the history of the book | case study: irma boom by victoria zaborov

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THE NEXT CHAPTER IN THE HISTORY OF THE BOOK CASE STUDY IRMA BOOM LEIDEN UNIVERSITY MASTER OF ARTS & CULTURE RESEARCH PROF. A. H. VAN DER WEEL DRS. N. L BARTELINGS August 2013

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Page 1: The History of the Book | Case study: Irma Boom by Victoria Zaborov

THE NEXT CHAPTER

IN THE HISTORY

OF THE BOOK

CASE STUDY

IRMA BOOM

LEIDEN

UNIVERSITY

MASTER OF

ARTS & CULTURE

RESEARCH

PROF. A. H. VAN DER WEEL

DRS. N. L BARTELINGS

Aug

ust 2

013

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Page 3: The History of the Book | Case study: Irma Boom by Victoria Zaborov

STUDENT V. ZABOROV

STUDENT № 1135775

DATE 12 AUGUST 2013

TYPE OF PAPER RESMA THESIS 28,500 WORDS

PROGRAM RESMA ARTS & CULTURE 2012-13

SPECIALIZATION EARLY MODERN AND MEDIEVAL ART

EC 25 EC

TUTOR DRS. N. L. BARTELINGS

PROF. A. H. VAN DER WEEL

Declaration: I hereby certify that this work has been written by me, and that it is not the product of plagiarism or any other form of academic misconduct. For plagiarism see under: http://www.hum.leidenuniv.nl/studenten/reglement-en/plagiaatregelingen.html

Signature:

THE NEXT CHAPTER IN THE HOSTORY OF THE BOOK

Case Study: Irma Boom

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TABLE OF CONTENTS

FOREWORD 3

INTRODUCTION 11

BOOKS B.C. 23

1.1. Nederlandse Postzegels 87+88 24

1.2. Form over content 28

1.3. Honoring the traditional book 31

1.4. Brilliant failure 34

1.5. Best Boek 36

1.6. Conclusions 38

THE DESIGNER AS AUTHOR 49

2.1 A Decade of Independence 50

2.2 Thinkbook 50

2.3 The Book as a Journey 54

2.4 Hidden Treasures 56

2.5 Icon of Dutch design 58

2.6 International Commissions 60

2.7 Otto Treumann 62

2.8 Whose book is it anyway? 64

2.9 Conclusions 67

BOOKS OF THE FUTURE 77

3.1. The New Millennium 78

3.2 The New Role of the Book 80

3.3 Manifesto for the Book 81

3.4 Biography in Books 84

3.5 The book as a monument 85

3.6 Invisible printing 87

3.7 Conclusions 88

CONCLUSIONS 97

APPENDIX 1 103

APPENDIX 2 115

LIST WITH ILLUSTRATIONS 120

BIBLIOGRAPHY 122

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FOREWORD

Throughout history the artisans of the book have always wanted

to push its boundaries. The present research will take a closer look at a

contemporary applied artist who redefined and reshaped the physical

book. For nearly three decades Irma Boom has designed books which

pushed the limits of typography, text-image conventions, materiality

and binding. Through her commissions Boom blurred the lines between a

designer, image editor and author. Her unusual way of story-telling pro-

vided the book with a new life. Boom’s books are celebrated as works of

art, exhibited in museums around the world, and featured in the perma-

nent collections in most prestigious art establishments around the globe.

The aim of this research is to create a discussion about the new role

of the book in the new millennium. In the digital age Irma Boom’s books

prove that the physical book has much to offer to its reader. This study

will examine three main issues: legibility as main source of communi-

cation, the designer as the new author of the book and finally the books

of the new millennium. Ten case studies were chosen to illustrate how

Irma Boom redefined the craft of book design.

history of the book; digital revolution; book design;

word-image relations; irma boom.

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Fig. 1. Previous page, Irma Boom: Book design exhibition, 2009, Museum für Gestaltung, Zürich.

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IRMA BOOM | PRIZES

2001 GUTENBERG PRICE FOR OEUVRE (LEIPZIG) + 1989 ADCN*-PRIZE (NEDERLANDSE POSTZEGELS 1987/1988)

+ 1989 CPNB*-PRIZE (NEDERLANDSE POSTZEGELS 1987/1988) + 1989 AMSTERDAM FOUNDATION FOR THE

ARTS (AMSTERDAMS FONDS VOOR DE KUNST) + 1990 CPNB-PRIZE (1988 ANNUAL REPORT FOR RAAD VOOR DE

KUNST) + 1990 CPNB-PRIZE (32 PORTRAITS/PORTRETTEN) + 1991 ADCN-PRIZE (CAT. BEST DESIGNED BOOKS

1989, CPNB) + 1991 CPNB-PRIZE HORS CONCOURS (BEST DESIGNED BOOKS 1989, CPNB) + 1992 FIRST PRIZE

‘GRAFICUS’ CALENDAR COMPETITION, AKZO COATINGS + 1992 CPNB-PRIZE (‘NINABER|PETERS|KROUWEL’,

CAT. STEDELIJK MUSEUM) + 1992 CPNB PRIZE (PRIVATELY PUBLISHED BOOK FOR P. FENTENER VAN VLISSINGEN)

+ 1993 CPNB PRIZE (‘GERARD POLHUIS’, CAT. CENTRAAL MUSEUM UTRECHT) + 1993 CPNB PRIZE (FERDI TAJIRI,

‘STROOM’) + 1993 CPNB PRIZE (‘ALLES HEEFT EEN VORM’, MINISTRY OF CULTURE) + 1994 NOMINATED FOR ‘THE

ROTTERDAM DESIGN PRIZE 1994’ + 1994 CPNB-PRIZE SECNONDS FIRST-HENZE BOEKHOUT + 1994 CPNB-PRIZE

ROUND TRANSPARANTIES-MARJAN BIJLENGA + 100 SHOW ACD-USA POSTSTAMPS ‘DUTCH BUTTERFLIES’ +

1995 100 SHOW ACD-USA CAT. ‘ANGE LECCIA’ + SHORT LIST ROTTERDAM DESIGN PRIZE POSTSTAMPS ‘DUTCH

BUTTERFLIES’ + CPNB PRIZE (CAT. ‘ANGE LECCIA’) + CPNB PRIZE (CAT. ‘THE SPINE’) + CPNB PRIZE (CAT. ‘TOMAS

RAJLICH’) + CPNB PRIZE (LARGE SCALE BOOK PROJECT ‘LANDGOED LINSCHOTEN’) + 1996 CPNB PRIZE (SHV

1996-1896 BOOK ) + CPNB PRIZE (CAT. ‘RENÉ GREEN’) + 1997 HOUNOURABLE MENTION ROTTERDAM DESIGN

PRIZE SHV 1996-1896 BOOK + CPNB PRIZE (CAT. ‘HYBRIDS’) + 1998 OVERALL WINNER WITH AHREND ANNUAL

REPORT 1997, LUTKI & SMIT ANNUAL REPORT COMPETITION + 1999 CPNB PRIZE (CAT. WORLD WIDE VIDEO,

1998 ) + CPNB PRIZE (OUDE SYMBOLIEK, NIEUWE KUNST, RIJKSGEBOUWENDIENST) + CPNB PRIZE (CAT.

HONG YOUNG PING) + CPNB PRIZE (WORKSPIRIT SIX, VITRA) + 2000 GOLD MEDAILLE “SCHÖNSTE BÜCHER

ALLER WELT”, LEIPZIG (CAT. WORLD WIDE VIDEO, 1998) + 2001 CPNB PRIZE (‘A ROAD NOT TAKEN ICW JOB

KOELEWIJN) + 2001 CPNB PRIZE (HET RIJNLANDHUIS TERUGGEVOLGD IN DE TIJD) + 2001 CPNB PRIZE (LIGHT

YEARS, ZUMTOBEL) + 2001 GUTENBERG PREIS 2001, LEIPZIG, GERMANY (FOR OEUVRE) + 2002 SIVER MEDAILLE

“SCHÖNSTE BÜCHER ALLER WELT”, LEIPZIG (CAT. RIJNLANDS HUIS, 2001) + 2003 GOLD MEDAILLE “SCHÖNSTE

BÜCHER ALLER WELT”, LEIPZIG WITH KRISTINA BRUSA + (IRMA BOOM, GUTENBERG GALAXIE 2, 2003) + 2003

STROOM ANNUAL REPORT 2002, ANNUAL REPORT COMPETITION + 2005 ZIEGELER PAPER AWARD ART &

PRINTING (BASEL), COLOUR BOOK 5 CENTURIES ART + 2006 CPNB PRIZE AND SILVER MEDAILLE, SCHÖNSTE

BÜCHER ALLER WELT, LEIPZIG (WIEL ARETS) + 2006 CPNB PRIZE AND BRONZE MEDAILLE, SCHÖNSTE

BÜCHER ALLER WELT, LEIPZIG (MUR MUR) + 2006 CPNB PRIZE AND BRONZE MEDAILLE, SCHÖNSTE BÜCHER

ALLER WELT, LEIPZIG (OPA, CHILDRENS BOOK) + 2006 GOLDEN BEE AWARD, COLOUR BOOK 5 CENTURIES

ART + 2007 NOMINATED FOR ‘THE ROTTERDAM DESIGN PRIZE 2007’ + 2007 CPNB PRIZE AND BRONZE

MEDAILLE, SCHÖNSTE BÜCHER ALLER WELT, LEIPZIG (OOG/EYE) + 2007 CPNB PRIZE AND GOLD MEDAILLE,

SCHÖNSTE BÜCHER ALLER WELT, LEIPZIG (SHEILA HICKS, WEAVING AS METAPHOR) + 2007 RED DOT AWARD,

BEST OF THE BEST (SHEILA HICKS, WEAVING AS METAPHOR) + 2008 CPNB PRIZE (INSIDE OUTSIDE/PETRA

BLAISSE) + 2008 CPNB PRIZE (SUR PLACE, FORTIS ART COLLECTION) + 2009 CPNB PRIZE (8 YEARS-8 COLORS,

GEMEENTEMUSEUM, DEN HAAG) + 2009 CPNB PRIZE (KUNST OP KAMERS, DE RIJP) + 2009 AIGA BEST BOOK

(DESIGN AND THE ELASTIC MIND) + 2010 CPNB PRIZE (READING THE AMERICAN LANDSCAPE) + 2010 CPNB PRIZE

(SONG, CHINESE CERAMICS) + 2010 CPNB PRIZE (DARFUR) + 2010 CPNB PRIZE (STEVEN AALDERS, CARDINAL

POINTS) + 2010 CPNB PRIZE (REPRESENT, KONINKLIJKE TICHELAAR MAKKUM) + 2011 AIGA BEST BOOKS, NEW

YORK (IRMA BOOM: BIOGRAPHY IN BOOKS) + 2011 AIGA BEST BOOKS, NEW YORK (DUTCH HEIGHTS) + 2011

D&AD, LONDON (IRMA BOOM: BIOGRAPHY IN BOOKS) + 2012 CPNB PRIZE (FOTOGRAAF VINCENT MENTZEL)

+ 2012 AMSTERDAM PRICE FOR OEUVRE + 2012 HOUSE OF ORANGE, HONORY MEDAILLE FOR ART AND

SCIENCE, HOUNOUR OF QUEEN BEATRIX + 2012 AAM MUSEUM PUBLICATIONS DESIGN COMPETITION, FIRST

PRIZE (USA) (KNOLL TEXTILES) + 2012 AIGA BEST BOOKS, NEW YORK (KNOLL TEXTILES) + 2012 HERZOG & DE

MEURON, ARCHITECTURAL BOOK AWARD 2012OF THE GERMAN MUSEUM OF ARCHITECTURE, FRANKFURT

+ 2013 AUTO BIOGRAPHICAL REFERENCES/WIEL ARETS + PLUS SEVERAL NOMINATIONS FOR ROTTERDAM

DESIGN PRIZE, DUTCH DESIGN AWARDS, ADC, D&AD. + *ADCN ART DIRECTORS CLUB NETHERLANDS +

*CPNB FOUNDATION FOR THE PROMOTION OF DUTCH BOOKS (ORGANIZES THE ANNUAL SELECTION OF

THE BEST BOOK DESIGNS) + SHOW IN STEDELIJK MUSEUM AMSTERDAM AND OTHERS PLACES IN EUROPE

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IRMA BOOM | CLIENTS

STICHTING CPNB + FOUNDATION DE APPEL, AMSTERDAM + ROYAL KPN, THE HAGUE + ROYAL TPG POST,

THE HAGUE + STROOM HCBK, THE HAGUE + AKZO COATINGS, AMSTERDAM + SHV HOLDINGS NV, UTRECHT

+ PAUL FENTENER VAN VLISSINGEN, UTRECHT + HET FINANCIEELE DAGBLAD + STEDELIJK MUSEUM

AMSTERDAM + CENTRAAL MUSEUM UTRECHT + PRINS BERNHARD FOUNDATION + PRINCE CLAUS FUND

+ STICHTING DE ROOS + OMA/REM KOOLHAAS/ ROTTERDAM + ZUMTOBEL GMBH AUSTRIA, BREDA +

MONDRIAAN FOUNDATION, AMSTERDAM + VITRA INTERNATIONAL, MUTTENZ SWITZERLAND + WORLD

WIDE VIDEO FESTIVAL, AMSTERDAM + ROYAL LIBRARY, THE HAGUE + ROYAL AHREND NV, AMSTERDAM +

RIJKSMUSEUM, AMSTERDAM + NAI PUBLISHERS, ROTTERDAM + SLEWE GALERIE, AMSTERDAM + UNITED

NATIONS NEW YORK + INSIDE/OUTSIDE, AMSTERDAM + ARCHITECTURAL ASSOCIATION, LONDON + BERLIN

BIENNALE, BERLIN + FORUM FOR AFRICAN ARTS, CORNELL UNIVERSITY, ITHACA + NAI PUBLISHERS,

ROTTERDAM + THOTH PUBLISHERS, BUSSUM + OKTAGON VERLAG, COLOGNE + TASCHEN, COLOGNE +

BIRKHÄUSER VERLAG, BASEL + PAUL KASMIN GALLERY, NEW YORK + FERRARI S.P.A, MARANELLO, ITALY

+ MASEARTI, MODENA, ITALY + AVL/JOEP VAN LIESHOUT, ROTTERDAM + AGA KHAN FOUNDATION FOR

ARCHITECTURE, GENEVA + MINISTRY OF FINANCE, THE HAGUE, KONINKLIJKE TICHELAAR, MAKKUM

+ CAMPER, MALLORCA + SERPENTINE GALLERY, LONDON + BARD GRAUDUTE CENTRE, NEW YORK.

