Chapter 7 Flashcards
Renaissance
- “Revival” or “Rebirth”
- originally used to denote the period that began the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries in Italy, when classical literature of ancient Greece and Rome was revived and read anew
- the word is now generally used to encompass the period marking the transition from the medieval to the modern world.
- In the history of graphic design, the renaissance of classical literature and the world of the Italian humanists are closely bound to an innovative approach to book design
Trademark
An emblem designed, in this case, to identify books produced by a certain printer. These emblems bear witness to the revived attention to Egyptian hieroglyphics during the Renaissance and are forerunners to those used in modern graphic design
Reversed designs
White forms on a solid background
Type specimen sheet
Displays a range of typographic sixes and styles. The first printer’s type specimen sheet was issued by Erhard Ratdolt upon his return to Augsburg, Germany from Venice
Fleurons
- “printer’s flowers”
- decorative elements cast like type.
- An edition of Ars Moriendi published on April 28, 1478, by Italian printers Goivanni and Alberto Alvise in Verona is believed to be the first design that used fleurons.
- The Verona Ars Moriendi used these as graphic elements on the title page design and as fillers in short lines that left blank areas in the text blocks
Humanism
A philosophy if human dignity and worth that defined man as capable of using reason and scientific inquiry to achieve both an understanding of the world and self-meaning. A turning away from medieval beliefs toward a new concern for huma potential and value characterized Renaissance humanism
Pocket book
- developed by Aldus Manutius
- a smaller book, made more econimical by being set in an italic type font. Between the smaller size type and the narrower width of italic characters, a fifty percent gain in the number of characters per line of a given measure was achieved
Cancelleresa
A slanted handwriting style favored among scholars for its speed and informality
Renaissance man
a unique individual of genius whose wide-ranging activities in various philosophic, literary, artistic, or scientific disciplines result in important contributions to more than one field.
Headpiece
an ornamental design at the top of a page
tailpiece
an ornamental design at the bottom of a page
arabesque
a complex, ornate design of intertwined floral, foliate, and geometric figures
Imagines Mortis
- “the Dance of Death”
- The procession in which skeletons ot corpses escort the living to their graves was a major theme in the visual arts as wall as in music, drama, and poetry. This use of art as an ominous reminder to the unfaithful of the inevitability of death originated in the fourteenth century, when the great waves of plague swept over Europe
bracketing
the connecting curves that unify the serif with the main stroke of the letter
Johannes da Spira
- d.1470
- A Mainz goldsmith, was given 5-year monopoly on printing in Venice and published his first book, Epistolae ad familiares (letter to families) by Cicero, in 1469. His innovative and handsome roman type cast off some of the Gothic qualities found in the fonts of Sweynheym and Pannartz. Da Spira’s 1470 edition of De civitate Dei, printed in partnership with his brother, Vindelinus, was the first typographic book with printed page numbers