Early modern Europe was a paper age! Let's focus, once more, on the paper usages of a period that mastered so many communication flows on paper. Another thread for #paperhistory#bookhistory
Let's start with the obvious: people are writing in this painting and in general. The material they are writing on - paper sheets, bound blank books, etc. It is paper letters (and paper envelopes), paper pages in accounting books, in writing books. All on paper.
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Paper was used for many writing purposes. Yes, only a few could write, but many came into contact with paper. In this scene the "paper manager" is a lawyer. The many papers around him are showing the law business as one of the many paper using activities. Inky paper states!
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Where to put all the used and waiting paper? This lawyer's cabinet decided, like many secretaries and lawyer at the time, to use document bags - literally filled with paper. These bags could be seen hanging in administration buildings. You may enjoy @EricKetelaar on this.
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A closer look offers stored blank "fresh" paper, yet unused material. Paper is always waiting for usages in our images, by the way.
What we see here is paper wrapped in small trading units of the paper trade. You could buy it as single sheets or in units up to 500.
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Every administrative activity produced streams of used papers in different variations and media forms, and all these papers needed archiving systems and order. Letters, drafts, documents, etc. - storing was a paper business in early modern Europe.
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In order to use paper for writing or documenting, one needed a storage system that made paper available in the needed format, quality and size. This writing desk, where content was formed on paper, is made of stored paper portions waiting. What a nice detail.
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The early modern paper worlds were messy places too. Too often newly written communication flows, like the one depicted at the desk, made use of older paper books. Recycling ideas for inspiration was a paper activity. Old paper inspired new paper, if you like.
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Apropos, 'old' paper. Early modern Europe was also an age of paper recycling. When drafts became useless, letters outdated, papers turned vastly and steadily into used papers. And these leftovers formed and fueled the material production of new papers many were waiting for.
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Attention to the document bags. As @EricKetelaar's great "Archiving people" is explaining in detail, these bags were full of written pages. The opening and closing of the bags was at court a formal procedure; however, it was a paper exchanging business.
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And how did all these waiting papers get into the many secretaries? Dealing with paper was a trade, and paper was sold at many places in early modern Europe. These paper flows need more attention. In March 2021 we expect this volume to be published:
There is a paper story included into this famous German painting of 1830s from Carl Spitzweg. You may know the common interpretation of the Poor Poet (German: Der arme Poet): Attention to the material misery of most artists and their work!
Let's start a #paperhistory thread. 1/x
The painting came in three versions and the one remaining copy is nowadays in the Neue Pinakothek (Munich: pinakothek.de/kunst/meisterw…). Let's focus on the paper used and present in this imagined scene of a poor poet in his attic room in the 1830s. 2/x
Easy to spot in the room are a few big bound books. They may be bound in leather but they are printed upon paper, very likely before 1800. These are used books, old books, second hand books. Nota bene: The German antiquarian book trade developed in these days, #bookhistory. 3/x
A scene of paper management and usages: an European early modern tax office was full of papers. Fresh paper sheets, old paper sheets, printed papers, handwritten papers, waste papers, etc. Let's have a deeper look, #paperhistory. A next thread, 1/x
Managing information became a paper business in Early Modern Europe. The expanding administration practices made secretaries, lawyer's offices, tax offices, etc. And they ran on paper, had to store paper, and deal with paper. It was a paper world.
So much paper in this 1665 painting from Cornelis N. Gijsbrechts. You see an open cupboard door, as art history labelled the image, but what you also see: prints, letters, a broadside, an almanac, stored unused paper sheets. Early Modern Europe was a paper age. A
thread, part 1.
This painting of late seventeenth century echoes the availability and usages of paper in Europe. By at least the fifteenth century, paper was increasingly used in more and more individual and public contexts. Have a look: brill.com/view/book/edco…
Part 2 of the thread.
Let's start with the letters. Writing letters, corresponding, was a thing in Europe. Managing your business or scholarly world, wrestling with administrative work, news transmission, and much more, all this was a paper using practice. You see folded and opened letters. Part 3.
What you see is a painted impression of the physical circumstances of an European artist in the early nineteenth century. Among other details and objects, a lot of paper is present. Let's have a a closer look, #paperhistory and #bookhistory. A thread.
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The painting is titled Léon Pallière (1787–1820) in His Room at the Villa Medici, Rome, and was painted in 1817 on oil. The artist: the French Jean Alaux.
Here is a link to more details: metmuseum.org/art/collection…
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The writing place. A place of various paper usages: a letter on the table, a few bound books, folders filled with loose paper sheets, unbound books, a few sheets of paper in-between. Also: an ink pot, and a writing quill. #paperhistory
Early Modern Europe was a paper age - a first period of paper usages. Especially managing information became a paper business as the painting "The Lawyer's Office" (1628) from Pieter de Bloot @rijksmuseumt1p.de/1awb highlights. A meta thread for #paperhistory. 1/x
As I have highlighted in earlier threads like this one (
), paper was from the fourteenth century onwards increasingly being used for more and more communication flows. Hello inky paper states and letter writing humans, here comes the printing industry.
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The artifact paper became more and more present in Europe, for example in schools as I have shed light on here:
The Notary is a painting of mid-sixteenth century by Marinus van Reymerswaele. What we see is secretary work with paper: record keeping practices, writing, folding, storing.
A thread for #paperhistory and #bookhistory.
Notaries needed offices in early modern Europe, because they provided paper businesses: they used papers as a general service. In fact, producing evidence in a lawsauit is a paper practice. First things first: writing on paper on a regular basis is the main office work.
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Let's focus on what writing was: a paper using literate practice that required - apart from paper - some more special materials, most importantly ink, an inkhorn, and a quill.