IRMA BOOM | TEACHING + WORKSHOPS + LECTURES

ACADEMIE VOOR BEELDENDE KUNSTEN, ARNHEM + RIETVELD ACADEMIE, AMSTERDAM + ACADEMIE

VOOR KUNST EN INDUSTRIE, ENSCHEDE + RHODE ISLAND SCHOOL OF DESIGN, PROVIDENCE + CALARTS,

CALIFORNIA INSTITUTE OF THE ARTS + VALENCIA CA (USA), SCHOOL OF THE ART INSTITUTE, CHICAGO (USA)

+ NC STATE UNIVERSITY, RALEIGH NC (USA) + AIGA (AMERICAN INSTITUTE FOR GRAPHIC ART) NEW YORK

+ CRANBROOK ACADEMY OF ART, BLOOMFIELD HILLS MI (USA) + SOCIETY OF TYPOGRAPHIC DESIGNERS,

LONDON (1993, 1998) (UK) + STROOM HCBK, THE HAGUE + COOPER UNION, NEW YORK + MIMAR SINAN

UNIVERSITY, ISTANBUL, TURKEY + LECTURE SERIE FOR DESIGNERS AND COMPANIES IN OSLO, NORWAY +

GOING CRITICAL SYMPOSIUM, UNIVERSITY OF THE WEST OF ENGLAND, BRISTOL (UK) + AIGA NEW YORK +

TYPO 2000 (APRIL), BERLIN + OULLIM CONFERENCE, SEOUL, KOREA (2000) + CCAC, SAN FRANCISCO (2001) +

AGI CONGRESS, LECTURE CENTRE POMPIDOU, (2001) PARIS, CECOFOP, NANTES (2001) + DIT, DUBIN, IRELAND

(2002) + ADGFAD, BARCELONA, SPAIN (2002) + WERKPLAATS TYPOGRAFIE, ARNHEM + DESIGN INDABA, CAPE

TOWN, SOUTH AFRICA (2003) + DESIGN INDABA GOES DUTCH WORKSHOPS, BLOEMFONTEIN/PRETORIA,

SOUTH AFRICA (2003), BRNO, CZECH REPUBLIC (2004), WORKSHOP BARCELONA (2004) + GROUP EXHIBITION

KUNSTBIBLIOTHEK STAATLICHE MUSEEN ZU BERLIN (2005) + LECTURE BERLING PRIZE, STOCKHOLM

(2006) + WORKSHOP KONSTFACK, STOCKHOLM (2006) + LECTURE EMZIN, LJUBLJANA, SLOVENIA (2006) +

LECTURE ‘SHAPESHIFTERS/GENEVIÈVE GAUCKLER & IRMA BOOM’ (2007) INSTITUTO EUROPEO DI DESIGN,

MADRID (2007), DESIGN ACADEMY EINDHOVEN (2007) + D&AD PRESIDENT’S LECTURE (2007). BATH, SPA

UNIVERSITY (LECTURE & WORKSHOP) 2008) + QATAR TASMEEM (2008 LECTURE) + BEELDSCHERMVSBOEK,

LAKENHAL LEIDEN (LECTURE 2008) + COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY, NEW YORK (LECTURE) + AKADEMIE

VOOR SCHONE KUNSTEN, BRUSSELS (LECTURE & WORKSHOP) + ESAD ESCOLA SUPERIOR DE ARTES E

DESIGN, PORTO (LECTURE) + TYPOGRAPHISCHE GESELLSCHAFT AUSTRIA (LECTURE, AUG 2008 RAABS +

MOSCOW (GOLDEN BEE JURY, TALK, EXHIBITION) + ÜRICH, PAPERVENT FISHER PAPIER (LECTURE 2008)

+ BODW CONFERENCE, HONG KONG (LECTURE 2008) + MUZEUM SZTUKI NOWOCZESNEJ WARSZAWIA

(MUSEUM OF MODERN ART IN WARSAW) (LECTURE AND WORKSHOP WARSAW, POLAND 2009) + BRISSAGO

SUMMERCOURSE (2009) + TECHNICAL UNIVERSITY DELFT (2009) + WALKER ART CENTER, MINNEAPOLIS

(2010) + UNIVERISTY OF HAWAII AT MANOA, HONOLULU (2011) + TEDEX, TU DELFT, 2011 + DESIGN

YATRA CONFERENCE AND MASTERCLASS, GOA, INDIA (2011) + TGA (TYPOGRAPHISCHEGESELLSCHAFT),

VIENNA (2012) + THE MINT MUSEUM, CHARLOTTE, USA (2012): AMERICAN UNIVERSITY BEIRUT,

LEBANON (LECTURE 2012) + TAIGA, ST. PETERSBURG, RUSSIA (LECTURE, EXHIBITION 2012)

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IRMA BOOM | EXHIBITIONS

IRMA BOOM ON HER BOOKS (SOLO): STROOM CENTER FOR VISUAL ARTS IN THE HAGUE, 1998. A VIDEO

PRESENTATION, IN WHICH, IN DISCUSSION WITH LOUWRIEN WIJERS, SHE DESCRIBES HER LOVE OF BOOKS.

“SHE TALKED ABOUT HER SOURCES OF INSPIRATION, LEAFING THROUGH HER OWN BOOKS, PARTICULARLY

SINCE HER RENOWNED SHV-BOOK.” + BOOM! (SOLO): BIGLI UNIVERSITESI, ISTANBUL, TURKEY, 2003. THE

EUROPEAN DESIGN SHOW (GROUP SHOW, TRAVELLING EXHIBITION: DESIGN MUSEUM, LONDON, 2004/2005

+ FOREIGN AFFAIRS (GROUP SHOW): TRAVELLING EXHIBITION OVER THE WORLD), 2005/2006 .ROTTERDAM

DESIGN PRIZE (GROUP SHOW): EXHIBITION NOMINEES (2007) + ARCHIEF STICHTING DE ROOS 1945-2005

(GROUP SHOW): FEBRUARY – 30 APRIL 2006, MUSEUM MEERMANNO, THE HAGUE (WITH M.C. ESCHER,

JAN BONS, OTTO TREUMANN, WILLEM SANDBERG, IRMA BOOM) + ONTWERPER & OPDRACHTGEVER

(DESIGNER & COMMISSIONER): 10 FEBRUARY – 29 APRIL 2005: UNIVERSITEITSBIBLIOTHEEK AMSTERDAM

(WITH: IRMA BOOM & PAUL FENTENER VAN VLISSINGEN, WIM QUIST & REYNOUD HOMAN, QUERIDO &

HARRY N. SIERMAN) + EUROPEAN DESIGN SHOW (GROUP SHOW): 28 MAY 2005 T/M 4 SEPTEMBER 2005,

DESIGN MUSEUM LONDON. WITH: IRMA BOOM, JOB VAN BENNEKOM, DROOG DESIGN, EXPERIMENTAL

JETSET, HELLA JONGERIUS, MAUREEN MOOREN & DANIEL VAN DER VELDEN + TSERETELI ART GALLERY

(GROUP SHOW): 9 SEPTEMBER – 28 SEPTEMBER 2008, MOSCOW + SOCIAL ENERGY SHOW IN CHINA (GROUP

SHOW, TRAVELING AROUND CHINA): BEIJING (NOV. 2008), CHENGDU (OCT. 2008) AND SHENZHEN (JAN.

2009), SHANGHAI (OCT. 2009) + IRMA BOOM – BOOK DESIGN (SOLO): 3 APRIL – 19 JULY 2009, MUSEUM FÜR

GESTALTUNG ZÜRICH + EXPERIMENTA 2009 (GROUP SHOW): SUMMER, LISBOA + ELLES@CENTREPOMPIDOU

(GROUP SHOW): 25 MAY 2009- FEBRUARY 2011, CENTRE POMPIDOU, PARIS + TAKING A STANCE (GROUP

SHOW, TRAVELLING IN CHINA): SHANGHAI MARCH 2010, BEIJING APRIL 2010), SHENZHEN (MAY 2010) +

DWARSVERBANDEN (GROUP SHOW): 1 JULY 2011-8 JANUARY 2012, NAI, ROTTERDAM + THE WAY BEYOND ART

2 (GROUP SHOW): CCA, WIDE WHITE SPACE, SAN FRANCISCO, 2011 + IRMA BOOM: BIOGRAPHY IN BOOKS

(SOLO), CAT.: AMSTERDAM, UNIVERSITY OF AMSTERDAM (JUNE-OCT 2010) + BOOM BEYOND BOOKS (SOLO)

CAT.: LEIPZIGER STADTBIBLIOTHEK ON THE OCCASION OF THE ‘GUTENBERG PREIS 2001’. + TAIGA (GROUP

SHOW WITH: IRMA BOOM, HANSJE VAN HALEM, LESLY MOORE): ST PETERSBURG, 26 MAY- JUNE 17 2012 +

MANIFESTA 9 (GROUP SHOW): GENK, JUNE-SEPT 2012 + GRAPHIC DESIGN: NOW IN PRODUCTION (GROUP

SHOW): WALKER ART CENTER IN MINNEAPOLIS AND THE COOPER-HEWITT NATIONAL DESIGN MUSEUM

IN NEW YORK, 2012 + IRMA BOOM: BIOGRAPHY IN BOOKS (SOLO) CAT.: INSTITUT NÈERLANDAIS, 2013

WORK SHOWN IN EXHIBITIONS ALL OVER THE WORLD • SAN FRANCISCO MUSEUM OF MODERN ART

‘DO NORMAL’; THE MUSEUM OF MODERN ART, CAFÉ, NEW YORK; STEDELIJK MUSEUM AMSTERDAM

‘MOOI MAAR GOED’ AND BEST DESIGNED BOOKS; MUSEUM BOYMANS VAN BEUNINGEN ROTTERDAM;

INSTITUT NÈERLANDAIS PARIS; 19TH INTERNATIONAL BIENNALE OF GRAPHIC DESIGN BRNO 2000;

LEIPZIGER- AND FRANKFURTER BUCHMESSE; TYPOJANCHI SEOUL, KOREA; BIBLIOTEQUE NATIONAL

DE FRANCE, PARIS, TOTEM GALLERY, NEW YORK (2002); AIGA, NEW YORK (2002), DESIGN MUSEUM,

LONDON (2003-5), FOREIGN AFFAIRS (TRAVELLING), AND WORK IN COLLECTIONS WORLD-WIDE.

COLLECTIONS • THE MUSEUM OF MODERN ART, NEW YORK: BOOKS IN THE PERMANENT COLLECTION OF

THE ‘ARCHITECTURE & DESIGN’ DEPARTMENT OF THE MOMA + UNIVERSITY OF AMSTERDAM, AMSTERDAM:

IRMA BOOM COLLECTION: COLLECTION OF COMPLETE OEUVRE AND ARCHIVE OF DOCUMENTS IN THE

SPECIAL COLLECTIONS OF THE LIBRARY OF THE UNIVERSITY OF AMSTERDAM + CENTRE POMPIDOU, MUSÉE

NATIONAL D’ART MODERNE, PARIS: BOOKS IN THE PERMANENT COLLECTION OF BIBLIOTHÈQUE KANDINSKY

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INTRODUCTION

On November 7th 2011 over nine hundred people gathered in the

beautiful city of Delft for the first independently organized TEDx

event.1 Twenty live speakers talked about a wide range of subjects,

but it was Irma Boom’s Manifesto for the Book that inspired and insti-

gated the present research. A small camera, placed above Irma Boom’s

head, transmitted live feed onto a large screen showing the audience

the subject of Irma’s talk. Six books designed by Irma Boom were

presented, three of which were chosen as this research case studies.

The recording of the live stream video did not allow me to get a clear

understanding of the books, but Irma’s views on book design both

intrigued and inspired me to step out of my comfort zone of Medieval

and Early Modern art and write about contemporary book design.

Several important questions guided me throughout this research:

why writing about contemporary books when the future of the

physical book seemed so uncertain? What was so special about the

books designed by Boom that they became part of the world’s most

acclaimed museums? Can a book be considered a work of art, and

if so what makes a book art? To answer my first questions I had to

find out everything possible about Irma Boom and her books, how-

ever, the last question proved to be one of the greatest challenges

1  TED is a nonprofit organization devoted to spreading ideas and is best thought of as a global community. The organization started in 1984 as a conference that brought together people from three worlds: technology, entertainment and design. TED.com gathers the best talks and performances from all over the world, and uploads these recorded talks for free. The TEDx program gives com-munities, organizations and individuals the opportunity to stimulate dialogues at a local level. Irma Boom, ”TEDxDelft. Irma Boom: Manifesto for the Book,” Delft 2011, accessed August 01, 2013. http://www.tedxtalks.ted.com/video/TEDxDelft-Irma-Boom-Manifest-to.

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14

this thesis faced. Does the financial value of the book determine the

status of the book as a work of art? What qualifies a book to become

part of the world’s most prestigious art establishments, and does this

acceptance turn the book into a work of art?

In order to find out who Irma Boom was, and what was so spe-

cial about her books, I used two main sources of information:

Special Collections of the University of Amsterdam (UvA) and the

Rijksbureau voor Kunsthistorische Documentatie (RKD). In 2003

Special Collections UvA acquired Irma Boom’s archive and owns

many of her books, while the RKD collects newspaper articles and

other valuable information about Boom. Two main problems arose

early on in my research: the living archive was not open to the public,

and during her relatively short career, Irma Boom designed some

three hundred books.

A new method of research was adopted: if the living archive was

not open to the public, an interview with its curator had to take place.

This interview was followed by additional interviews of Irma Boom’s

fellow graphic designers, typographers, educators, publishers and

librarians, who I believed could shed some light from their own per-

spective on Boom’s books. Almost immediately it was clear that due

to personal involvement of my interviewees with my subject, further

modifications of my method had to take place.

Following a thorough archival research of Irma Boom, I was able to

examine nearly every article, book, webpage and video about Boom.

Due to Irma’s popularity all around the world, I decided to involve

the social media in this project, and received unbelievable number

of positive and helpful responses as well as useful suggestions that

enriched my research.2

2  The project’s twitter account @book_as_art reached over four-hundred follow-ers, and received endless support from all over the world including Irma Boom. Book as Art facebook page reached thousands of people world-wide that took part in a survey to determine which one of my case studies was the most popular book designed by Irma Boom.

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15

introductionWriting about a living artist was a new and unfamiliar experi-

ence, therefore I decided approaching my case studies as I would

any Medieval or Early Modern manuscript. It is my conviction that

any research should begin and conclude with the actual artwork, in

this case Irma Boom’s books. Early on in this research I made a con-

scious decision not to interview Irma Boom before the research was

complete. It is my belief that once the books were designed by Boom

and presented to the public, they began their independent existence

and became open to interpretations and analysis.

Despite her world-wide popularity, only three monographs were

published about Irma Boom: In 2001 Irma Boom was the youngest

laureate to receive the prestigious Gutenberg prize for her complete

oeuvre. Irma Boom was honored with a catalogue and an exhibition

celebrating her books; in 2008 a monograph was published in China,

which I unfortunately was not able to locate; as part of an exhibition

held in the UvA Special Collections in 2011 a miniature catalogue

was published including Boom’s books in reversed chronology. Irma

Boom: Biography in Books catalogue provides the reader with the most

complete and comprehensive biography of Irma Boom. The text from

the Gutenberg Galaxie II and Biography in Books are reproduced in

full in the appendixes of this paper. It is my intention to provide my

reader with as much useful information as possible and inspire him

to continue researching this fascinating subject.

The present study combines two disciplines to create a comprehen-

sive and wide research. For this study I combined my knowledge and

skills as an art historian with book and digital media studies. Through

the interdisciplinary research it is my intention to bring new per-

spective and insight into this relatively new and unexplored subject.

Narrowing down and choosing my case studies proved to be a

greater challenge than I was able to foresee. Irma Boom designed

some three hundred books throughout her career. Thirty books were

selected as potential case studies, and as I constructed my chapters,

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16

the list was narrowed down to ten final case studies. I conducted a

codicological analysis of the books, since these books are first and

foremost physical objects that needed to be studied. The materi-

als, typography, the page’s layout, the book’s binding, as well as the

images, were all carefully examined.

Irma Boom’s lecture in TEDxDelft raised a difficult practical issue

that had to be resolved: how to show my case studies without actually

showing them? While I was working in the UvA Special Collections,

I took photographs of the books, but these photographs, just like the

overhead camera transmitting onto a large screen, did not reflect a

clear understanding of the books. A decision was made to build a

website that would complement this paper. book-as-art.info pro-

vides the reader with videos of ten case studies as well as additional

photographs that might give a sense of sculptural character of these

books. The website does not attempt to replace the actual book with

its digital version. As the lecture in Delft drove me to the UvA to look

at the books, it is my intention to encourage the reader to do the same.

The website provides a general presentation of the books measure-

ments, closer look at the images and the layout of the pages, but it

does not make any attempts to replace the actual objects.

The present paper was constructed as three independent chapters,

and each chapter confronts with an important issue. When combined

together, the chapters answer most of the questions raised through-

out this research. First chapter deals with the question of form over

content. It presents two books, dated to the 1980s, designed by Irma

Boom during her five-year employment at the Staatsdrukkerij en

Uitgevers (SDU). Can a book communicate with its reader without

being legible? What are the criteria in which a book is considered a

success or a failure? This chapter takes a closer look at the reception

of the books when they were first published.

