Fuck Yeah, Book Arts! |
A blog for creative types interested in the (un)conventional world of Book Arts! Posts here will feature artist's books, illustration, book binding, typography, sketch-booking, scrap-booking, print-making, paper making, altered books, how to guides, zines, paper engineering and more! Feel free to submit your own work, thoughts around the subject, or even just inspiration new and old.
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Art and Botany: A Xylotheque’s Cabinet of Curiosities
“With its flourishing book industry and emphasis on natural history, the Age of Enlightenment introduced new ways of bringing science and culture to curious audiences. One of its most remarkable inventions was the xylotheque. From the Greek words xylos, ‘wood,’ and theque, ‘repository,’ a xylotheque is, literally a “library of wood”—however, something is lost in this translation. To its audiences, the xylotheque was an experiential botanic expedition, an exquisite art form, and an ingenious way to examine the beauty and value of its plant specimens.
An enhanced version of botanical books that merely illustrated the taxonomy of trees, these volumes were in fact fabricated from their subjects. They were bound in the bark of their respective tree, covered with moses and lichens, and filled with pages fabricated from the tree’s leaves. Hinged with bark, each “book” opened to reveal a cabinet of curiosity. The hollow interior was an exhibit of the tree’s anatomy: tucked neatly inside were dried leaves, seeds, flowers, and a piece of the root. A written description of the tree’s biology and economic use was nested within the spine. Fabulously literal and remarkably beautiful, the xylotheque was a library of art and science, in equal parts. “
scroll/reset (by Mary Bogdan)