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Bruce Rogers (typographer)

Bruce Rogers (May 14, 1870 – May 21, 1957) was an American typographer and type designer, acclaimed by some as among the greatest book designers of the twentieth century.[1] Rogers was known for his "allusive" typography, rejecting modernism, seldom using asymmetrical arrangements, rarely using sans serif type faces, often favoring faces such as Bell (at the time known only as Brimmer), Caslon, his own Montaigne, a Jensonian precursor to his masterpiece of type design Centaur. His books can fetch high sums at auction.

Bruce Rogers
Photo of Bruce Rogers
Born
Albert Bruce Rogers

(1870-05-14)May 14, 1870
Lafayette, Indiana, United States
DiedMay 21, 1957(1957-05-21) (aged 87)
NationalityAmerican
Other namesBR
Known forTypographer
Notable workOxford Lectern Bible, Centaur typeface, bookplates
SpouseAnna Embree Baker

Early life

Born Albert Bruce Rogers in Linwood, now part of Lafayette, Indiana, he never used the name Albert and was known to associates as "BR." Rogers received a B.S. from Purdue University in 1890. He enrolled at age 16, and was quickly recognized in his studies of illustration, allowing him to work with University catalogs, lettering for the yearbook, and the College Quarterly Magazine.[2] At Purdue, he worked with political cartoonist John T. McCutcheon on the student newspaper and yearbook.

After graduation, Rogers worked as both an artist for the Indianapolis News and as office boy for a railroad. After seeing several Kelmscott Press editions, Rogers became interested in producing fine books, and so moved to Boston, then a center of publishing, where he free-lanced for L. Prang and Co.[3]

Typographer and type designer

 
Rogers bookplate for the Newberry Library, featuring Rudolf Koch's Eve Bold typeface

Riverside Press period (1895–1911)

In 1895 he took a position designing books for Riverside Press in Cambridge, Massachusetts where he worked on trade books and designed book advertisements for the Atlantic Monthly. In 1900 a Department of Special Bookmaking for the production of fine editions was created with Mr. Rogers its head. More than sixty of these Riverside Press Editions were designed by Rogers, decorated with illustrations and ornament largely by him, and printed on handmade, damped paper.[4] It was there, in 1901, that he cut his first typeface, Montaigne, a Venetian style face named for the first book it appeared in, a 1903 limited edition of The Essays of Montaigne.[5]

New York/Dyke Mill period (1911–1916)

In 1912 Rogers moved to New York City, where he worked both as an independent designer and as house designer for the Metropolitan Museum of Art. It was for the Museum's 1915 limited edition of Maurice de Guérin's The Centaur that he designed his most famous type-face, Centaur. Like Montaigne it was based on the Venetian faces of Nicolas Jenson. Rogers considered this face to be an improvement on his earlier Montaigne, both because his design had matured and because, on the advice of Frederic Goudy, he had employed Robert Wiebking as the punch-cutter; and Rogers used Centaur extensively for the rest of his career[6] The Centaur was produced by Rogers in Dyke Mill at Carl Purington Rollins' Montague Press (hand-set by his wife, Anne Rogers (1867–1931)), and it is now one of the most collected books ever printed.[7]

First visit to Britain

In 1916 Rogers left for England to work with Emery Walker, hoping to establish a press for fine editions. However, because of wartime conditions, only one book was produced, and Rogers soon sought employment with the Cambridge University Press. He found conditions at the press to be poor, and his report to the syndics of the press resulted in many reforms and paved the way for the hiring of Stanley Morison as typographic adviser.[8]

Mount Vernon period (1919–1928)

After returning to the U.S., Rogers met William Edwin Rudge, who began to use Rogers extensively as a book designer for his Mount Vernon Press. This was Rogers' most productive and remunerative period, as he worked three days a week designing books for Rudge, served as typographic adviser and designed books for Harvard University Press (from 1920 to 1936), served as typographic adviser to Lanston Monotype, and produced a few books for the June House Press, which he operated in partnership with James Raye Wells and James Hendrickson.[9]