The second chapter discusses the new role of the graphic designer as

co-editor of the book. Should a designer influence the content of the

book? What led to the change in the designer’s status as a co-editor?

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17

introductionThree case studies were chosen to answer these questions, dated to

the last decade of the twentieth century. The final chapter is con-

cerned with the books of the new millennium. How did the digi-

tal age influence the physical book? What became the new criteria

by which a physical book was judged and praised? When combined

together, these three chapters show the important role Irma Boom

played in the transformation of the book in the new millennium.

In recent years titles concerned with the history of the printed

book gained much popularity.3 Libraries and important collections

provided the readers with hundreds of pages of beautiful spreads

accompanied by brief description of the highlights of Western book

design. In his book Matheiu Lommen, the curator of Irma Boom’s

living archive in the Special Collections UvA, concludes his visual

survey of five hundred years of graphic innovation with Irma Boom’s

James Jennifer Georgina. Lommen depicts Boom as one of the ground

breaking and unique individuals that helped reshape the physical

book throughout its existence. It is my intention to show what was

the crucial role of Irma Boom in the history of the book and why was

she chosen to conclude five hundred years of graphic innovation.

Five hundred years of the book’s history was not the only book

related subject which gained popularity in recent years. Numerous

publications about artist’s books constantly reemerged throughout

this entire research.4 Although Irma Boom’s books were not usually

categorized as artist’s books, I was constantly confronted with this

3  Mathieu Lommen, ed., The Book of Books: 500 Years of graphic Innovation (London: Thames & Hudson, 2012); David Jury, Graphic Design Before Graphic Design: The Printer as Designer and Craftsman 1700-1914 (London: Thames & Hudson, 2012); Alan Bartram, Five Hundred Years of Book Design (London: The British Library, 2001);

4  David Jury, Book Art Object (Berkeley, CA: The Codex Foundation, 2008); Krystyna Wasserman, The Book as Art: Artist’s Books from the National Museum of Women in the Arts (New York: Princeton Architectural Press, 2007); Stefan Klima, Artists Books: A Critical Survey of the Literature (New York: Granary Books, 1998); Johanna Ruth Drucker, The Century of Artist’s Books (New York: Granary Books, 1995).

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18

term. I dedicated substantial time researching artist’s books, and

concluded that it is not my intention to include Irma Boom’s books

in this category.

There are three main issues concerning artist’s books: there is no,

and probably cannot be a satisfying definition of the term. Since the

1970s scholars attempted to define this loose term, and the conclusion

was never unanimous. In his 1998 book, Stefan Klima, provides the

reader with the critical survey of the literature concerning artist’s

books. He refers to the problems of the term’s definition, the desire

of the artist’s books to challenge the art establishments (but eventu-

ally embraced by them), and the new kind of reading these books pro-

vide. Perhaps artist’s books of the second half of the twentieth cen-

tury enabled graphic artists to create books which could be exhibited

in art establishments, bought in public auctions and considered to

be objects of art, or perhaps the growing digital media transformed

books from its functional purpose into sculptural objects of art.

Irma Boom’s book cannot be considered mere sculptural objects of

art. Their main function of spreading information reflected in their

industrially manufactured nature along with their large print-runs.

They are beautiful objects, but they also bear an important cultural

function of spreading information in a way that could not be trans-

lated into digital form. Irma Boom’s books do not compete with the

digital books, they complement them. In the digital age, there is no

substantial need for printed books that do not use the physicality

of the book to its fullest potential. In order to communicate an idea

an e-book, a PDF or a text on the web will allow the author to reach

its audience, but if a decision was made to print a book, this object

should communicate with the reader on an additional level that uses

the book’s unique features.

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I’m IN LOVE with anything that has to do with books – to design, to create, and be a part of the content of a book, to be a part of the editorial board from the very beginning of a book project.5

5  Jeroen Beekmans, “Interview: Irma Boom,” Volume, March, 2012, accessed August 1, 2013. http://volumeproject.org/2012/03/interview-irma-boom/.

I am very happy with the Internet, e-readers and all the new tech-nologies. Many conventional books can go digital now. Often when I go to a bookstore I get really depressed by all the books that could have been PDFs. On the other hand, my books are THREE-DIMENSIONAL OBJECTS and very hard to replace with electronic books.6

6  Peter Bil’ak, “Irma Boom: Interview,” Typotheque, 2012, accessed August 1, 2013. http://www.typotheque.com/articles/irma_boom_interview.

The role of the designer is much more than make a book look good. The book as a total piece is important for me: size, weight, clarity. Small pieces of architecture, I love to BUILD BOOKS.7

7  Ibid.

I have no clients, but commis-sioners. Having a client implies serving someone’s wish, and that’s not my idea. Together with the commissioner, we work on a COMPLETELY EQUAL level and try to do our best, as intelligently and creatively as possible, to inform each other, to be generous – and then you create something new.11

11  Breuer and Meer, 2012, 227.

If there is something in common about my books, it is the ROUGHNESS; they are unrefined. Very often there is something wrong with them. It is not like Walter Nikkels – very solid where you can’t change anything. In my books it doesn’t even matter if you change details. It’s more the total thing that is interesting.12

12  Peter Bil’ak, “Irma Boom, Book Designer,” Typotheque, 2001, accessed August 1, 2013. http://www.typotheque.com/articles/irma_boom_book_designer.

In older days, a book was made for spreading information, but now we have the Internet to spread information. So to spread something else – maybe sheer beauty or a much slower, more THOUGHT-PROVOKING MESSAGE – it’s the book.13

13  Erich Nagler, “Irma Boom’s Visual Testing Ground,” Metropolis, 2013, accessed August 1, 2013. http://www.metropolis-mag.com/December-1969/Irma-Boom-rsquos-Visual-Testing-Ground/.

IRMA BOOM

IN HER OWN

WORDS

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For me it is important to give SPEECHES, TALKS, WORKSHOPS. It helps me to articulate what I am doing now. I am still working on how to define what and why I do the things I do.8

8  Gerda Breuer and Julia Meer, “Never Do Anything Just for Money! An Interview with Irma Boom,” in Women in Graphic Design 1890-2012 (Berlin: Jovis, 2012), 228.

A book is a bit of architecture; I also call it building books. I am happy about the new developments with iPads and tablets and the effect it has had on book design. It gives me space to work on the REDEFINITION OF THE PRINTED BOOK and use the non-linear structures that new media have introduced.9

9  Beekmans, 2012.

Making and design books like I do is a very time consuming process: I do a lot of research, the editing of images, etc. Therefore every book has its own autonomous appear-ance. I would never ACCEPT A JOB JUST FOR THE MONEY.10

10  Breuer and Meer, 2012, 227.

I hate artists’ books. I hate it, I hate it. I think “artists’ books,” then I think of a print run of one or two. My books are all indus-trially made. I think a book has to be INDUSTRIALLY MADE, because that’s the whole idea of the book: to spread information. And artists’ books – to me that’s not a book. That’s a piece of art.14

14  Michael Silverberg, “Muffins with Irma Boom,’ Print, July 22, 2011, accessed August 1, 2013. http://www.printmag.com/article/interview-with-irma-boom/.

I honor the traditional book but don’t want to stop there. My ambition is to develop the significant and the limits of the book. Structure comes from the New Media, the way text and images are treated, have given the book a new impulse. It is important to EXPERIMENT and not to be afraid of sometimes to create an outer failure. There is a lot to explore in the technical way, and even more important in terms of content and form. My role in creating books is to give another life to a story.15

15  Irma Boom, “Insights Design Lecture Series: Irma Boom,” Walker Art Center Minneapolis, 2010, accessed August 1, 2013. http://www.walkerart.org/channel/2010/irma-boom.

The role of the designer has changed in many ways. The designer became more of an AUTHOR than just serving the commissioner’s need. Being part of a total creative process. Raising questions and looking for

an unusual answer.16

16  Ibid.

Page 22: The History of the Book | Case study: Irma Boom by Victoria Zaborov

Fig. 2. Irma Boom, Nederlandse Postzegels 87+88, vol. 2 (Amsterdam: CPNB, 1988), 210-211.

Page 23: The History of the Book | Case study: Irma Boom by Victoria Zaborov

CHAPTER

ONE

BOOKS

B.C.

Page 24: The History of the Book | Case study: Irma Boom by Victoria Zaborov
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25

BOOKS B.C.

In the end of 1980s a young female designer was approached by

the head of the PTT and offered one of the most prestigious commis-

sions: to design the annual stamp book for the years 1987 and 1988.

Past designers of the Nederlandse Postzegels series included highly

regarded names as Wim Crouwel, Walter Nikkels, Karel Martens

and Anthon Beeke.17 The young designer was given three months

to complete the commission and absolute freedom to execute her

artistic vision.

The launch of annual stamp-books was a much-anticipated event.

Eight thousand books were published and distributed around the

Netherlands, and copies were sent to the original target group of the

Dutch philatelic society. The stamp-books of 1987 and 1988 looked

unfamiliar and were not appreciated by their receivers.18 Books were

returned, enraged letters were sent to the designer, and some even

unsubscribed from the series. However, not everyone was displeased

by the stamp-books. The following year the stamp-books won the title

of the Art Directors Club Nederland (ADCN), the Stichting Collective

Propoganda van het Nederlandse Boek (CPNB) and Amsterdams

Fonds voor de Kunst prizes.

17  Wim Crouwel designed Nederlandse Postzegels 1977 and Nederlandse Postzegels 1978, Walter Nikkels design Nederlandse Postzegels 1979, Anthon Beeke designed Nederlandse Postzegels 1980 and Nederlandse Postzegels 1981, and Karel Martens designed Nederlandse Postzegels 1982 and Nederlandse Postzegels 1983.

18  For video and photographs of the book, please visit http://www.book-as-art.info/nederlandse_postzegels_87_88.html.

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26

Nederlandse Postzegels 87+88 was the first public commission

that established Irma Boom’s name in the world of graphic design.19

Almost a decade later these books led to one of her most important

commissions that awarded her Gold Medaille, Red Dot award and

the title of ‘the most beautiful book in the world’. However, in the end

of the 1980s these stamp-books were condemned as a ‘brilliant fail-

ure’.20 What was so infuriating about these books? How could two

printed books attract such energetic criticism and later on awards

and praises?

The present chapter demonstrates two case studies each highlight

a certain characteristic of Irma Boom’s early design. The first case

study presents a conflict: can a book communicate without being

legible? To answer this question, it is crucial to examine the physi-

cal appearance of these books, their content, and take a closer look

at the reception of the books at the time of their publication. The

second case study stresses Boom’s profound understanding of the

audience of her book, and the use of a technical innovation turns

a single volume into two books addressing different audiences. In

both of these case studies Irma Boom strived to influence the book

she was commissioned to design through its content, form and the

way it communicated with its reader.

1.1. NEDERLANDSE POSTZEGELS 87+88

In 1985 Irma Boom successfully graduated from the Academy of

Fine Art in Enschede as a graphic designer. Following the advice

of her tutor, Boom began working as a public servant at the SDU in

19  Mathieu Lommen, “Living Archive,” in Irma Boom: Biography in Books. Books in Reverse Chronological Order, 2010-1986, With Comments Here and There, trans. John A. Lane (Amsterdam: University of Amsterdam, 2010) 14-15.

20  Ibid., 18.

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27

books b.c.The Hague.21 SDU allowed Irma something that a studio could not:

it enabled her to become a designer as opposed to a designer’s assis-

tant.22 During her five-year employment at the SDU, Irma Boom

worked on various projects including minor tasks such as design-

ing advertisements for the annual stamp-books published by one of

the country’s most important patron of the arts: the PTT.23

Irma’s advertisements of the stamp-books captured the attention

of the director of the PTT’s Aesthetic Design Department, Robert

Deodaat Emile (Ootje) Oxenaar, an important designer and commis-

sioner.24 As early as 1919 the Dutch PTT emphasized the importance

of design and believed that government agency should encourage

excellence in all area, from telephone booths and buildings to postal

stamps.25 Despite its privatization in 1989, the PTT continued to be

an important commissioner for graphic designers.

In the end of 1988 Oxenaar commissioned Irma Boom to design

the annual stamp-books for the years 1987 and 1988. When Oxenaar

arrived at the SDU offices, it was assumed that the prestigious com-

mission would be offered to one of the office’s senior designers,

but instead the twenty eight year-old designer was approached by

Oxenaar and offered to design the books.26 This commission further

21  Lommen, 2010, 12.

22  Eliza Williams, “Boom and her Books,” in Creative Review 31, no. 12 (December 2011): 35-36.

23  It was not possible to reproduce the advertisements for the stamp-books of 1986 in this paper. The SDU no longer has them, nor does the Museum voor Communicatie; Irma Boom does not have it either, since at that time she was an employee at the SDU.

24  Boom 2010

25  Philip Meggs and Alston W. Purvis, Megg’s History of Graphic Design, 4th ed. (New Jersey: John Wiley & Sons, Inc, 2006) 458.

26  Irma Boom, ”TYPO London 2012 Social International Design Talks. Irma Boom: Manifesto for the Book,“ accessed August 1, 2013. http://typotalks.com/video/2012/10/21/irma-boom-manifesto-for-the-book/.

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28

intensified the tension between Irma Boom and her colleagues, and

few people left the office.27 Irma was the only female designer and

one of four young people working at the SDU.28

Three months and complete creative carte blanche were given to

Irma Boom to design the stamp-books. These books, as the name of

the chapter indicates, were Books B.C. - a term Irma Boom borrowed

from her fellow designer Massimo Vignelli to describe books created

before computers.29 Boom was keen to break with the past design

approaches that she saw repeated in the previous books,30 and was

free to design her version of the stamp-books. Following a familiar

format, the stamp-books were divided into two parts: an essay and

the stamps produced in that year.

The design concept for the books derived from its content. When

commissioned to design the annual stamp-books, the designer was

to produce an introductory text to accompany the stamps produced

that year. Irma collaborated with Paul Hefting and requested him

to write an introductory text about artistic inspiration. Hefting,

an art historian working at PTT, wrote an essay titled (Voor)beeld-

ing. The title indicates that the essay will be concerned with (pre)

images, or visual inspiration for certain images. To accompany the

essay, Irma searched for illustrations which in her opinion inspired

famous artists and designers. Using the modern and unconventional

Xerox machine, scissors and glue, Boom composed the spreads of

her stamp-books.31

The commission to design two volumes of the stamp-books gave

Irma Boom the opportunity to turn her artistic vision into tangi-

ble objects, as well as allowed her to explore the boundaries and the

27  Williams, 2011, 36.

28  Ibid.

29  ’…I like to divide our profession into B.C. and A.C., just like history. So B.C. is Before Computer, A.C. is After Computer. Massimo Vignelli, “Big Think Interview with Massimo Vignelli”, Big Think (April 15, 2010), accessed August 1, 2013. http://bigthink.com/videos/big-think-interview-with-massimo-vignelli.

30  Williams, 2011, 36-37.

31  Boom, 2010.

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29

books b.c.visual possibilities a book can offer to its reader. Japanese binding,

in which the pages are closed at the front, was chosen to provide

the book with its unusual appearance. Binding books in Japanese

binding required an uncommon craftsmanship in the Netherlands

of the 1980s.32 Since the images were printed on both sides of the

folded page, Irma used thin architectural paper to make the images

printed on the inside of the folded page visible to the viewer. Initially

the-books were to be printed on seven hundred pages, however, the

Japanese fold allowed the images to be printed on both sides of the

folded page, turning seven hundred pages into fourteen hundred.

