In
Folio: Rare Volumes in the Stanford University Libraries
|
IN FOLIO EXHIBIT INDEX |
The Stanford
University Libraries’ Department of Special Collections
held the exhibit In Folio: Rare Volumes in the Stanford
University Libraries. Featuring more than thirty titles,
the exhibit was on view at Stanford University’s Cecil
H. Green Library, Peterson Gallery, second floor of the Bing
Wing, from August 4 through November 9, 2003. The exhibit was
free and open to the public.
Bibliographically
speaking, a folio is a book whose printed sheets have been folded
only once to form leaves of text or illustration. In contrast,
a quarto is a book whose sheets have been folded twice; an octavo,
a book whose sheets have been folded three times. Generally
speaking, a folio is simply a large book. Each of the folios
in this exhibit is not only great in size; each is great as
well in significance, being important editions of important
texts. These folio volumes have something else in common as
well: each has been used in a class or academic presentation
over the past two years. These volumes, then, are important
in their own right and lovely in their grandness, and they are
also vital to the teaching mission of Stanford University.
In Folio
features titles spanning the first five centuries of printing.
Highlights include the 1469 edition of Pliny’s Natural
History, a 1497 edition of Dante’s Commedia,
the first edition of the Nuremberg Chronicle (1493),
William Blake’s engravings in Edward Young’s Night
Thoughts (1797), John Dryden’s translation of Virgil’s
works (1697), the Cranach Press Hamlet (1930), The
Foulis Press Homer (1756-1758), and Abraham Ortelius’
magnificent atlas (1595).
Image
top left: Illustration by William Blake, from The Complaint,
and the Consolation, or, Night Thoughts by Edward Young,
London, 1797.
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