Second visit to Britain

In 1928 Rogers left for England in hopes of producing an edition of Homer's Odyssey translated by T.E. Lawrence. Despite Rogers's being very "bookish," he soon became close, lifelong friends with the dashing Lawrence of Arabia. The project took four years and the fine book was printed in Centaur types, on gray handmade paper, bound in black Niger leather. Rogers also became engaged to produce the renowned Oxford Lectern Bible for Oxford University Press. This project took six years, requiring annual trips to Oxford to oversee its completion in 1935. Joseph Blumenthal called this "The most important and notable typographic achievement of the twentieth century."[10] To produce the Bible, an italic complement to Centaur was needed. As he did not feel capable of designing the sort of chancery face that he thought appropriate, Rogers chose to pair Centaur with Frederic Warde's Arrighi, a pairing retained to this day.[11]

October House period (1932–1957)

In later years Rogers worked as a free-lancer, designed his World Bible, and wrote and designed his book on printing, Paragraphs on Printing, published by William E. Rudge's Sons in 1943.[12]

Personal life

In 1900 Rogers married Anna Embree Baker, and they remained together until her death in 1936. As Rogers spent most of his working life as a free-lancer, they lived frugally and were often in financial straits. Rogers purchased October House, his residence in New Fairfield, Connecticut, in 1925, and made this his permanent home from 1932 until his death. Rogers was a member of the Typophiles, and smoked imported English cigarettes.[13]

Death

Rogers died on May 18, 1957, in New Fairfield, Connecticut.

In later life Rogers and his wife Anne donated a substantial collection of books, early manuscripts, and antique furniture to Purdue University's Special Collection Library. The bulk of his papers are in the collection of the Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library.[14]

Works

Sayings of Bruce Rogers

  • "Don't borrow contemporary work — you are sure to be found out."
  • "Never apologize."
  • "The first requisite of all book design is orderliness."
  • When told that something he had produced was not "according to Hoyle" he answered, "We're Hoyle.".[15]

Typefaces

Bookplates

In addition to his work as a typographer and type designer, Rogers worked designing ephemera, such as bookplates. Bookplates by Rogers that have survived in library and museum collections show that his bookplate designs were text-based, only rarely including small images, and frequently showcased his type designs.

Further reading

  • Kelly, Jerry. The First Flowering: Bruce Rogers at the Riverside Press, 1896-1912 (2008. David Godine, Boston, USA) [with check-list]
  • Rogers, Bruce. Pi; a hodge-podge of the letters, papers, and addresses written during the last sixty years (1972. Freeport, NY: Books for Libraries Press)
  • Rogers, Bruce, Paragraphs on Printing (1943. William E. Rudge's Sons, NY. Reprint 1980. Dover Publications, NY)
  • Targ, William. The making of the Bruce Rogers World Bible (1949. Cleveland: World Publishing Co.)
  • Warde, Frederic. Bruce Rogers, designer of books And Bruce Rogers: a bibliography; hitherto unrecorded work 1889-1925, complete works 1925-1936, by Irvin Haas. (1936. Mount Vernon: The Peter Pauper Press; 1967 Port Washington, NY: Kennikat Press)
  • The work of Bruce Rogers, jack of all trades, master of one: a catalogue of an exhibition arranged by the American Institute of Graphic Arts and the Grolier Club of New York. With an introduction by D. B. Updike, a letter from John T. McCutcheon, and an address by Mr. Rogers. Publisher: Oxford University Press, New York 1939

