A New Old Idiom of Design

Опубликовано: 10 Декабрь 2024
на канале: TypeWknd
127
5

A talk by Pooja Saxena

Through this talk, we will take a sojourn in the northern plains of India in the nineteenth century during the heyday of lithographic book printing in the region to take a peek at how local printing and book design flourished, and the lessons that may offer for us today. At the time, lithographed books produced by local publishers were a stepping stone between handwritten manuscripts and Western books. And even though they were soon over-ridden by their letter-pressed counterparts, they are excellent examples of a design idiom that was at once vernacular and cosmopolitan. It developed free from the constraints that metal type imposed on the letterforms of Devanagari and Nastaliq scripts, and from its limitations when it came to syncretic arrangements of text and images. Instead it begat striking visual compositions, and ingenious reproduction techniques unique to lithography. The content of the books was carefully chosen to appeal to an audience more familiar with oral knowledge traditions, and came with different types and levels of literacy, rejecting colonial impulses. Not to mention, the books were purposefully ornamental and multilingual, without any preoccupation with “minimalism” or the duress of treating vastly different scripts visually alike. This often-forgotten chapter of book design from India, introduced in the talk, will open up new possibilities of thought as well as practice for contemporary type designers and typographers to explore and learn from.