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Posted: Monday, June 6, 2016

Buffalo State Alumnus Launches New Book at the Burchfield Penney: June 10

The Burchfield Penney Art Center at Buffalo State is pleased to host the launch of living legacy artist and Buffalo State alumnus Richard Kegler’s new book, The Aries Press of Eden, New York, published by RIT Press, on M&T Second Friday, June 10, at 6:00 p.m. in the center’s Collection Study Gallery.

In the book, Kegler, a typographer, printer, and print historian, uncovers an almost lost history of the Aries Press. The book includes a foreword by Burchfield Penney executive director Anthony Bannon.

“The goal of the book is to tell the story of a curious chapter in a long history of printing and independent publishing,” Kegler said. “There are many connections to renowned figures in the art, printing, and typographic worlds of the 1920s, and others may have an interest in this story, as well as knowing about all the materials produced by the press during its short lifespan.”

Spencer Kellogg Jr., a businessman and book designer, founded the Aries Press in Eden, New York, during the 1920s with a vision to produce high-quality book designs. Kellogg hired talented workers with a passion for printing, including a craftsman connected to the nearby Roycroft campus. He also commissioned type designer Frederic Goudy to create a typeface for Aries Press. While the press was only open for four years, it produced many fine standard-setting examples of printing.

In 1926, the first book printed at the Aries Press, The Ghost Ship, by Richard Middleton, was named one of the 50 best-designed books by the American Institute of Graphic Arts. To uphold the high-quality printing values of a private press, no more than 300 copies of a book were printed.

The Aries Press was also known for its connections to William Morris, Rockwell Kent, and Bruce Rogers. Kellogg purchased his printing press from Frederic Goudy. It was later known as the Kelmscott/Goudy Albion Press and was acquired by the Cary Graphic Arts Collection in 2013.

Printers, print historians, and typographers will enjoy the Aries Press story, as will anyone with an interest in Western New York history. The colorful examples highlighted in Kegler’s book provide inspiration for today’s contemporary designers.

Submitted by: Kathleen M Heyworth
Also appeared:
Tuesday, June 7, 2016
Wednesday, June 8, 2016
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