References

  1. ^ This view is advanced by Daniel Berkeley Updike, William Addison Dwiggins, Thomas Maitland Cleland, Will Bradley, Frederic Goudy, Frederic Warde, Rudolph Ruzicka, and Stanley Morison. Hendrickson, James, Bruce Rogers, in Heritage of the Graphic Arts edited by Chandler B. Grannis, R. R. Bowker Company, New York & London, 1972, p. 61.
  2. ^ Annand, Carolyn (2000). Revival of the fittest : digital versions of classic typefaces. New York: RC Publications. p. 72. ISBN 9781883915087.
  3. ^ Hendrickson, Bruce Rogers, pp. 61-63.
  4. ^ Hendrickson, Bruce Rogers, p. 63.
  5. ^ Hlasta, Stanley C., Printing Types & How to Use Them, Carnegie Press, Pittsburgh, PA, 1950, pp. 19-24.
  6. ^ Hlasta, Printing Types & How to Use Them, pp. 19-24.
  7. ^ Hendrickson, Bruce Rogers, p. 64.
  8. ^ Hendrickson, Bruce Rogers, pp. 65-66.
  9. ^ Hendrickson, Bruce Rogers, pp. 65-66.
  10. ^ Hendrickson, Bruce Rogers, pp. 72.
  11. ^ Hlasta, Printing Types & How to Use Them, pp. 19-24.
  12. ^ Hendrickson, Bruce Rogers, pp. 73-74.
  13. ^ Hendrickson, Bruce Rogers, pp. 67 & 77.
  14. ^ Hlasta, Printing Types & How to Use Them, pp. 19-24.
  15. ^ Hendrickson, Bruce Rogers, pp. 68, 66, 77, & 68.
  16. ^ Lawson, Alexander, Anatomy of a Typeface, David R. Godine, Publisher, Boston, 1990, ISBN 0-87923-332-X, pp. 62-73.

External links

  • Works by or about Bruce Rogers at Internet Archive
  • An article on Centaur, a type face designed by Rogers, in Harvard Magazine
  • Works by or about Bruce Rogers in libraries (WorldCat catalog)
  • Linotype Font Designer Gallery entry for Bruce Rogers
  • The Bruce Rogers Collection From the Rare Book and Special Collections Division at the Library of Congress
  • Bookplates by Bruce Rogers in the University of Delaware Library's William Augustus Brewer Bookplate Collection
  • Inventory to the Collection on Bruce Rogers at Purdue University
  • Bruce Rogers Papers at the Newberry Library
  • Bruce Rogers Collection. General Collection, Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library, Yale University.