In the second part of the book, depicting the stamps designed in

1987 and 1988, Boom decided to show the creative process rather than

the final result of the stamps.33 Irma contacted the designers of the

stamps and asked to send her their sketches and other projects they

were involved with to give a broader view of their design practice.34

Boom was less than impressed with the stamps designed in ’87 and

‘88, and as the image editor of the book, reproduced her least favor-

ite sketches inside the folded page printed in mirror images so as to

intensify their sketchiness.35

A month before the publication of the books, Irma Boom presented

her design to the directors of the PTT. The design was not approved

and Irma was told to change it or else another designer will be given

the commission. Boom stood her ground and was not going to com-

promise over her artistic vision.36 The budget of the stamp-books,

provided by the PTT, was 96000 guilders, and it became clear that

Boom’s design will overrun the budget. The final books cost 500000

32  Boom, 2010.

33  Ibid.

34  Interview with Prof. Wigger Bierma and the author. April, 2013.

35  Irma Boom, Gutenberg – Galaxie II (Leipzig: Institure für Buchkunst, 2002), 216.

36  Boom, 2012.

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30

guilders and it was decided that the high costs of the books will be

divided between the SDU and the PTT.37 Color images were printed

only on the external part of the folded page, while the inner images

were printed in black and white to minimize the cost of the book.38

Nederlandse Postzegels 87+88 looked nothing like books previ-

ously designed by Crouwel, Martens and Beeke (fig. 3). Past editions

appeared slim, elegant, well-printed and well-bound. Boom’s folded

pages gave her stamp-books relatively thick appearance, and her use

of low quality images made by Xerox machine, separated her books

from the rest of the series. Early editions of the stamp-books from

the 1970s were relatively smaller in their size (21x15mm), whereas

books designed in the 1980s were taller and wider (17.5x25mm).

The Japanese binding gave an additional centimeter to the width of

Irma’s stamp-books (18.6x25mm) and thus broke with the conven-

tional dimensions of the book established in the 1980s (fig. 4-8).

The volumes of the stamp-books were bound with blue carton

paper for the first volume and light grey for the second volume. In

the center of the cover page of the first volume golden square leaf in

the center of the cover displaying the number 87 in emboss print-

ing and 88 in blind imprint, while the second volume displays a black

square leaf with 87 in blind printing and 88 embossed. The design

is minimalistic and does not match the series’ previous cover pages.

1.2. FORM OVER CONTENT

Nederlandse Postzegels 87+88 were divided into two main parts:

an essay about artistic inspiration and the stamps of 1987 and 1988,

depicted along with the creative process that led to their creation. To

separate the two, Boom set two different kinds of paginations. Roman

numerals were chosen for the essay, while conventional numeric

37  Boom, 2012.

38  Interview with Jan Willem Stas and the author. January 2013.

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31

books b.c.pagination was used for the stamps. The Roman numerals, centered

and printed inside the folded page, are nearly invisible, while the pag-

ination of the stamps is clear and visible. An additional alphabeti-

cal pagination was used for the first eight pages of the first volume

of the stamp-book.

The first page welcomes the reader with a quote set in a Malevich

inspired perfect square shape:39 The roots of modern typography are

entwined with those of twentieth-century painting, poetry, and archi-

tecture. Photography, technical changes in printing, new reproduction

techniques, social changes, and new philosophical attitudes have also

helped to erase the frontiers between graphic arts, poetry and typog-

raphy and have encouraged typography to become more visual, less lin-

guistic, and less purely linear.40 The quote sets the tone of the book and

almost warns the reader of what he is about to experience.

As the reader continues to flip through the pages of the first volume

of the stamp-books, he is confronted with an immediate sense of

unfamiliarity and instability. Although he is presented with legible

typography,41 much effort is needed to decipher the text. The essay

written by Hefting spreads over fifty-two pages. The text is set in

a square shape in the center of the page, while the captions of the

images run right through it. There are twenty square text boxes and

one rhombus shape constructed from the text. The squares differ in

their measurements: 10.3x11mm, 12x12mm, 9.7x9.2mm, 7.1x7mm,

9x8.7mm etc., however, to the naked eye they appear completely

symmetrical.

39  Boom, 2012.

40  Herbert Spencer, The Pioneers of Modern Typography, revised ed. 1969 (Aldershot: Lund Humphries, 2004), 11.

41  Adrian Frutiger’s 1975 Fruteger and 1957 Univers typefaces, and Eric Gill’s 1926 Gill Sans, were all used in a single text block.

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32

The layout of the page changes when the catalogue of the stamps

designed in 1987 begins. The text boxes, still in the center of the page,

are turned on their side. Some of the text boxes are placed close to the

edges of the book and run all the way to the next page, while other

text boxes are covered with illustration, all of which makes read-

ing of the text very difficult. The second volume, thinner in its size,

depicts the stamps designed in 1988 in much the same way.

Instead of being ‘invisible’ the printed pages challenge the reader

and create new obstacles for his comprehension.42 Text boxes turned

on their side force the reader to hold the book horizontally instead

of vertically. Text beginning on one page and bleeding into the next

create further challenge for the reader to decipher the text. Perhaps

this book is not meant to be read in a conventional way. The text

serves a different purpose than its literal function of readability, and

the images enhance this new way of communication.

Various types of images, chosen by Boom, accompany the essay of

the book written by Hefting: images are connected by visual resem-

blance, by their subject, and random thought-provoking illustrations

(fig. 9). Some spreads require basic knowledge of graphic design

to see the connection between the images. For instance, spread 42

(XLII) depicts Wim Crouwel’s New Alphabet on the top right hand-

side of the spread, alongside with Anthon Beeke’s alphabet, while the

inside images of the folded page show, as the caption says, a seven-

teenth-century alphabet (fig. 10). In 1967 Crouwel set out to design

an alphabet suitable for the new technologies based on a pattern

of horizontal and vertical rows of pixels and a 45° angle. Crouwel

created this ‘over the top and never meant to be used’ alphabet as a

statement on the impact of new technologies on centuries of typo-

graphic tradition.43

42  As Stanley Mirisons soulmate and friend Beatrice Warde said: ‘printing should be invisible’. Lommen, 2012, 275.

43  Wim Crouwel, Wim Crouwel Gerrit Noordzij Prize (The Hague: Royal Academy of Art, 2012), 31.

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33

books b.c.When the New Alphabet was published, many of Crouwel’s peers

reacted to it differently. Beeke reacted in his way by ‘re-humanizing

the alphabet’. While Crouwel had dehumanized it by creating forms

conditioned by the limitation of the computer screen, Beeke wanted

to make his alphabet as human as possible, so he used female figures

to form his alphabet issued in 1970 by the same company that pub-

lished Crouwel’s typeface.44 Beeke’s alphabet drew its inspiration

from a sixteenth-century alphabet based on both male and female

figures designed by a German/Flemish engraver in the end of the six-

teenth-century. Some knowledge of the world of graphic design is

required to decipher this connection between the images, but most

of the other spreads are associated by visual resemblance.

Irma Boom’s stamp-books allow the form of the book to take over

its content. In both parts of the stamp-books, the essay and the

stamps, the text provides something other than readability. Since

the Industrial Revolution type was an important component of any

printed object. First the main function of typography was the dis-

semination of information, however, soon the letters of the alpha-

bet could not merely function as phonetic symbols.45 Boom’s books

communicate with its reader thorough its form rather than its leg-

ibility. The form can also provide content by means of attracting,

engaging and differentiating without being readable.46

1.3. HONORING THE TRADITIONAL BOOK

In her lectures entitled Manifesto for the Book Irma Boom expresses

her deep respect for the traditional book, and at the same time

her desire to push the boundaries of the medium even further. To

44  Jan Middendorp, Dutch Type (Rotterdam: 010 Publishers, 2004), 134.

45  Meggs, 2006, 135.

46  Rudy Vanderlands, ‘Legible?’ in Emigre No. 70: The Look Back Issue. Selection from Emigre Magazine #1-#69, 1984-2009 (Berkeley, CA: Gingko Press, 2009) 96.

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34

illustrate Boom’s connection to the traditional book, I propose to

compare a spread printed in Venice in the end of the fifteenth cen-

tury, and a spread from the first volume of Irma Boom’s stamp-

books. Boom’s stamp-books bring to mind Aldus Manutius’s 1499

Hypnerotomachia Poliphili for two main reasons: our contemporary

conventions of book design and the visual resemblance of the type

set in a geometrical shape.

Ever since William Morris laid the principles which remain the

foundation of modern book typography,47 it is difficult for us to see

codex as something other than his vision of the ideal book. Clear

and legible pages, designed as spreads and not independent pages;48

a typeface designed by an artist as opposed to type designed by an

engineer; and finally the margins of the book must be in due propor-

tion to the page of letters.49 But, can a book be considered beautiful if

it does not obey our contemporary ideas of an ideally designed book?

Hypnerotomachia Poliphili, despite its errors which would be unac-

ceptable today, is considered by many to be one of the great books of

all time.50 Much of the book’s fame is due to the beautiful illustra-

tions and almost equally beautiful clarity and elegance of its type.51

However it is important to note that little imperfections, as we would

address them today, do exist in this masterpiece: type is often being

jammed up against or even into illustrations, the illustrations are

not quite the same width as the text, the lines are spaced challeng-

ingly tight, there is inconsistent spacing after punctuation or some-

times no spacing at all, hyphens differ, there is a lack of relationship

47  William S. Peterson, ed., The Ideal Book: Essays and Lectures on the Arts of the Book (Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, 1982), xxxii.

48  Ibid., 70.

49  Ibid., 68-69.

50  Bartram, 2001, 28-29.

51  Ibid., 29.

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books b.c.between facing pages etc.52 Manutius’s masterpiece does not match

our contemporary expectations of an ideal book, as defined by Morris,

and yet it is considered by some to be the most beautiful book ever

produced.53

Visual resemblance appears between Aldus Manutius’s

Hypnerotomachia Poliphili and Irma Boom’s Nederlandse Postzegels

87+88. To demonstrate the likeness I chose a remarkable spread from

the Hypnerotomachia Poliphili that was possibly not designed as a

spread and illustrates an interest in typesetting the text as semi-geo-

metrical shape (fig. 11). Irma Boom, possibly inspired by Early Modern

books, turned her text into precise geometrical shapes in which the

legibility of the text becomes less important than the shape of the

text box carefully positioned in the center of the page (fig. 12).

It is clear that Manutius’s aesthetic principles do not match those

of Morris’s, however, our judgment of books based on Morris’s ideals

allows us to judge the fifteenth-century book as a masterpiece. To

shape his text into a geometrical shape, Manutius ‘sacrificed’ the unity

of his hyphens in order to create his shape, and so did Irma Boom by

removing it altogether. In an interview given in 2001, Irma talked

about her desire to create an absolute typographical square: ‘…but if

you look at medieval books, they are considered to be typographical

masterpieces and they are doing exactly the same’.54

Over half a millennium separates the Venetian masterpiece and

Irma Boom’s stamp-books, but the desire of the two applied artists to

use the text in an unconventional way connects the two together. It is

52  Bartram, 2001, 29.

53  Lommen, 2012, 54.

54  ‘Maar kijk naar middeleeuwse boeken, die worden gezien als typografische hoogstandje: daar wordt precies hetzelfde gedaan! ...Ken je klassickers, denk ik dan’. Lies Holtrop, “De Boeken van Irma Boom,” Made in Holland (Winter 2001): 38.

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perhaps ahistorical to compare the Early Modern book with a contem-

porary book, however, Irma Boom’s statements invite the assump-

tion that she was inspired by traditional books, but she also took the

concept even further and created her own unique visual statement.

1.4. BRILLIANT FAILURE

In 1989 Irma Boom received many awards for her design of

Nederlandse Postzegels 87+88 and from this point onward, nearly

every year, her books were awarded and honored for their design.55

In a catalogue of 1988 awarding the stamp-books De Best Verzorgde

Boeken (best designed books) of that year, the jury’s report allows us

a rare glimpse into the reception of Boom’s book at the time of their

publishing. The report summarized all the difficulties the panel faced

when judging the stamp-books.

‘Text printed through one another, missing hyphens, large-set ini-

tial words in new sentences which sometimes switch to the ordinary

size in mid-syllable, pagination which starts at an arbitrary page…

it is all a very long way from the general typographical pattern of

booklets intended for reference purposes’, ‘some pages can only be

understood when held up to the light… such a high degree of inac-

cessibility cannot, surely, be the purpose of book design’.56

The panel’s decision to award the stamp-books after all has every-

thing to do with a change that was beginning to happen within the

book: ‘…it is clear that we now have the kind of climate for book

design in which this sort of experimentation is possible’.57 The report

55  From 1989 to 2013 Irma Boom received awards, honors or honorable mention for a great number of her books. Only in 2004 Boom was not awarded or nomi-nated for any award for her books.

56  De Best Verzorgde Boeken 1988 (Amsterdam: CPNB, 1989), 137-139.

57  Ibid., 137.

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37

books b.c.continues: ‘that the text should run right up and indeed over the edge

of the page perhaps epitomizes the panel’s final conclusion: this is

an experiment that goes over the top. In other words it fails, but it is

a brilliant failure’.58

The stamp-books were also appreciated by the panel for their tech-

nical innovations: ‘the excellent printing of the variegated picto-

rial matter on the difficult paper’. They addressed the unusual bind-

ing technique: ‘with sheets left close at the front so that the whole

assumes something of an Asiatic air, and the ingenious idea of print-

ing the transparent paper on both sides with the verso reversed. This

means that the pictorial and textual elements on the verso form as

it were an entity with the recto’.59 Despite the criticism the books

received they were recognized as unusual and worthy of attention.

Even with her award, Irma Boom never considered her stamp-

books to be best designed books. The award for De Best Verzorgde

Boeken was given to books that had the best execution: best typog-

raphy, type-setting, lithography, binding etc. The stamp-books were

stapled, since at that time in the Netherlands the technique of the

Japanese binding was not familiar. The printing of the images was

not done in an award-winning manner, and only after the books were

printed Irma discovered she made a serious mistake regarding the

design of her books. As Morris suggested, Boom designed her books

as sheets and not as single pages. When the books were bound, pages

originally intended to be on the right side appeared on the left.60

58  Niek Smaal et al., De Best Verzorgde Boeken 1988 (Amsterdam: CPNB, 1989), 137.

59  Ibid.

60  Boom, 2010.

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Nederlandse Postzegels 87+88 taught Boom the impact a book can

have, as well as a valuable lesson about book design. Since Boom

experienced unexpected challenges with the reversed pages of the

stamp-books, she decided to make dummy-books, miniature ver-

sions of the final book, to prevent future mistakes. These miniature

books inspired her 2010 catalogue and are expected to be revised

and reprinted in September 2013.

1.5. BEST BOEK

After winning the award for De Best Verzorgde Boeken, Irma Boom

was invited to design the 1989 catalogue. De Best Verzorgde Boeken,

the oldest of its kind in Europe dating back to 1926, was an important

source of information regarding the changes and the developments

which occurred in the world of the book. Each year Dutch publishers,

designers and printers submit hundreds of books to be judged by a

publisher, two designers, a printer or a binder; the fifth jury member

can be a bookseller, a book historian, curator or a writer on the sub-

ject. The members of the jury are invited to select no more than thir-

ty-three books that excel in their physical appearance. The winning

books are later exhibited at the Stedelijk Museum in Amsterdam,

several other places in the Netherlands and abroad.61

Each year, a bi-lingual catalogue listing the best book designs is

published by CPNB to promote book trade in the Netherlands and

encourage the habit of reading books.62 The commission to design the

catalogue is offered to young graphic designers, and each designer

may create only one catalogue.63 Following the success of the stamp-

books, Irma Boom was invited to design the catalogue of De Best

61  About, “De Best Verzorgde Boeken,” accessed on August 1, 2013. http://www.bestverzorgdeboeken.nl/en/about/.

62  About, “CPNB,” accessed on August 1, 2013. http://www.cpnb.nl/cpnb/index.vm?template=english.

63  Boom, 2010.

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books b.c.Verzorgde Boeken 1989.64 The structure of the catalogue follows a

certain format: an essay and the books awarded that year along with

the jury’s deliberations.

