Book design in St. Gallen

  • Exhibition
  • Thursday 4 to Friday 19 March 2010 Extended to Thursday 1 April 2010
  • Opening hours Monday–Friday 9am–6pm (until 9.30pm on Wednesdays)
  • In the Exhibition Room, St Bride Library
  • Admission free
  • Two evening talks
  • Thursday 4 March and Wednesday 17 March 2010 at 7pm
  • Admission £7 · concessions £5 · Friends of St Bride Library £3

Evening talks

You can book tickets for each talk on the relevant page

  1. Thursday 4 March: Jost Hochuli
  2. Wednesday 17 March: Roland Früh, Richard Hollis, Robin Kinroos

Exhibition

For centuries, St. Gallen’s relationship to the book was determined by two institutions: the Stiftsbibliothek, with its extremely valuable mediaeval holdings, and the Kantonsbibliothek Vadiana, originally a humanist library. Renowned for its textile industry, and, from late mediaeval times onwards, as a centre of trade, St. Gallen was not, however, a printers’ town like Basle with Amerbach, Petri and Froben or Zurich with Froschauer.

For this reason, the exhibition looks back on just some 60 years of book design in St. Gallen. The first publisher of note is Zollikofer in the 1940s, with books by Imre Reiner and later with work by Rudolf Hostettler and Max Koller. In the 1950s, Tschudy brought out several noteworthy books, and Erker began publishing in the following decade, with Hans-Peter Kaeser as designer. Jost Hochuli has had an impact on book design not only in St. Gallen, but nationally and internationally, in particular with his work for the VGS Verlagsgemeinschaft St. Gallen and with his books on typographical design, which have been translated into several languages. The design team of TGG Hafen Senn Steiger have developed, since the 1990s, an assured approach to typography that has resulted in some original book design. Interesting in this context is also the Vexer Verlag of Josef Felix Müller, with his artists’ books. Gaston Isoz, who works in Berlin, has produced internationally recognized book designs in recent years; he learnt the basics of his profession at the Schule für Gestaltung in St. Gallen.

Some of the over 65-year-olds are still at work, and coming after the middle generation are young designers who have not long completed their training. The book, that three-dimensional and, once opened, axially symmetrical object, unmatched for its functionality for hundreds of years, will surely continue to offer them, and those who come after them, opportunities for new, original solutions.

Support

Helvetic Centre
Arts Council of Switzerland
Gesellschaft Pro Vadiana, St. Gallen
Stadt St. Gallen
Kulturfürderung Kanton St. Gallen

Printing and beyond