bruce, rogers, typographer, other, people, named, bruce, rogers, bruce, rogers, disambiguation, bruce, rogers, 1870, 1957, american, typographer, type, designer, acclaimed, some, among, greatest, book, designers, twentieth, century, rogers, known, allusive, ty. For other people named Bruce Rogers see Bruce Rogers disambiguation Bruce Rogers May 14 1870 May 21 1957 was an American typographer and type designer acclaimed by some as among the greatest book designers of the twentieth century 1 Rogers was known for his allusive typography rejecting modernism seldom using asymmetrical arrangements rarely using sans serif type faces often favoring faces such as Bell at the time known only as Brimmer Caslon his own Montaigne a Jensonian precursor to his masterpiece of type design Centaur His books can fetch high sums at auction Bruce RogersPhoto of Bruce RogersBornAlbert Bruce Rogers 1870 05 14 May 14 1870Lafayette Indiana United StatesDiedMay 21 1957 1957 05 21 aged 87 New Fairfield ConnecticutNationalityAmericanOther namesBRKnown forTypographerNotable workOxford Lectern Bible Centaur typeface bookplatesSpouseAnna Embree Baker Contents 1 Early life 2 Typographer and type designer 2 1 Riverside Press period 1895 1911 2 2 New York Dyke Mill period 1911 1916 2 3 First visit to Britain 2 4 Mount Vernon period 1919 1928 2 5 Second visit to Britain 2 6 October House period 1932 1957 3 Personal life 4 Death 5 Works 5 1 Sayings of Bruce Rogers 5 2 Typefaces 5 3 Bookplates 6 Further reading 7 References 8 External linksEarly life EditBorn Albert Bruce Rogers in Linwood now part of Lafayette Indiana he never used the name Albert and was known to associates as BR Rogers received a B S from Purdue University in 1890 He enrolled at age 16 and was quickly recognized in his studies of illustration allowing him to work with University catalogs lettering for the yearbook and the College Quarterly Magazine 2 At Purdue he worked with political cartoonist John T McCutcheon on the student newspaper and yearbook After graduation Rogers worked as both an artist for the Indianapolis News and as office boy for a railroad After seeing several Kelmscott Press editions Rogers became interested in producing fine books and so moved to Boston then a center of publishing where he free lanced for L Prang and Co 3 Typographer and type designer Edit Rogers bookplate for the Newberry Library featuring Rudolf Koch s Eve Bold typeface Riverside Press period 1895 1911 Edit In 1895 he took a position designing books for Riverside Press in Cambridge Massachusetts where he worked on trade books and designed book advertisements for the Atlantic Monthly In 1900 a Department of Special Bookmaking for the production of fine editions was created with Mr Rogers its head More than sixty of these Riverside Press Editions were designed by Rogers decorated with illustrations and ornament largely by him and printed on handmade damped paper 4 It was there in 1901 that he cut his first typeface Montaigne a Venetian style face named for the first book it appeared in a 1903 limited edition of The Essays of Montaigne 5 New York Dyke Mill period 1911 1916 Edit In 1912 Rogers moved to New York City where he worked both as an independent designer and as house designer for the Metropolitan Museum of Art It was for the Museum s 1915 limited edition of Maurice de Guerin s The Centaur that he designed his most famous type face Centaur Like Montaigne it was based on the Venetian faces of Nicolas Jenson Rogers considered this face to be an improvement on his earlier Montaigne both because his design had matured and because on the advice of Frederic Goudy he had employed Robert Wiebking as the punch cutter and Rogers used Centaur extensively for the rest of his career 6 The Centaur was produced by Rogers in Dyke Mill at Carl Purington Rollins Montague Press hand set by his wife Anne Rogers 1867 1931 and it is now one of the most collected books ever printed 7 First visit to Britain Edit In 1916 Rogers left for England to work with Emery Walker hoping to establish a press for fine editions However because of wartime conditions only one book was produced and Rogers soon sought employment with the Cambridge University Press He found conditions at the press to be poor and his report to the syndics of the press resulted in many reforms and paved the way for the hiring of Stanley Morison as typographic adviser 8 Mount Vernon period 1919 1928 Edit After returning to the U S Rogers met William Edwin Rudge who began to use Rogers extensively as a book designer for his Mount Vernon Press This was Rogers most productive and remunerative period as he worked three days a week designing books for Rudge served as typographic adviser and designed books for Harvard University Press from 1920 to 1936 served as typographic adviser to Lanston Monotype and produced a few books for the June House Press which he operated in partnership with James Raye Wells and James Hendrickson 9 Second visit to Britain Edit In 1928 Rogers left for England in hopes of producing an edition of Homer s Odyssey translated by T E Lawrence Despite Rogers s being very bookish he soon became close lifelong friends with the dashing Lawrence of Arabia The project took four years and the fine book was printed in Centaur types on gray handmade paper bound in black Niger leather Rogers also became engaged to produce the renowned Oxford Lectern Bible for Oxford University Press This project took six years requiring annual trips to Oxford to oversee its completion in 1935 Joseph Blumenthal called this The most important and notable typographic achievement of the twentieth century 10 To produce the Bible an italic complement to Centaur was needed As he did not feel capable of designing