The catalogue provides valuable information regarding the winning

books: authors, publishers, print-run, the number of pages, binding

styles, printers, typesetters, typefaces used, photographers, lithog-

raphers, designers, kinds of paper, the format of the book, materials

used, and the prices by which the books were sold. A spread and a

cover page of the book are presented alongside the most vital infor-

mation of the catalogue: the jury’s report and the reasons why this

particular book was chosen as that year’s winner.

When commissioned to design the 1989 catalogue, Irma Boom

wanted to create two books combined in a single volume. After exper-

imenting with her new technique of creating the small-size dummy

of the book, Irma Boom presented a solid design for the next Best

Verzorgde Boeken. By using glossy and matt paper, trimming the

margins slightly closer on every second leaf Boom created two books

in one.

The Best Boek, with its modest dimensions of 17x20.5mm, bound

in blue velvet texture, is printed on thin semi-transparent paper. The

soft cover invites the reader to flip through the pages instead of turn-

ing them one by one. When the reader flipped through the leaves from

front to back, the jury reports along with black and white pictures

from the book are visible, and once flipping the book from back to

front, the glossy color printed images of the book’s cover are revealed.

Boom created two volumes in one, but she also created a book

that could communicate different information to different audi-

ences. While some people are interested in content, others might

be more interested in pictorial overview of the winning books. The

64  For video and photographs of the book, please visit http://www.book-as-art.info/dutch_best_book_design_1989.html.

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40

information is legible and printed through the entire book using only

one typeface, Universe, and the pictures are high quality images

printed on a glossy paper that makes the images to appear vibrant and

visually appealing. Looking back at this commission Boom writes:

‘Desperately seeking to make two books in one I made trial dum-

mies and discovered a strong and simple concept with surprising

and effective results… The cover is so soft it invites the flipping idea.

Some designers have never seen the text of the book!’65

The large print run of 1500 books was sold out and this book won

the next year’s honorable mention in Best Verzorgde Boeken 1990.

The success of the catalogue was not only regarded to the form of the

book, but also to its content. When taking upon herself a time con-

suming commission, Irma brought a part of herself into the proj-

ect. Creating a new way of experiencing the book was not enough,

she also wanted to take charge of the content. Instead of providing

the jury’s edited reports, Irma asked for the transcripts of the pan-

el’s deliberations. These deliberations, so important for a young

designer, provided an important insight into the selection process

of the winning books.

1.6. CONCLUSIONS

Between 1985 and 1990 Irma Boom worked at the SDU, where

she was commissioned to work on important cultural and social

projects. During this period, Irma’s books began to show what will

later on give her an important status in the history of book design.

Uncompromising attitude towards her artistic vision, her unusual

way of communicating with the audience, and the important role

of the designer in the content of the book determine its success or

65  Lommen, 2010, 594.

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41

books b.c.failure. When working on a project, Boom was concerned with the

alternation of the physicality of the book and its communication of

the content to its reader. Two of the case studies presented in this

chapter demonstrate her early works and experiments in the tradi-

tional field of book design.

Nederlandse Postzegels series and De Verzorgde Boeken were part of

a long and respected tradition. Irma Boom brought these two series

into the last quarter of the twentieth century, using the traditional

components of the book, namely binding, printing, paper, typefaces

and layout, but creating something completely new. The acute reac-

tion to the new books emphasizes the change which Boom’s books

introduced to the world of the book.

I chose these two case studies for different reasons. The stamp-

books and their rejection raised my curiosity and forced me to see

these books for myself. Earlier this year I conducted a survey via

social media to determine which of Irma Boom’s books was the most

popular. I was surprised to discover that the stamp-books were the

most beloved books, despite their relative anonymity in comparison

with Boom’s other projects. Even after twenty five years these books

remain relevant and praised. The catalogue of De Best Verzorgde

Boeken 1989 is less familiar, but it demonstrates Irma Boom’s pro-

found understanding of different audiences a book may have.

In 1990, a year before opening her office in Amsterdam, Irma was

commissioned to design a book for a conference about art, science

and spirituality. The designers at the SDU were not interested in this

project, and Boom decided to take the commission as her final work

at the printing and publishing office. This commission changed her

professional career as she met her patron and commissioner of the

next fifteen years: Paul Fentener van Vlissingen (1941-2006).

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Fig. 3. Nederlandse Postzegels 1977, 1978, 1982, 1983, 1980, 1987, 1988.

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Fig. 4. Wim Crouwel, Nederlandse Postzegels 1977, 1978, 46-47.

Fig. 5. Wim Crouwel, Nederlandse Postzegels 1978, 1979, 32-33

Fig. 6. Karel Martens, Nederlandse Postzegels 1982, 1985 48-49.

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Fig. 7. Karel Martens, Nederlandse Postzegels 1983, 1986, 66-67.

Fig. 8. Anthon Beeke, Nederlandse Postzegels 1980, 1984.

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Fig. 10. Irma Boom, Nederlandse Postzegels 1987+88, vol. 1 1988, XLII-XLIII.

Fig. 9. Irma Boom, Nederlandse Postzegels 1987+88, vol. 1, 1988, XX-XXI.

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Fig. 11. Francesco Colonna (?), Hypnerotomachia Poliphili (Venice, 1499).

Fig. 12. Irma Boom, Nederlandse Postzegels 1987+88, vol. 1 1988, IIL-1.

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Fig. 13. Irma Boom and Johann Pijnappel, SHV book Chinese and English editions, 1996.

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CHAPTER

TWO

THE DESIGNER

AS AUTHOR

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51

THE DESIGNER AS AUTHOR

In 1991 Irma Boom was ready for her independence. That year

Irma opened her studio in Amsterdam and was ready to turn book

design into an art form. Initially, Irma did not think about becoming

a graphic designer and her discovery of the potential of book design

happened while she was still a student at the Academy for Art and

Industry (AKI) in Enschede.66 The romantic idea of an artist, work-

ing alone in his atelier, inspired her to become a painter.67 Irma stud-

ied painting for three years, until she stumbled upon a class on book

design, and since then she never touched a brush again.68 In 1991 her

romantic idea of working alone in her studio was about to become a

reality, and for the next twenty-two years her small office remained in

Amsterdam. The following year, Boom was appointed to the faculty

of Yale University School of Art as a senior critic in graphic design,

a prestigious position that offered new and exciting challenges.69

This chapter will present three case studies each concerned with

the influence of the designer on the content of the book he was com-

missioned to produce. With the introduction of computers, the pro-

fession of the graphic designer changed and began to include addi-

tional responsibilities that eventually gave him more control over

the commission. Three of the case studies introduced in this chapter

ask a difficult question: should a graphic designer become involved

in the content, or should he neatly connect between the images and

the text previously provided by his commissioner?

66  Williams, 2011, 34.

67  Boom 2012.

68  Williams, 2011, 34.

69  Lommen, 2010, 20-21.

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2.1 A DECADE OF INDEPENDENCE

All through the 1990s Irma worked on both national and inter-

national commissions, which brought her prizes and recognition

for her design. The last commission Irma took before leaving the

SDU was to design a catalogue for a conference held in the Stedelijk

Museum in September 1990. Art Meets Science and Spirituality

in a Changing Economy brought together artists, scientists, spiri-

tual leaders and economist to explore the emerging paradigm of a

holistic world view and the implications for a global economy. One

of the speakers and the sponsor of the event was Paul Fentener van

Vlissingen, the CEO of Steenkolen Handels-Vereeniging (SHV). Van

Vlissingen was impressed by the book Boom designed for his event,

and soon after the two met to discuss another commission.

The collaboration between Irma Boom and Paul van Vlissingen

was of great importance to Irma’s freelance career. Paul was an excep-

tional commissioner; he was an economist, a philosopher, an envi-

ronmentalist and a philanthropist, and the CEO of multinational

company. He gave Irma complete creative freedom and an unlim-

ited budget to turn her vision into designed objects. The relation-

ship between the two resulted in sixteen books published each year

on Paul’s birthday,70 and their professional relationship lasted until

2006 when Paul lost his battle against cancer. The first project Boom

and van Vlissingen worked together was for a book celebrating Paul’s

fiftieth birthday. After this successful collaboration, Paul commis-

sioned an object to celebrate his company’s one-hundred year jubilee.

2.2 THINKBOOK

In 1991 an exceptional project was about to ‘cause the impact

of a small earthquake in the world of Dutch graphic design’.71 Paul

Fentener Van Vlissingen commissioned Irma Boom and the art

70  Petri Leijdekkers, “Building Books: The Powerful Book Designs of Irma Boom,” The Low Countries 18. trans. Chris Emery (2010): 247.

71  Carel Kuitenbrouwer, “A Monument Made of Money,” Eye (Spring, 1997), accessed on August 1, 2013. http://www.eyemagazine.com/review/article/a-monument-made-of-money.

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the designer as author

historian Johan Pijnappel to produce a commemorative object cele-

brating the centenary of SHV. This object would be distributed inter-

nally to the company’s share-holders and its main function would be

to inspire future generations. The commission was to be completed

by 1996, and the only guidance Irma and Johan received was to ‘look

for the unusual’.72 It is important to note that a company’s centenary

has always been of great importance in The Netherlands. A company

that existed for one-hundred years, and was of national importance,

can apply for the right to carry the title ‘Koninklijk’ (Royal) granted

by the Queen of The Netherlands.73 However, this title was never

added to the company’s name.74

For this commission Irma and Johan moved into their offices at

the SHV headquarters in Utrecht to learn all they could about the

company. For their research Irma and Johan were given unlimited

access to all the company’s files and were even allowed to attend

share-holders’ meetings. The research for the book took three and

a half years and the remaining time was devoted to the design of the

actual object.75 The commission did not specify what kind of object

should celebrate the company’s hundred years of existence, but it

required durability of five centuries. It was agreed that the only object

suitable to withstand the test of time was the book.

In May 1996, when the SHV book was finally published, the result

was like no other jubilee book.76 The vast majorities of these books

used to be a glamorous celebration of the company’s success, usually

72  Modern Book Design. Irma Boom: SHV 1896-1996, accessed August 1, 2013. http://www.meermanno.nl/index/-/p-irmaboomshv1896-1996124.

73  Peter Bil’ak interview with the author, March 2013.

74  In an internal memo reproduced in the first pages of the SHV thinkbook, van Vlissingen wrote: ‘just to put your mind at rest, I can inform you that SHV itself has not applied for the ‘Royal’ sobriquet either. Nor has it initiated any applica-tion for other honors… too many ‘Royal’ companies have come in for negative pub-licity in recent years, thereby tarnishing the label’s prestige…The Netherlands and Dutch companies in particular have enjoyed a ‘republican’ history under the respected House of Orange. It is the quality of the family that is so important and not the title. The same goes for us’.

75  Lommen, 2010, 24.

76  For the video and photographs of this book, please visit http://www.book-as-art.info/shv.html.

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54

written by historians, and were never read by their recipients.77 Irma

wanted to change that, she wanted to create a book that its reader

would enjoy again and again. She wanted to design an inspirational

book that would take its reader on a journey through the company’s

history that would ultimately influence its future.

The SHV book is considered to be a masterpiece of design and print-

ing. The book was lithographed and printed by Drukkerij Rosebeek,

bound by Boekbinderij Spiegelenberg, and published by SHV Utrecht.

There are two editions of the book: four thousand English books and

five hundred books translated to Chinese (fig. 13). Initially, Boom and

Pijnappel wanted to make additional books in other languages, but

after the Chinese edition it was decided not to follow through with

their concept.78 The SHV book is 170x225x113mm, and it weighs an

impressive three and a half kg. It is the most expensive jubilee book

ever printed, and it is not for sale. The SHV book has been available

for inspection in libraries around The Netherlands since summer

1996,79 but it was never released for sale in stores.

The materials used for the SHV book were meant to last for centu-

ries. For this purpose Irma used the best glue, paper and a stainless

steel enhancement for the book’s spine.80 In order to save trees, the

book’s 2136 pages were printed on cotton based banknote paper.81

Editions of the SHV book differ by the color of the books binding: the

77  Boom, 2010.

78  Ibid.

79  The Royal Library in The Hague for instance, received a copy of the English version after they sent an official letter to the SHV on June 19th 1996. The book was given to the library in exchange for a donation of 750 Guilders to a cancer fund. Both the English and the Chinese books are available in Meermanno Museum in The Hague and in Special Collections of UvA.

80  Boom, 2010.

81  Ebelin Boswinkel and Paul van Capelleveen, Style: Unique Acquisitions by the Koninklijke Bibliotheek during the Directorship of Wim van Drimmelen (The Hague: Koninklijk Bibliotheek, 2008), 59.

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the designer as author

English version bound in white, and the Chinese edition in black.

Custom-made protective covers were specially designed for these

four and a half thousand books. For this analysis I will be discuss-

ing only the English edition of the SHV book.

The SHV jubilee book was designed to provide the future gener-

ations with the company’s much-needed archive.82 There are three

types of documents in the SHV book: original English documents as

well as documents translated from Dutch, German, Thai and Chinese

into English; pictures without captions that would not allow the

reader to recognize the company’s employees or even the dates in

which these photos were taken; and newly typeset texts in English or

Chinese – depending on the publication. Some of the images repro-

duced in the SHV books were covered with a fine horizontal screen

rendering them slightly out of focus. At times these images remind

us of television frame paused with a VCR. None of the photos reveal

any information about their subjects, and the people with names are

the share-holders and their families, transfigured in pale, low con-

trast shade of blue.83 The removal of the captions allows the reader

to see the past and present employees as timeless components that

were and always will be a part of the SHV.

The SHV book includes doubts, mistakes, changes, and no sub-

ject is considered a taboo. The book demonstrates exquisite laser

printing, multi-color printing and sophisticated computer tech-

niques; special screens were used to produce hundreds of documents

and photographs on these 2136 pages.84 Water-marks are scattered

all through the book displaying hidden messages such as LEARN,

LISTEN, REACT, MOTIVATE PEOPLE and KEEP THINGS SIMPLE

82  Rick Poynor, ‘XXXL,’ I.D. Magazine, November 1996, 63.

83  Kuitenbrouwer, 1997.

84  Boswinkel and van Capelleveen, 2008, 59.

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56

reappear on many of the book’s pages. This book, by form and con-

tent separates itself from the traditional jubilee books and invites a

new kind of reading.

2.3 THE BOOK AS A JOURNEY

The reading experience of the SHV book is like of no other book.

It was not designed for a linear reading and therefore it does not

possess the familiar characteristics of a Western book.85 There is

no title-page, table of contents, a clear division into chapters, a col-

ophon or an index to help the reader in any way to understand the

book’s structure. My first experience with the SHV book left me more

confused than before I got the chance to examine it. It is clear that it

is nothing like the books I was used to read. I returned to this book

many times, until I finally understood how it should be experienced.

The SHV book is a multilayered journey that can be perceived on

several levels: it is a personal journey of the reader through the his-

tory of the SHV holdings, a journey of the company throughout the

pages of history, and it is also the journey of the physical book. The

journey begins in 2096 represented by white perforated pages sym-

bolizing the unknown future. The holes become bigger and bigger

as the reader reaches the year 1996. Boom and Pijnappel noted their

presence in the history of the SHV by adding their photo holding van

Vlissingen and Boom’s first private commission, the jubilee book

for van Vlissingen’s fiftieth birthday. Next a page from the birthday

book accompanied by a caption ‘The most important ingredient for

happiness is the capacity to change’ welcomes the reader. The fol-

lowing pages present Q&A from the Art Meets Science conference

and Paul’s speech from the opening ceremony. The reader continues

his journey until he reaches the year 1896. With every journey, the

85  Lommen, 2010, 25.

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57

the designer as author

experience will be different. Since there are no page numbers, the

journey through the book can never be exactly the same, much like

people’s journey through life.

Another way to see the SHV book as a journey is not from a personal

perspective, but the company’s journey through the human history.

Many important events happened in the world in one hundred years

of the company’s existence. Irma did not leave unflattering events

from the company’s past, but included them along with quotes like

‘Life is all about the journey not the destination’. The unnumbered

pages allow the reader to flip quickly through the pages, and thus

make him look at the last one hundred years as a passing moment in

the much longer history of the world.

