Symposium—Early Codices
This symposium, organized in conjunction with the exhibition The Codex and Crafts in Late Antiquity, aims to give an overview of the scholarship around the innovation of the codex in late antiquity and its gradual establishment as the standard form of the book until today. Speakers will focus on two distinct but complementary aspects—the historical, which derives primarily from the study of codices as texts, and the material, which derives from the study of codices as physical objects. The purpose of both the exhibition and the symposium is to merge different disciplines, points of view, and approaches in order to gain a better understanding of the early history and evolution of one of the most fascinating and culturally significant objects, the book.
Throughout history the number of books produced must have been huge, but the number of books lost is also substantial. Subtracting those destroyed from those created leaves us the number of books preserved today, which, especially for those produced in the earliest stages of the evolution of the book is frustratingly small. This scarcity of physical evidence is partly what makes the surviving codices from the early centuries extremely important, not just for their texts but also for their technical and material culture aspects. Conserving these precious relics is a challenge that poses both physical and theoretical problems, but at the same time grants a privileged access which enables a closer study and understanding of the technical history of codices.
1 pm
Peter N. Miller
Dean and Professor, Bard Graduate Center
Ivan Gaskell
Professor, Curator and Head of the Focus Gallery Project, Bard Graduate Center
Welcome
Dean and Professor, Bard Graduate Center
Ivan Gaskell
Professor, Curator and Head of the Focus Gallery Project, Bard Graduate Center
Welcome
Georgios Boudalis
Head of the Book and Paper Conservation Laboratory, Museum of Byzantine Culture, Thessaloniki, Greece
Introduction
Head of the Book and Paper Conservation Laboratory, Museum of Byzantine Culture, Thessaloniki, Greece
Introduction
1:20 pm
Brent Nongbri
Independent Scholar
The Emergence of the Codex in the Roman Empire
Independent Scholar
The Emergence of the Codex in the Roman Empire
2 pm
Dirk Rohmann
Lecturer, University of Wuppertal
Canon Formation: Book-Burning and the Christian Codex in Late Antiquity
Lecturer, University of Wuppertal
Canon Formation: Book-Burning and the Christian Codex in Late Antiquity
2:40 pm
Coffee Break
3 pm
Francisco H. Trujillo
Associate Book Conservator, Morgan Library and Museum
Incipient Forms: Codicology of the Coptic Bindings Collection at the Morgan Library & Museum
Associate Book Conservator, Morgan Library and Museum
Incipient Forms: Codicology of the Coptic Bindings Collection at the Morgan Library & Museum
3:40 pm
Maria Fredericks
Drue Heinz Book Conservator, Thaw Conservation Center, Morgan Library and Museum
The Coptic Manuscripts at the Morgan Library & Museum: Conservation Then and Now
Drue Heinz Book Conservator, Thaw Conservation Center, Morgan Library and Museum
The Coptic Manuscripts at the Morgan Library & Museum: Conservation Then and Now
4:20 pm
Georgios Boudalis
Head of the Book and Paper Conservation Laboratory, Museum of Byzantine Culture
Codex as Craft: Can a Book be Compared to a Sock?
Head of the Book and Paper Conservation Laboratory, Museum of Byzantine Culture
Codex as Craft: Can a Book be Compared to a Sock?
5 pm
Reception
This event will be livestreamed. Please check back the day of the event for a link to the video. To watch videos of past events please visit our YouTube page.
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