

38 West 86th St.
New York, NY 10024
212.501.3000
admissions@bgc.bard.edu
18 West 86th St.
New York, NY 10024
212.501.3023
gallery@bgc.bard.edu
BGC Gallery is currently closed.
38 West 86th St.
New York, NY 10024
212.501.3000
admissions@bgc.bard.edu
18 West 86th St.
New York, NY 10024
212.501.3023
gallery@bgc.bard.edu
BGC Gallery is currently closed.
Georgios Boudalis
Museum of Byzantine Culture, Thessaloniki, Greece
March 2, 2015
12:00 – 1:30 pm
Georgios Boudalis will be giving a Brown Bag Lunch presentation on Monday, March 2, 2015, from 12 to 1:30pm, at the Bard Graduate Center in New York City. His talk is entitled “The Making of the Early Codex and the Crafts of Late Antiquity.”
The codex book format – that is, the book as we know it today - was invented around the 2nd century AD in the Middle East in close connection with Christianity, and by the 5th century had almost completely supplanted the scroll, the standard form of the book during Greco-Roman Antiquity. Since its invention the codex has been the major doctrinal vehicle for Christians, Muslims and Jews and therefore had great symbolic and religious connotations. Nevertheless, as a complex, three-dimensional, functional object it is made up of a number of technical and decorative features, the main ones being the sewing of the gatherings of the book-block, the connection of the boards to the book-block, the sewing of the endbands, the working and decoration of the covers, and the making of fastenings. Each of these components presents specific particularities and similarities with crafts, artefacts and techniques common in the Eastern Mediterranean during Late Antiquity. The talk will focus on these similarities in order to stress the fact that despite its great symbolic and religious weight the book as a physical object was made with materials and techniques borrowed from very ordinary and humble everyday objects such as socks, shoes and dresses.
38 West 86th St.
New York, NY 10024
212.501.3000
admissions@bgc.bard.edu
18 West 86th St.
New York, NY 10024
212.501.3023
gallery@bgc.bard.edu
BGC Gallery is currently closed.