There is another journey that can be observed – the journey of

the SHV book around the world. The book was designed to be dis-

tributed around the world, but in much slower distribution pace.86

According to the calculations it will take about five centuries to spread

these books around the world. Every year the SHV distributes a few

copies while the rest are kept in the company’s safe. The decision not

to release this book for sale only generated interest for this publica-

tion. Almost twenty years after the book was first published, it can

be found not only in Europe and China, but also in the permanent

collection of the Museum of Modern Art in New York and other pres-

tigious collections. In recent years few copies became available for

purchase in public auctions and even online, and the price of these

books (€7000-45000) shows that the public’s interest only grows

as the time passes.

86  Bil’ak, 2001.

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2.4 HIDDEN TREASURES

There are many hidden treasures in the SHV books which only a

careful inspection will reveal. Since the books were not available for

purchase, a vale of mystery surrounded the publication. Irma Boom

often encouraged these speculations by talking about secret messages

on the cover of the book that can be revealed only after extensive use,

or the hidden title of the book found only after placing the eight book-

marks of the book in specific places. This technique of adding mys-

tery to her books started with the SHV and continued with future

commissions, such as in the Sheila Hicks: Weaving as a Metaphor.

Five hidden treasures become visible after a close study of the SHV

book: 1. Three red sheets of postage stamps were added to each pub-

lication. There are one hundred and forty five anonymous portraits

and twenty three stamps with the words ‘bad news’, ‘should travel

fast’, ‘good news’, ‘may travel slowly’. 2. Eight red bookmarks reveal

the books hidden title and when they are placed in the correct order

they spell thinkbook (fig. 14). There are eight bookmarks and nine let-

ters, therefore the letters ‘oo’ are placed together on a spread. 3. The

hidden title on the cover of the book can be revealed after the white

cover becomes dirty. When looking at the white cover, it appears that

nothing is written, however once the book becomes dirty the words

‘SHV? WHAT TOMORROW’ become visible.

The decorated edges of the book reveal a colorful field of tulips on

one side, and a poem by the Dutch poet Gerrit Achterberg ‘Bolero van

Ravel’ on the other.87 The stainless steel enhancement for the spine

gave Irma an additional place for a subtle decoration. When looking

into the spine of the book, when the book lays open, the dates 1896

and 1996 become apparent. On a reflective surface of the binding

87  Boven dit eindeloos moeras: helblauwe vogel, af en aan. In de eeuwige woestijn: o karavaan. Over de zee een schip, alleen, van horizon in horizon. En in mijn leven het gedicht, waarin gij danst met ogen dicht.

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the designer as author

the number 2096 becomes visible only when the book is vertically

placed with its open pages on the table. There are many other inter-

esting things that a careful study of the book might reveal, and this

is what the designer wanted to achieve with this jubilee book.

From the first pages of the SHV book the reader realizes that this

book is different from what he is used to. There are no chapters, but

there are white pages with black questions printed with an enlarged

typeface. There are sixty one questions in total scattered around the

book.88 These questions were inspired by Robert Filliou’s Ample Food

for Stupid Thought (1965): ‘how are you, and why?’, ‘when will all the

nonsense end?’ and ‘how often do you see each other?’ Filliou’s book

inspired Irma and Johan to create their own ‘food for thought’.89

The SHV book begins with the question ‘Is thought physical?’ and

concludes with ‘Do we learn from mistakes?’ Some of the questions

are businesslike (‘Can loss be a profit?’), some homely (‘Do we feel

better with a new pair of socks?’), though provoking (‘Is early late

to someone else?’), Zen (‘Can you hear dew falling?’), unexpected

questions (‘Can death become a friend?’ or simply ‘Why?’), and ques-

tions about questions (‘Is the beginning of everything a question?’,

‘Which questions need an answer?’ and ‘What is an interesting ques-

tion?’). In the opening ceremony of Art Meets Science conference,

van Vlissingen said that ‘Questions are often more interesting than

answers. Human activity is such that there are more questions than

answers’, and the SHV books demonstrates this notion in full.

Six months before the SHV thinkbook was published, another

important thick book was designed. The Canadian Bruce Mau

together with the Dutch architect Rem Koolhaas published a book

88  There are sixty questions and one statement: ‘No partner in a separation should foul what was once shared’. Two of the questions are repeated twice: ‘Can you hear dew falling?’ and ‘Is the beginning of everything a question?’

89  Irma Boom, “Irma Boom: Personal Views 44,” Portugal, 2008, accessed August 1, 2013. http://esad.pt/pt/eventos/irma-boom.

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like no other previously designed monograph.90 S,M,L,XL with its

1344 pages, as the title suggests, was divided into four parts: small

(private commissions by Koolhaas), medium (commercial devel-

opments), large (office blocks), and extra-large (urban infrastruc-

tures).91 Irma Boom’s SHV book and Mau’s S,M,L,XL were created

almost simultaneously in different parts of the globe. These books

demonstrate unusual and new ways of non-linear story-telling.

Through this commission Boom met Koolhaas and together they

have worked on various projects.

2.5 ICON OF DUTCH DESIGN

The second half of the 1990s both praised and criticized the SHV

book. Graphic design magazines reviewed the book as a master-

piece, but they also commented on some interesting issues regard-

ing the book. Eye Magazine named their review of the SHV book ‘A

Monument Made of Money’ and criticized the design of the book that

was ‘neither adventurous nor surprising’.92 The author commented

that Boom and Pijnappel ‘put their professional skills in the service

of a commercial commissioner… but they did not maintain sufficient

distance between themselves and the client, who in this case hap-

pened to be their subject’,93 implying that the designer should remain

neutral regarding his commission.

The jury of the Best Verzorgde Boeken 1996 concluded their report

by saying that ‘it would be to the credit of the client if next time round

he focused all this talent, all this effort, all this ambition on a subject

of more general interest, and then shared the results with a much

90  Rem Koolhaas and Bruce Mau, S,M,L,XL (Rotterdam: 010 Publishers, 1995).

91  Roger Fawcette-Tang, New Book Design (New York: Laurence King Publishing, 2007), 182.

92  Kuitenbrouwer, 1997.

93  Ibid.

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the designer as author

wider public.’94 I.D. Magazine agreed with the jury report by adding

that although the SHV book ‘contributes to the culture of an unusual

organization… yet it remains an internal communication aimed at

a limited readership’.95 The author continued by adding ‘although

Boom’s book would provide a business historian with fascinating

evidence, it does not achieve the critical detachment to make it a

piece of historical commentary in its own right’.96 One of the Dutch

newspapers published an article revealing the cost of the SHV book:

three million Guilders (over €1.3 million in today’s currency).97 With

all the critics about the book’s inaccessibility, its high cost and the

subjectivity of the designer towards her subject, the SHV book, con-

sidered to be a modern-day masterpiece, is studied by designers and

displayed in museums around the world.

The SHV book was an important commission that influenced

Irma Boom’s future career. The collaboration between Boom and

van Vlissingen showed that the only way a project can be truly suc-

cessful is when the designer has the commissioner’s complete trust.

Just like with her previous commissions, Irma took a familiar cat-

egory of jubilee books and created something completely new. She

took complete charge over the content and researched the subject

for three and a half years before taking the role of the designer and

creating the actual object. This masterpiece, both in its design and

content, provokes the reader to think about unexpected philosoph-

ical topics intertwined with corporate mentality.

94  De Best Verzorgde Boeken 1996 (CPNB, 1997), 29.

95  Poynor, 1996, 65.

96  Ibid.

97  Hub Hubben, “Ware meesterproef van drie miljoen,” De Volkskrant, September 19, 1997.

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2.6 INTERNATIONAL COMMISSIONS

The SHV book soon became an icon of Dutch design, which drew

the attention of both national and international companies, such

as Vitra, Ferarri and Zumtobel. Irma Boom’s first of many interna-

tional commissions came from Vitra, the Swiss family-owned furni-

ture manufacture. Irma was commissioned to design Workspirit Six,

the sixth volume in a series of promotional publications by Vitra.98

Workspirit Six was referred to as ‘somewhere between an artist’s book

and a catalogue,’99 while De Best Verzorgde Boeken 1998 called this

book ‘a book with a view’,100 referring to the circular holes punched

into every page of the book.

The publication for Vitra was different from Irma’s previous proj-

ects. This international commission, with its impressive print run of

115000 books, published by the company, was to show Vitra’s more

playful side. To accomplish that, Irma used two kinds of paper, high-

gloss and uncoated, that alternated with each turn of the page. Unlike

the use of different paper in the Best Boek, Boom punched holes in all

176 pages of the book, and told the story of the company by a clever

interplay between words, images and pages of the book.

Workspirit Six was entirely developed by Irma: the concept of

the book, image and text editing, as well as the book’s realization.101

Irma used a soft cover for this 169x235x13mm book that gives it a

more casual feel. This book has no ISBN, however, unlike the SHV

book it was available for purchase at Vitra’s distributors. The playful

use of the decorated edges did not escape this publication. Irma cre-

ated an interesting interplay between the cover of the book and the

98  For the video and images, please visit http://www.book-as-art.info/ workspirit_six.html.

99  Fawcett-tang, 2004, 66.

100  Marij Bertram et al., De Best Verzorgde Boeken 1998 (Amsterdam: CPNB, 1999), 105.

101  Boom, 2002, 214.

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the designer as author

edges. The book’s cover depicts twenty-three white dots on a black

background and one red dot with the word ‘new’ written inside. The

dots alternate on the cover and show twenty-four black dots care-

fully arranged on a white background. The black dots were made

from combination of the colors (red, yellow and blue), and since the

colors were not placed one on top of the other, a colorful circle forms

around the black dot adding color to this otherwise monochromatic

cover. The edges of the book have this same interplay of alternation

of colors. When flipping through the book from start to finish, white

edges with black dots are revealed, and if flipping through the book

from end to start, black edges with white dots are visible to the reader.

Irma Boom was not interested in providing information about

Vitra’s furniture; instead, she explored the interplay between the

pages and the scattered holes throughout the entire catalogue. On

some of the pages Irma wrote words associated with ‘work’, ‘meet-

ings’, ‘office chairs’, ‘more chairs’ and ‘Eams’. These words written

in three rows can be seen through the circular holes of the previous

or the following pages, thus creating new thought provoking con-

nections between words and images. For instance, a page dedicated

to Vitra’s designer Charles Eames lists the key words regarding his

design along with a quote: ‘Don’t ask me about new lines and sil-

houettes. I am more interested in utility and the way things present

themselves in a room’.102 The circular hole of this page reveals Eames’

smile that appears on a photograph of the following page (fig. 15-16).

After opening her office in Amsterdam, Irma Boom enjoyed work-

ing with commissioners that granted her design complete creative

freedom. The SHV thinkbook and its unparalleled success attracted

international attention and allowed Irma to continue her innova-

tion in the field of book design. For Irma the content was always an

102  Irma Boom, Workspirit Six, (Amsterdam: Vitra Nederland, 1998), 145.

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important part of the book; it was her editing talent that separated

her books from the books of her colleagues. The control over the con-

tent that goes into the book made the stamp- books, the SHV book,

Vitra and many other commissions truly successful.

2.7 OTTO TREUMANN

At the end of 1990s, Irma was commissioned to produce the

first book in a series Grafisch Ontwerpen in Nederlands about Dutch

design and designers with support from the Prince Bernhard Cultural

Foundation.103 Two designers were paired together, and the first

volume allowed Irma Boom to design a book for Otto Treumann (1919-

2001). Treumann is regarded a major pioneer in the modernization

of graphic design in the Netherland, and when the work on this book

began, Otto was the oldest living designer in The Netherlands.104 Two

books were published, a Dutch version of 1999 and an English trans-

lation of 2001. Irma developed the concept and researched Otto’s

archive in the Stedelijk Museum in Amsterdam to find the right

images for the book. In their conversations, Otto told Irma about the

way he worked, how he designed posters and postage stamps. He

often used the idea that a designer can just let things flow, so that a

pattern can emerge.105

Otto Treumann’s monograph was published by 010 Publishers

in 1999 (English trans. 2001).106 Its 144 pages were bound in soft

cover stressing the colorful edges of the book. The protective cover

of the book depicts almost seven hundred little images, and once it is

removed from the book and unfolded, the cover turns into a poster.

The images on the cover showed Otto’s posters, postage stamps,

photos of his family, details of his works, all designed to show great

103  Lommen, 2010, 32.

104  Boom, 2002, 218.

105  Ibid.

106  For the video and images, please visit http://www.book-as-art.info/otto_tre-umann.html.

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the designer as author

oeuvre. The table of contents appears to be printed on the spine of

the book, so that the reader’s experience of the images printed on the

cover is not interrupted once he opens the book.

No title-page is greeting the reader once he opens the Otto

Treumann’s monograph. Instead, he is immediately exposed to rows

of little images that increase in their size as he progresses his jour-

ney through the book. As with her other books, Irma is very aware

of the ability of different materials to communicate their unique

statements. For this book, as for her other books, Irma used differ-

ent kinds of paper. First pages depicting small images were printed

on light paper revealing the silhouette of the image on the other side

of the page. As the reader progresses through the book, the images

grow bigger and the paper becomes thicker (fig. 17). Irma was the

image editor of the book and selected the order of the illustrations

she considered to be Treumann’s best works.

For this publication, Boom was provided with the main text of the

book. She was less than impressed with the way the content was writ-

ten, and decided to concentrate on the visual aspect of Treumann’s

work while rearranging the text to look more like footnotes than

the main text of the book. Few years earlier in 1994 David Carson,

the art director of a popular music magazine Ray Gun, published an

entire interview in symbol-only typeface. Carson found the text to

be poorly written and used typography to conceal its content from

the reader. Carson argued that ‘just because something is legible

doesn’t mean it communicates; it could be communicating completely

the wrong thing… It is mostly a problem of publications sending the

wrong message or not strong enough message. You may be legible,

but what is the emotion contained in the message?’107 Like Carson,

Irma found the essay written for the Otto Treumann monograph to

be extremely poorly written.

107  ‘David Carson on design + discovery,’ February 2003, accessed June 1, 2013. http://www.ted.com/talks/david_carson_on_design.html

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2.8 WHOSE BOOK IS IT ANYWAY?

When the monograph on Otto Treumann was published, the pub-

lic’s reaction was not positive, and he was not satisfied with the pub-

lication either. Almost ten years, and many successful commissions

later, Irma again faced public’s negative reaction to her design. Otto

Treumann generation did not consider Irma’s book well designed.

They could not understand what made her choose a soft cover for a

publication about Holland’s cherished designer. Why did she choose

to dedicate precious spread to a photo taken by Treumann and not the

photo of Treumann himself; why would she zoom into Treumann’s

works and not show his work in a more traditional way? After the book

was published Otto was not happy with the final result and thought

that this book was not about his work, but about Irma Boom. He told

Irma that ‘It is your book, not mine’, to which she replied ‘Yes, it is

my book about you.’108 He also accused Irma of ruining his beauti-

ful work by zooming in too close to it, and by doing so creating her

own interpretation of his work.

The media reviews soon followed, and it seemed that nothing was

right with Irma’s book. The content, the design and image editing

were all heavily criticized by the author of Eye Magazine. The title

of the review was ‘Treumann Battered into Patterns’, and the author

concluded that this book was ‘only superficially about Treumann. In

truth it is about another designer, whose name appears in the cred-

it’.109 The author questioned Irma’s editorial choices: ‘certainly there

is no good reason for such space-fillers as the double-page spread

that blows up a snapshot by Treumann of F. H. K. Henrion and Willen

Sandberg in a swimming pool in Jerusalem’; he questioned her design:

‘tab-marks in nine different colors are placed on the foredge: by these

sit reference numbers, keying pictures to the catalogue of work.

