Taken from a press release to Exlibris and additional notes supplied by
the associate curator, Alesandra Schmidt Woodhouse:
On view at the Watkinson Library, Trinity College, Hartford, CT, is an
exhibition titled:
FEW, BUT ROSES: CLASSICAL TEXTS AND FINE PRINTING IN THE 20th
CENTURY.
This exhibition, taking its title from the introduction to
Meleager's anthology, GARLAND--in which the Hellenistic poet writes that
Sappho's poems, though few, are all roses--is an anthology of fine
printing of the classics at home and abroad in our century, from 1901 to
1973. From the publications of the Ashendene Press of Chelsea, England,
to those produced by the Gehenna Press of Northampton, Massachusetts, all
are "roses," relatively few in number but beautiful. There are a little
under 30 titles shown, about evenly divided between Greek and Latin
literature, and about half published in this country and about half
abroad. Also shown are ephemeral publications (e.g., the prospectus for
the Mosher checklist published by Gehenna Press in 1966). The exhibit came
about in connection with the annual meeting of a classical association
held at Trinity College. The meeting concluded in the Watkinson Library
with a reception and a presentation about the exhibition.
The fine presses represented, in addition to Ashendene and Gehenna, are
Shakespeare Head, Nonesuch, Chismark, Chilmark, Officina Bodoni,
T. B. Mosher, the Limited Editions Club, and the Bibliophile
Society. Texts are in Latin, Greek, and in translation, often with
illustrations by prominent artists. Highlights include the Ashendene
Thucydides, the Limited Editions CLub publication of Aristophanes'
Lysistrata illustrated and signed by Picasso, and the Officina
Bodoni
reprint of the 1470 Veronese edition of Caxton's translation of
Aesop. Also shown are ephemeral publications of some of the
presses, such as specimen pages and prospectuses relating to books on
display.
The exhibition will run from Oct. 25, 1999 through January 2000. For
information about the exhibition please call or e-mail Alesandra Schmidt
Woodhouse at (860)297-2267 or at .