The funds for this post are available until 31 December 2026 in the first instance.
Closing date: 15 September 2023
At the intersection among the arts, science, and technology, printing is widely recognised as the invention of the millennium. However, and in spite of a resurgence of traditional typographic methods among artists and craftspeople, letterpress equipment and technology face an uncertain future.
Funded by the Arts and Humanities Research Council (AHRC), Small performances is a three year (2024-2026) interdisciplinary project that will make a substantial contribution to the history of printing technology, whilst ensuring it is a living process that will continue into the future. At its heart is the exceptional collection of typographic punches designed, cut and used at the workshop of England's foremost printer, John Baskerville (1707-75), and now housed in the Historical Printing Room, Cambridge University Library. Bringing together printing historians, heritage scientists, craftspeople, and type designers around the AHRC-funded Cambridge Heritage Science Hub (CHERISH), this project will reconstruct 18th-century punch-cutting using a combination of pioneering scientific and artisanal methods that will benefit current industrial and craft applications as well as educational projects.
A key element of the project will be the reverse engineering of the craft of punch-cutting, through a combination of pioneering scientific analyses borrowed from heritage science, engineering and archaeology, and experimental replications involving jewellers, blacksmiths, metal engravers, and typeface designers. Using forensic and engineering approaches, we will evaluate the loss of design fidelity that occurs between the manufacture of the punch and the character that appears in the printed book. We will also digitise Baskerville’s key books and create a new digital Baskerville typeface, in addition to a variety of knowledge exchange ventures.
If you have any questions about this vacancy or the application process, please contact Prof Marcos Martinón- Torres.
More information and an application form HERE.