the sort of chancery face that he thought appropriate Rogers chose to pair Centaur with Frederic Warde s Arrighi a pairing retained to this day 11 October House period 1932 1957 Edit In later years Rogers worked as a free lancer designed his World Bible and wrote and designed his book on printing Paragraphs on Printing published by William E Rudge s Sons in 1943 12 Personal life EditIn 1900 Rogers married Anna Embree Baker and they remained together until her death in 1936 As Rogers spent most of his working life as a free lancer they lived frugally and were often in financial straits Rogers purchased October House his residence in New Fairfield Connecticut in 1925 and made this his permanent home from 1932 until his death Rogers was a member of the Typophiles and smoked imported English cigarettes 13 Death EditRogers died on May 18 1957 in New Fairfield Connecticut In later life Rogers and his wife Anne donated a substantial collection of books early manuscripts and antique furniture to Purdue University s Special Collection Library The bulk of his papers are in the collection of the Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library 14 Works EditSayings of Bruce Rogers Edit Don t borrow contemporary work you are sure to be found out Never apologize The first requisite of all book design is orderliness When told that something he had produced was not according to Hoyle he answered We re Hoyle 15 Typefaces Edit Montaigne 1901 privately cast punches cut by John Cumming Centaur original 1914 privately cast by Barnhart Brothers amp Spindler matrices cut by Robert Wiebking of the Western Type Foundry Centaur Monotype 1929 Monotype Ltd and Mackenzie amp Harris matrices re cut for machine composition by British Monotype 16 Bookplates Edit In addition to his work as a typographer and type designer Rogers worked designing ephemera such as bookplates Bookplates by Rogers that have survived in library and museum collections show that his bookplate designs were text based only rarely including small images and frequently showcased his type designs Bookplates designed by Bruce Rogers An early 1900 Bruce Rogers bookplate lacking his usual block text Type based bookplate for the Harvard College Library A second bookplate for the Harvard College Library featuring a different typeface A third bookplate for the Harvard College Library featuring a third typeface An elaborate Rogers bookplate for the Typographic Library and Museum of the American Type Founders CompanyFurther reading EditKelly Jerry The First Flowering Bruce Rogers at the Riverside Press 1896 1912 2008 David Godine Boston USA with check list Rogers Bruce Pi a hodge podge of the letters papers and addresses written during the last sixty years 1972 Freeport NY Books for Libraries Press Rogers Bruce Paragraphs on Printing 1943 William E Rudge s Sons NY Reprint 1980 Dover Publications NY Targ William The making of the Bruce Rogers World Bible 1949 Cleveland World Publishing Co Warde Frederic Bruce Rogers designer of books And Bruce Rogers a bibliography hitherto unrecorded work 1889 1925 complete works 1925 1936 by Irvin Haas 1936 Mount Vernon The Peter Pauper Press 1967 Port Washington NY Kennikat Press The work of Bruce Rogers jack of all trades master of one a catalogue of an exhibition arranged by the American Institute of Graphic Arts and the Grolier Club of New York With an introduction by D B Updike a letter from John T McCutcheon and an address by Mr Rogers Publisher Oxford University Press New York 1939References Edit This view is advanced by Daniel Berkeley Updike William Addison Dwiggins Thomas Maitland Cleland Will Bradley Frederic Goudy Frederic Warde Rudolph Ruzicka and Stanley Morison Hendrickson James Bruce Rogers in Heritage of the Graphic Arts edited by Chandler B Grannis R R Bowker Company New York amp London 1972 p 61 Annand Carolyn 2000 Revival of the fittest digital versions of classic typefaces New York RC Publications p 72 ISBN 9781883915087 Hendrickson Bruce Rogers pp 61 63 Hendrickson Bruce Rogers p 63 Hlasta Stanley C Printing Types amp How to Use Them Carnegie Press Pittsburgh PA 1950 pp 19 24 Hlasta Printing Types amp How to Use Them pp 19 24 Hendrickson Bruce Rogers p 64 Hendrickson Bruce Rogers pp 65 66 Hendrickson Bruce Rogers pp 65 66 Hendrickson Bruce Rogers pp 72 Hlasta Printing Types amp How to Use Them pp 19 24 Hendrickson Bruce Rogers pp 73 74 Hendrickson Bruce Rogers pp 67 amp 77 Hlasta Printing Types amp How to Use Them pp 19 24 Hendrickson Bruce Rogers pp 68 66 77 amp 68 Lawson Alexander Anatomy of a Typeface David R Godine Publisher Boston 1990 ISBN 0 87923 332 X pp 62 73 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Bruce Rogers typographer Works by or about Bruce Rogers at Internet Archive An exhibit of Rogers work at the Minnesota Center for Book Arts now only available through the Internet Archive s Wayback Machine An article on Centaur a type face designed by Rogers in Harvard Magazine Works by or about Bruce Rogers in libraries WorldCat catalog Linotype Font Designer Gallery entry for Bruce Rogers Emery Walker Trust The Bruce Rogers Collection From the Rare Book and Special Collections Division at the Library of Congress Bookplates by Bruce Rogers in the University of Delaware Library s William Augustus Brewer Bookplate Collection Inventory to the Collection on Bruce Rogers at Purdue University Bruce Rogers Papers at the Newberry Library Bruce Rogers Collection General Collection Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library Yale University Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bruce Rogers typographer amp oldid 1095494060, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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