Otto Ege

Otto F. Ege (18881951)[1] was a teacher, lecturer, bookseller, and well-known book-breaker. He worked for many years at the Cleveland Institute of Art where he served as Chair of the Department of Teacher Training,[2] instructor of Lettering, Layout, and Typography,[2] and Dean.[1] He was also employed by the School of Library Science at Case Western Reserve University as a lecturer on the History of the Book,[1] and instructor of History and Art of the Book.[2]

Otto Ege's greatest fame, however, came as a result of his book-breaking. Over a period of decades in the early 20th century, Ege systematically removed the pages of some 50 illuminated medieval manuscripts,[1] and divided them into 40 unique compilation boxes,[3] commonly referred to as "Otto Ege Portfolios". These portfolios were in turn sold and distributed world wide.[3] Although strong profits were made from each sale, Ege defended his actions by stating, "Surely to allow a thousand people 'to have and to hold' an original manuscript leaf, and to get a thrill and understanding that comes only from actual and frequent contact with these art heritages, is justification enough for the scattering of fragments."[4]

Over the last several years, Prof. Peter Stoicheff of the University of Saskatchewan has been working to locate all existing Ege Portfolios, and to foster co-operation from their respective owners in creating an "Ege Medieval Manuscript Database" with the ultimate goal being the digital reconstruction of the complete books.[5]

Ege's personal collection, including 50 unbroken manuscript books, was in 2015 acquired by the Beinecke Rare Book & Manuscript Library (part of Yale University Library).[6]

See also

References and notes

  1. 1 2 3 4 "Otto F. Ege Collection of Fifty Original Manuscript Leaves", University of South Carolina, University Libraries Digital Collections
  2. 1 2 3 "Barbara A. Shailor to lecture at Wells College", Wells Book Arts Center
  3. 1 2 "Scattered Leaves: the Otto Ege Medieval Manuscript Collection", University of Saskatchewan.
  4. Fred Porcheddu, "Otto F. Ege: Teacher, Collector, Biblioclast", Art Libraries Society of North American, 6 May 2006
  5. "Symposium to look at ancient pages", University of Saskatchewan On Campus News, Volume 12, Number 17, April 29, 2005
  6. Mike Cummings, "Beinecke Library acquires ‘treasure trove’ of medieval manuscripts from a famed ‘book breaker’", YaleNews, November 15, 2015.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.