108  Leijdekkers, 2010, 250.

109  Robin Kinross, ‘Treumann battered into patterns,’ Eye (Winter 2001): 78.

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the designer as author

The effect is of meaningfulness. But the colors mean nothing, and it

becomes infuriating to have to turn constantly to the catalogue for

information that could have been put into a caption by the picture’;

and finally the text: ‘…the text is short, constructed in discrete sec-

tions that hardly connect to each other, which is often no more than

blandly appreciative, which has no argument to speak of, and cer-

tainly no conclusion. A lame translation into English does not help’.110

The last remark about the content of the book raises an interesting

issue. In his article, first published in 1996, Wigger Bierma addresses

the content of the book and the amount of publication as opposed to

previous decades: ‘In recent years the question of whether the book

is an outdated medium has cropped up regularly. It is said that we live

in the aftermath of the Luscaux-Gutenberg era, in a period of tran-

sition to […] a kind of multimedia image-soup. The consequences

of the introduction of the computer cannot be overestimated, but if

anything it gnawing away the position of the printed word… Perhaps

there is just as much of importance written and published as before,

but there is so much more written and published which is nonsen-

sical and superficial… Commissioners don’t use printed matter to

communicate matters of general importance any more, they use it

to make themselves visible…’.111

Otto Treumann’s monograph is an illustration of this cultural phe-

nomenon. In her attempt to ‘save’ this monograph from its content,

Boom relied on Treumann’s graphic work rather than the main text

of the book. Despite her efforts, this book is considered to be one of

Boom’s failures, and demonstrates how in times the graphic designer

is out-staging the main subject of the book he was commissioned to

design. Both Boom and Carson raise an interesting issue regarding

110  Kinross, 2001, 78.

111  Wigger Bierma, “In the surf of what is a typographer in a culture where emotions and images prevail at the expense of thoughts and words?” in Dot Dot Dot 3 (2001): 8.

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the role of the graphic designer once he is presented with an article he

or she considers to be beneath the book’s standard. In this case, can

or should the designer complete the commission and add his name

to the project, or must he do everything in his power to correct or

attempt to conceal the problem? Carson chose to eliminate the text

completely, while Boom suggestively moved it to the background.

In 1999 a manifesto was published in one of the leading magazines

of graphic design.112 It was signed by many designers, including Irma

Boom, calling for graphic designers to focus on putting designer’s

skills into use, instead of focusing on commercial design. This man-

ifesto was a reprint of Ken Garland’s 1964 First Thing First mani-

festo published in London. The reprint of the manifesto in the end of

the twentieth century showed that the opinion of graphic designer

should not be taken lightly.

Despite the discontent of Otto Treumann and his generation, the

book turned out to be a success that brought Irma even more com-

missions and clients that were looking for collaboration rather than

an objective arrangement of text and images in an aesthetic compo-

sition. Just as with previous series of the stamp-books and the best

Dutch book designs, Irma Boom brought Otto Treumann and his

work into the twenty-first century.

By the end of the twentieth century Irma Boom designed many

books, and was working on several projects at once. At any given

time, Boom works on 15-30 books in various stages of production,

and this does not allow her to dwell on less successful commissions.

It is this productivity along with her unique ideas on book design

that made her the youngest laureate to receive to Gutenberg prize

for her complete oeuvre.

112  ‘First Things First Manifesto 2000,’ Emigre, 1999, accessed June 1, 2013. http://www.emigre.com/Editorial.php?sect=1&id=14.

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the designer as author

2.9 CONCLUSIONS

During 1990s Irma became an internationally acclaimed graphic

designer. Her office handled national and international commis-

sions and her project with Johan Pijnappel for the SHV book became

a modern-day masterpiece. When working with her commission-

ers, Irma demanded complete creative freedom both as the editor

and the designer of the book. Her approach to book design was both

praised and criticized for the same reasons – should the designer be

involved with the content of the book he or she were commissioned to

design? For Irma Boom this may determine whether she will accept

or decline a commission. Successful collaboration between creative

people, as Mau and Koolhaas or Boom and van Vlissingen, can create

something exceptional that might forever change our perception of

book design.

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Fig. 14. Irma Boom, Hidden title of the SHV book, 1996.

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Fig. 15. Irma Boom, Workspirit Six, 1998, 144-145.

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Fig. 16. Irma Boom, Workspirit Six, 1998, 146-147.

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Fig. 17. Selected spreads from Otto Treumann, 2001.

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Fig. 18. Irma Boom, No. 5 Culture Chanel, 2013.

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CHAPTER

THREE

BOOKS OF

THE FUTURE

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BOOKS OF THE FUTURE

The modern historian and art philosopher R. G. Collingwood

wrote in 1924: ‘Contemporary history embarrasses a writer not only

because he knows too much, but also because what he knows is too

undigested, too unconnected, too atomic. It is only after close and

prolonged reflection that we begin to see what was essential and what

was important, to see why things happened as they did, and to write

history instead of newspapers’.113 This final chapter will attempt to do

just that: writing history in the present, while taking into an account

the challenges that this approach poses upon the author.

To this day, Irma Boom has designed some three hundred books,

and in recent years she has been receiving top commissions for other

important projects not necessarily connected with book design. In

2012 Boom designed the new visual identity for the reopening of

the Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam. Her latest commission involves

designing the pedestrian tunnel that will run under Amsterdam

Central Station. Besides these projects, Irma Boom also redesigned

the UN Headquarters’ interior of the North Delegate Lounge.114 Irma

Boom’s name has become a synonym for innovative design that keeps

on pushing the boundaries of the traditional book design, while

respecting its long-lasting tradition. In this chapter I will look at

Irma Boom’s book design of the twenty-first century.

113  Alston W. Purvis and Cees W. De Jong. Dutch Graphic Design: A Century of Innovation (London: Thames & Hudson, 2006), 389.

114  Beekmans, 2012.

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3.1. THE NEW MILLENNIUM

In the past five hundred years or so, the history of the book has

changed in more ways than one, but these changes never threat-

ened the physicality of the book as an object. The basic structure of

the book - its paper/parchment, script/typeface, ink and binding -

was never threatened. The traditional book adapted its form to any

technological and technical developments while keeping its core fea-

tures. The twenty-first century’s electronic book was the first real

threat to the physicality of the book. For some, digitization brought

the five hundred-year-old Gutenberg era to an end,115 while others

see this development as an environmental achievement that could

only contribute to our way of living.

The new millennium has changed many aspects of our lives as well

as the process of book production, and for some designers it created

an opportunity to redefine the printed book.116 Computer hardware

and software developments combined with the explosive growth of

the Internet created new opportunities that were not possible in the

past. The Industrial Revolution separated the process of creating and

printing graphic communications into various tasks, each requiring

specific expertise. In the beginning of the 1990s typesetters, engrav-

ers, skilled specialists who created page layouts, plate-makers, and

press-operators were no longer needed in order to produce a book. A

single individual could control most – or even all - of these functions

using a desktop computer,117 and this individual could even become a

new kind of co-author as was demonstrated in the previous chapter.

In 2001 Irma Boom received a prestigious Gutenberg prize awarded

by Institute für Buchkunst and funded by the Cultural Administration

of Leipzig. This Gutenberg prize has been awarded since 1959 to a

designer of outstanding merit.118 This award included €10000 of

115  Jason Epstein, “The End of the Gutenberg Era,” Library Trends (vol. 57, no.1, 2008): 8.

116  Beekmans, 2012.

117  Purvis and De Jong, 2006, 488.

118  Fawcett-Tang, 2004, 188.

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books of the future

prize money, an exhibition and a publication to exemplify Leipzig’s

tradition as a historical center for quality print work and the fostering

of book arts. The winner is given the opportunity to produce a book

entitled Gutenberg-Galaxie.119 Boom was not interested in design-

ing a book about her book design, and a student from the Academy

of Visual Arts in Leipzig accepted the commission.

Gutenberg-Galaxie II was Boom’s first monograph and its design had

to be in line with Irma’s unusual way of story-telling. Eleven of Boom’s

books, along with short comments translated to various languages,

were featured in the book. When commissioned to design a book for

the Gutenberg-Galaxie, the designer was given fixed measurements

of the book. When the monograph was published, it was evident that

Boom took the commission and literally bent it to her will.

The volume came wrapped in a sheet of brown craft paper depicting

a map of the galaxy (fig .19). At first glance the monograph appears

to be a standard portrait-format book (290x193mm), however, once

the wrapping paper is removed it becomes evident that the book can

be folded in the middle. Once folded, the volume becomes a brick-

shaped book that can be read in two different ways: as a single 416-

page book, or as two 208-page books.120

The opening lectures of the Gutenberg-Galaxie II praised Boom

for her achievements in a relative short period of her creative career

and referred to her work as ‘works of art… which lacks all dissatis-

faction facing backwards, which illustrate the creative and concep-

tual possibilities for interpretation of our present without nostalgic

over-attentiveness’.121 International success and the definition of

Boom’s books as works of art, changed the public’s reception of these

books. From being a ‘brilliant failure’ Irma Boom’s books became

‘sheer brilliants’.122

119  Fawcett-Tang, 2004, 188.

120  Daniel Nadel, “The Book as Sculpture,” in Eye 2003, accessed on August 1, 2013. http://www.eyemagazine.com/review/article/the-book-as-sculpture.

121  Boom, 2002, 385.

122  Paul Hefting et al., De Best Verzorgde Boeken 2006 (Amsterdam: CPNB, 2007), 59.

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3.2 THE NEW ROLE OF THE BOOK

‘If electronic media is a practical tool for conveying informa-

tion, books are information sculpture. From now on, books will

be judged by how well they awake this materiality, because the

decision to create a book at all would be based on a definite choice

of paper as a medium’.123

The new millennium shifted the main source of information from

the book to the World Wide Web. The book has quickly adjusted to

the change by providing to its reader an additional value that could

not be reproduced in a digital form. Irma Boom’s books of the first

decade of the new millennium, with their complete awareness of

their digital simulacrum,124 provide the reader a work of art rather

than merely beautifully-designed books. Irma Boom’s books are all

industrially made with an emphasis on large print-runs. A beauti-

ful book that was printed in few copies does not serve the main pur-

pose for which it was created, according to Irma Boom. ‘A book is not

simply a book, it is also an object. That is what makes it special… I

think a book has to be industrially made, because that is the whole

idea of the book: to spread information’.125

In 1987 when Otto Treumann joined the panel of judges of De Best

Verzorgde Boeken, he suggested to change the rules of the annual

report and include a new category. Treumann suggested including

the relationship between content and form as one of the criteria by

123  Kenya Hara, Designing Design (Baden: Lars Müller Publishers, 2007), 201.

124  When using the term ‘simulacra’, I refer to Jorge Luis Borges fable in which the cartographers of the Empire drew up a map so detailed that it ended up cov-ering the entire territory. In this analogy, the e-book represents the map that was believed to be the exact replica of the original. The e-book uses all the features of the book, such as page layout, typography and the basic structure of the book with its division into chapters, titles and indexes. The second stage of this might occur when the e-book will be referred to as a ‘book’, and gradually take the meaning of the original object whilst inevitably destroying it – just as the map destroyed the beautiful Empire.

125  Silverberg, 2011.

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which a book is judged. In his introduction to the judges’ report of

1993, Lucas Bunge also insisted that the quality of the form could

only be tested against the content.126 It was soon realized that the

traditional book should not compete with its digital twin, the book

should offer the reader something that the e-book will not be able to:

the reflection of the book’s content in its physical form. Irma Boom’s

books, their almost sculptural appearance could not be transferred

into a digital form, nor should they. Irma’s books have to justify their

existence in physical form before accepting the commission and

designing the book.

3.3 MANIFESTO FOR THE BOOK

Nearly a quarter of a century past since Irma Boom designed her

stamp-books, when these books were rediscovered in a Parisian book-

shop by the Czech photographer Josef Koudelka. Koudelka immedi-

ately rang Sheila Hicks saying: ‘I do not know who she is, but she is

just got to do your book’. Hicks, an American textile designer living

in Paris, contacted Irma Boom and the two women met in Paris to

discuss the commission. This collaboration proved to be successful to

all involved in the project. In 2007 Sheila Hicks: Weaving as Metaphor

was named ‘Most Beautiful Book in the World’ at the Leipzig book

fair, the book became a bestseller and exposed Sheila Hicks to new

audiences.127 The success of the book led the Museum of Modern

Art in New York (MoMA) to include Irma Boom’s books as part of

their permanent collection in their department of architecture and

design collection.

126  Wigger Bierma et al., De Best Verzorgde Boeken 2003 (Amsterdam: CPNB, 2004). The Judges’ Report does not have pagination.

127  For the video and images of the book, please visit http://www.book-as-art.info/sheila_hicks.html.

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Sheila Hicks: Weaving as Metaphor is considered by Irma Boom

as the manifesto for the book, and a living proof that a book can sur-

vive in the digital age. This book was added to Google Books and

available for inspection online,128 however the digital version of the

book fails in every possible way in comparison to the physical book

(fig. 20). By examining the digital edition, it appears that the design

is fairly conventional. The book begins with an informative essay by

the art critic Arthur C. Danto ‘Weaving as Metaphor and Model for

Political Thought’. The essay is presented to the reader in a very leg-

ible typeface printed in large letters that gradually decrease as the

reader continues reading. The essay is followed by over one hundred

images of Sheila Hicks’ miniature works on the right-hand page,

and a brief description of the work on the left page. The digital ver-

sion presented by Google Books demonstrates the inability of cer-

tain books to be translated into a digital form. The design appears

conventional, neat and certainly does not justify its title as ‘the most

beautiful book in the world’ (fig. 21).

Sheila Hicks: Weaving as Metaphor is the book of a new millen-

nium. It is an all-white brick-like object (15.5x22x5.9mm), with

unusual rough edges, created in collaboration between an American

textile designer working together with a Dutch graphic designer; it

was published for The Bard Graduation Center in New York, by Yale

University Press in London. The book was lithographed and printed

by Rosbeek, and the first 3500 copies were sewn and bound by Van

Waarden in the Netherlands. The book was available for purchase

online all around the globe.

The success of this publication, as opposed to other books, lies in

the profound understanding of the new role of the book in the twen-

ty-first century. The book has to offer something beyond the well-de-

signed page that integrates word and image; the book’s physicality

has to reflect its content as well. The rough edges of the book are not a

128  “Sheila Hicks: Weaving as Metaphor,” accessed August 1, 2013. http://books.google.nl/books/about/Sheila_Hicks_Weaving_as_Metaphor.html?id=0ACUnVjqBwYC&redir_esc=y.

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mere decorative element; these edges echo the rough edges of Sheila

Hicks’ textile works of art. The book’s cover does not depict one of

Sheila Hicks works in excellent color-printing that would appeal to

textile lovers to pick up the book and look inside; instead it shows

an actual work of art that might attract a larger audience beyond the

world of textiles. The book’s white cover depicts a graphic interpre-

tation of Sheila Hicks’ Nuage, 1990 by Irma Boom.

Before its unprecedented success, there were many challenges

concerning this commission: disagreements with the publisher con-

cerning the white cover of the book and the non-academic way Irma

wanted to present Danto’s text. To settle the argument, Boom sug-

gested contacting the author and asking for his opinion, Arthur Danto

approved and the conflict was resolved. The conflict between the Bard

curator and editor, Nina Stritzler-Levine, was not easily resolved and

Stritzler-Levine fired Irma Boom from the project. After devoting

four years to this commission, Boom could not abandon this book.

She continued sending her ideas and the project carried on with no

more mentioning of the termination.129 In 2006 Sheila Hicks: Weaving

as Metaphor was published and since then it had three reprints. The

sculptural features of the book, its awareness of the change in the

history of the book, and finally the new approach to book designed

proved that printed books could survive in the digital age.

The success of this commission perhaps was also contributed to

the secrecy and mystery surrounding the production of the book.

