the principal design element and the gold
lines and circles as an intricate, flat ground.
The front cover of Schwob's Mimes (Plate VI) also features Art
Nouveau decoration, in this case an asymmetrical design of stylized whole
poppy plants which end in realistic purple blooms. Patterned wisps flit
lightly across the cover and evoke the lines from the text of the fifth of
these Symbolist pieces: ". . . if I have woven them garlands of violets
and poured forth libations of wine and milk from my water-jars; if I have
gathered poppies for them at the hour when the sun kisses the crest of my
wall, mid swarms of gnats that float on the evening air...." A related Art
Nouveau decoration on the title page incorporates the water-jars, while
the poppy motif con-tinues onto the spine. Possibly, the artist for Mimes
who signed himself "C" was Thomas Maitland Cleland (1880-1964): everything
about the work of "C" is con-sistent with the young Cleland's then
unestablished style, including the elegant hand lettering of the cover and
the title page.
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(-1-) Thompson, pp. 190-97, and Blumenthal, pp. 41-43, both include Mosher
in their surveys of American bookmaking. The fullest account of the Mosher
publications is Benton L. Hatch, comp. and ed., Check List of the
Publications of Thomas Bird Mosher . . . with a Biographical Essay by Ray
Nash (Amherst [Mass.], 1966). The sanest appreciation of Mosher is
Norman H. Strouse, The Passionate Pirate (North Hills, Pa., 1964).
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(-2-) Frederic W. Goudy, A Half-Century of Typo Design and Typography
1895 1945 (New York, 1946). pp. 41, 45-46. Goudy's discussion of his
associations in the late nineties (pp. 30-51 et passim), especially his
work with W. W. Denslow and Elbert Hubbard and both Goudy's and Bruce
Rogers' associations with Mosher, suggests that further research and
examination of design examples are needed.
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(-3-) A review of Cleland's early work shows a definite Kelmscott-Walter
Crane influence with more than a dash of Goodhue's Gothicizing, while his
later work was greatly influenced by diverse Renaissance models. Cleland's
Art Nouveau bookplate for Laura Finley (reproduced in Bowdoin, p. 181),
however, as well as his tailpiece for his own 1901 Cornhill Press edition
of Housman's Blind Love (illustration in Thompson, p. 166),
demonstrates his ability to design in the more modern mode. Cleland signed
much of his work with a "C," drawn in a characteristic manner. The same
mark appears on several later Old World Series covers of Art Nouveau
design.
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