As with the SHV thinkbook, Sheila Hicks: Weaving as Metaphor was

a project that never revealed its technical innovations. Irma Boom

never disclosed how the edges of the book were made, and in her inter-

views she mentions that the binding was ‘top secret’.130 On various

occasions Boom went against the hand-made book as well as ‘artist

129  Williams, 2011, 42.

130  Lommen, 2010, 226.

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books’, since they stand against everything she believes in: ‘I hate

hand-made books. They have to be industrially made’.131 It is a well-

guarded secret how the binder created the rough edges of the Sheila

Hicks book, and despite my numerous attempts to unveil this mys-

tery, its secret remains uncovered.

3.4 BIOGRAPHY IN BOOKS

In 2010 Special Collection of UvA held a retrospective exhibi-

tion for Irma Boom’s books. Designing a catalogue for this exhibi-

tion posed a great challenge: how to represent in print what has to be

experienced as three-dimensional object? Irma solved this obstacle

by designing a miniature catalogue that demonstrates her creative

process of making her book.132 Despite its size there are two hundred

and twenty-six books designed by Boom between 1986 and 2010

reproduced in the catalogue. There are over four hundred and fifty

full-color illustrations in the book’s seven hundred and four pages.

Like many book designers, Irma Boom creates dummies of her

commissions. She began working with dummies after the stamp-

books were published, and since then Irma has turned this practi-

cal and technical way of designing books into art. The Museum of

Modern Art in New York, as well as the Irma Boom Living Archive in

UvA pleaded Boom for her dummies, but Irma refused to part with

these little artworks. The catalogue for the Amsterdam exhibition

allows a small glimpse into Irma Boom’s creative process of book

design. The small size of the book is protected by a larger cover, and

the actual catalogue is only 50×38mm (fig . 22). Two hundred and

twenty-six books were designed by Irma Boom in a little less than

a quarter of a century, and all these were modestly reproduced in a

miniature book that fits perfectly in the palm of our hand.

131  “Dutch Profiles: Irma Boom,” DutchDFA, 2012 accessed August 1, 2013. http://www.dutchprofiles.com/profile/361/irma-boom.

132  For the video and images of the book, please visit http://www.book-as-art.info/biography_in_books.html.

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3.5 THE BOOK AS A MONUMENT

2010 was a successful year for Boom. A retrospective exhibition

of her oeuvre was held in her city of Amsterdam, and her latest com-

mission was finally published: James Jennifer Georgina ( JJG).133 It was

the British graphic designer, Allen Fletcher (1931-2006), who rec-

ommended Boom for this project.134 The book tells a personal story

of the Butler family. In an attempt to save her husband from alcohol-

ism, Jennifer Butler decided to take her husband James on a world-

wide journey. The journey took place in 1989-1999 and each day the

family was separated, Jennifer sent a postcard to her little daughter,

Georgina who was left at home and was looked after by her nanny.

The story of the Butler family is told in this beautiful yellow brick-

like object. The book’s 1200 pages were carefully bound in an inno-

vative binding method of a threefold embossed spine. The entire

cover and the edges of the book were silkscreened in a radiant soft

neon yellow glow, while the book was protected by a dark grey box

with the book’s name imprinted on the top. The revolutionary spine

designed by Boom allows the book to stay flat open on any given page,

and when open in the middle, the book turns itself into a beautiful

sculpture (fig .22).

The concept of the book and its content were carefully constructed

by Irma Boom and the Butlers to serve as the family’s memoir. In this

book Irma demonstrated once again her unusual way of storytelling.

The book is divided into three parts: two hundred and ten selected

postcards reproduced in their actual size, both front and back, along

with other four-hundred miniature reproductions. Jennifer wrote

1136 postcards to her daughter Georgina for each day they were apart.

133  For the video and images of the book, please visit http://www.book-as-art.info/james_jennifer_georgina.html.

134  Interview, accessed on August 1, 2013, http://jamesjennifergeorgina.com/interview.html

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Due to Jennifer’s handwriting, the text is also printed next to each of

the postcards reproduced in the book. The second part of the book

transcribes twenty-one very intimate conversations between the

Butlers ten years after the journey ended. The idea of adding these

conversations was conceived by Boom, and the conversations were

not edited by the family for this publication. The final section of the

book reproduces the family’s photo album.

Irma Boom was not the only internationally acclaimed name that

was commissioned for this project. Erwin Olaf, the celebrated Dutch

photographer, was commissioned to create the family’s portraits

for the publication of JJG. The three portraits are reproduced in the

first pages of the book, the family members all depicted separately:

Jennifer, the patron of the book, standing next to the unbound proto-

type of the JJG; James positioned next to a chair, and Georgina is the

only family member that is looking directly at the reader. Soft yellow

light at the background and the dark clothes three of the Butlers are

wearing, form a unity between the portraits.

JJG was a private commission with a print-run of 999 copies, pub-

lished by Erasmus Publishing and priced at €435. This commission,

as the SHV book, can be of great interest to the public as well as to

the commissioner of the book. By taking a potentially personal sub-

ject, like the history of a coal-trading company or a private memoir,

Boom created a beautiful object that can be admired by its unusual

form as well of its content. In the age of reality television, JJG pro-

vides an intimate view into the life of a family battling with their

demons. This book could never have been produced in a different

era, however, today this book justifies its existence by providing an

additional value to its reader. JJG is not only a book communicating

an interesting story in an unconventional way, it is also an object of

beauty that can be appreciated for its physicality that could not be

translated into a digital form.

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This commission enabled Boom to push the boundaries of the book

even further. The book’s 1200 pages are neatly bound in an unusual

technique of dividing the spine into three parts, and by doing so

allowing the book to stay open on any open page. When opened in

the middle, the book turns into a sculpture-looking object and per-

haps even a work of art. Unlike the SHV book, JJG is widely available

for purchase, however, its price indicates that this is not an ordinary

book. The protective cover, specially designed to protect the book,

hints on its value.

3.6 INVISIBLE PRINTING

In May 2013 Irma Boom designed a book to accompany an exhibi-

tion No. 5 Culture Chanel, at the Palais de Tokyo in Paris.135 Published

by Abrams Books and printed in the Netherlands, this book pushed

the boundaries of book design one step further. Boom designed an

entirely white book (21x24x4.5mm) with one hundred and fifty-four

folios of embossed pages. No ink was used, and at first glance the book

appears to be entirely white without any content (fig. 18). A closer look

reveals embossed pages with illustrations and hand-written text.

The concept and the design of the book were executed by Boom. For

this book Irma wanted to create a mysterious feeling of both pres-

ence and absence. Just as the perfume, Boom created an illusion of

something that ‘you do not see, but at the same time it is there’.136 Just

as other case studies presented in this chapter, this book cannot be

translated into a digital form. The texture of the pages and the light

feel of the book could not be translated into photographs or even

video; No. 5 Culture Chanel is all about experiencing the pages of

the physical book.

135  For the video and images of the book, please visit http://www.book-as-art.info/chanel.html.

136  Irma Boom, “No. 5 Culture Chanel: Interview with book designer Irma Boom”, May 2013, accessed August 1, 2013. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J3kwJOm75j8.

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3.7 CONCLUSIONS

The case studies presented in this chapter demonstrate Irma Boom’s

books designed in profound understanding of the changes occur-

ring in the world of the book. Digital books with their evident envi-

ronmental benefits did not end the Gutenberg era. Instead, e-books

allowed printed books to fulfill their true potential. Physical books

should not compete with digital books, they should complement

them. A physical book must use its components to give additional

value to its content, and if it is not successful it should use other avail-

able medium for the distribution of its content.

Irma Boom’s books in the twenty-first century succeed in their

comprehension of the change brought by the digital revolution. They

fully use the potential of the physical book to enhance the reader’s

experience. The book for Sheila Hicks reflects the information held

within the book, Biography in Books presents Irma Boom’s creative

way of making the books listed in the catalogue; Chanel brings the

concept of the perfume to physical form of the book, and JJG becomes

almost a sculptural monument with its form reflecting the content

as the Butler’s memoir.

Irma Boom’s journey through the past twenty-five years of book

design led her to redefine again and again the physicality of the book.

In the 1980s she searched for ways to communicate content by using

the form of the book instead of its readability. In the 1990s she rede-

fined our conventional way of reading a book, even when the content

was legible. The new millennium, with its technological advances,

encouraged Boom to continue her quest for new ways of communi-

cation using the physical book as its main device.

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Throughout the history of the book, at a time of great change, people

reacted differently to what was about to come. The digital revolu-

tion inspired artists to look ahead and create new ways of expres-

sion, but it also caused others to look back and concentrate on what

was being lost in the change. For some the book, which used to be

vital, became something in the realm of leisure,137 and here lies the

biggest challenge of the final chapter of this paper – to write his-

tory in the present.

It was never my intention to predict the future of the book, only to

create a discussion about the change that is happening in our present.

Perhaps Irma Boom’s books will form a foundation for future book

designers that would use the book’s physicality to its fullest poten-

tial, or perhaps they would be remembered as the final transforma-

tion of the book before it turned into something completely differ-

ent. Only time will tell.

137  Bierma, 2013. In his interview with the author, Prof. Bierma used the meta-phor of the horse to demonstrate our current attitude towards books: ‘the history of the book has something in common with the history of the horse – once it was in the center of society, and now it is being cuddled by girls in the periphery.’

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Fig. 19. Irma Boom, Gutenberg-Galaxie II, 2002.

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Fig. 20. Irma Boom, Sheila Hicks: Weaving as Metaphor, 2006.

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Fig. 21. Irma Boom, Six spreads, Sheila Hicks: Weaving as Metaphor 2006

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Fig. 22. Irma Boom, Biography in Books, 2010.

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Fig. 23. Irma Boom, James Jennifer Georgina, 2010.

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CONCLUSIONS

Books have always been an important part of my life. My fascina-

tion started with my discovery of early Anglo-Saxon manuscripts,

and the Book of Kells forever changed my perspective on Medieval art.

Carolingian manuscripts, the Utrecht Psalter, and manuscripts illumi-

nated in Bruges were the reason that brought me to the Netherlands,

but my interest with manuscripts was not constrained only to the

Western world. During by BA I studied thirteenth-century Persian

manuscripts as well as the art of East Asia. My MA studies allowed me

to explore later books illuminated by William Blake and the Private

Press of the nineteenth-century. My love for the book only grew as

the time passed.

Important changes started to happen in Medieval and Early

Modern manuscripts studies. Cultural institutes and libraries began

their digitizing projects allowing more and more people access to

manuscripts that previously were never on display. The British

Library, together with other important libraries around Europe,

held workshops allowing people from all over the world to learn

about their future plans concerning the research of manuscripts

and their connection to other libraries around the globe that had

the same agenda.

It was during one of these workshops that I realized how important

and unique was to be a researcher in the present. With endless oppor-

tunities given by the development of new technologies, research-

ers would be able to see beyond their case studies and understand

the bigger picture of their research. The digitizing project was not

in any way intended to rob the researcher of the study of the actual

object, but to help him with his search, and in the process bring the

book to many other potential scholars that might see something in

these books that would improve their research. However, the new

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opportunities came with a price: some researchers began to speak

about the end of the printed books and their new reincarnation in

the form of an e-book – available to all, in any geographical location

with details that could never be seen by looking at the physical object.

While some saw this incredible development as the end of the

printed book, others saw this as an opportunity. Irma Boom is one

of the world’s most recognized book designers. For her the digi-

tal revolution enabled the book to become something more than it

was in the past. Information can and must be available to all, taking

the environmental aspects under consideration. Unlike in the past,

the decision to publish a book at all must be taken into account. If

the book was made to spread information, and information alone,

the responsible way would be to publish it in the form of an e-book.

The physical book should offer the reader something that its digital

twin cannot. In this paper, by choosing Irma Boom’s books as my

case studies, I showed this additional quality that the printed book

should offer to its reader.

It was not my intention to speculate on the future of a printed

book, and this is why writing history in the present is so challenging.

Only time will show the book’s further development or its transfor-

mation into something else, but it is certain that the book will never

be what it was for the past five centuries: a source of spreading infor-

mation. Nowadays more titles are printed than ever before, but this

does not mean that all these titles should be published in the phys-

ical form. It is my strong conviction that only books that give the

reader an additional value should be published as physical objects.

During my research I encountered interesting and creative book

designers that questioned my main case study. Why Irma Boom and

not someone else? Should Boom’s books be studies as part of a cul-

tural phenomenon and include other book designers? The answer

to all these questions became clear once my research was complete.

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conclusionsIrma Boom’s incredible oeuvre paints a picture of an applied artist

constantly experimenting with new ways of expression. Failures are

not considered to be a setback, since at any given time many other

books are ready or being prepared for publication.

By choosing Irma Boom as my case study, I wanted to demonstrate

a change that was happening in the history of the book. Any historical

change causes different reactions: extremely positive or negative, but

never indifferent. At the beginning of her career Boom’s books were

endlessly criticized, and despite the criticism almost every year they

were awarded and celebrated. During the past decade, the reaction

to her books became less critical and excellence was almost taken

for granted. Her books became a synonym for interesting, intelli-

gent and ground breaking design, and it is with great anticipation

that her recent commissions are greeted by her fans.

The abundance of interesting projects designed in the past twen-

ty-five years made my selection of the case studies extremely diffi-

cult. Some choices were obvious, while others were chosen for their

specific characteristics. For the first chapter I knew that the stamp-

books had to be discussed for their unusual way of communication,

and the SHV books had to be part of the second chapter. Sheila Hicks

was expected to appear as an example of the books of the new mil-

lennium, but other case studies were chosen in connection to a cer-

tain issue raised in each of the three chapters.

Each chapter of the book dealt with a specific problem. The first

chapter dealt with legibility, the second chapter questioned the new

role of the graphic designer and its consequences, and the final chap-

ter attempted the nearly impossible task of writing history in the

present. Every chapter is presented as an independent research with

its own questions and conclusions. Additional chapter presenting an

interesting argument about the books designed by Irma Boom will

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not harm the structure of the paper and will only contribute to this

study. Boom designed many books, and a great percentage of them

deal with an interesting problem or new way of communication.

It is my hope and intention to turn this study into a series con-

cerned with exceptional individuals that helped shape and redefine

the physical appearance of the book. Irma Boom’s greatest achieve-

ment was to design books that communicate with their audiences

on another level. During my research, I was asked via the social

media what made a book a work of art – typography/paper/bind-

ing/layout etc.? But then we can also ask what makes a great paint-

ing? Is it the painter’s brush, the canvas, the paint or the composi-

tion? To me a book, a painting or a sculpture, becomes a work of art

when it communicates with its audience on an additional level. Irma

Boom’s books presented in the final chapter, offer something beyond

a printed object, they are conceptual and though provoking. These

books make us think, argue and question the medium in which the

book was created.

In recent years Irma Boom’s books became collector’s items. People

buy them not only for their content, but also for their somewhat

affordable price of an art object. These books earned their place in

the history of the book that changed our perception of what books

should look like, feel and communicate. It will be interesting to review

Irma Boom’s oeuvre in the future and see what kind of change these

books made to a physical book.

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APPENDIX 1

This catalogue was first published in conjunction with the exhibi-

tion ‘Irma Boom: Biography in Books’ held at the Special Collections of

the University of Amsterdam, 4 June – 3 October 2010 in Amsterdam.

Its miniature size and rare availability turns this helpful overview

of Irma Boom’s books into hidden and unavailable. It is my hope that

the reprint of this text might inspire further research.

Living Archive, Mathieu Lommen:

Jan Tschold’s Penguin paperbacks are design icons. In the late nine-

teen-forties his strict guidelines set high standards for the book as a

mass-produced product. Yet from printing’s earliest beginnings books

did more than bring uniformity to the ‘machine á lire’. Fortunately

there were always printers, binders and later also designers who

strove for innovation in type and typography, in the use of paper, in

finish and in the relation between image (including photography) and

text. Amsterdam University’s Special Collections Department docu-

ments that graphic evolution from Nicolas Jenson, Aldus Manutius,

Albert Magnus, John Baskerville, Giambattista Bodoni and William

Morris to El Lissitzky and Jurriaan Schrofer. That is what makes the

2003 acquisition of Irma Boom’s ‘living achieve’ so important: she

too explores new paths in the tradition. Boom’s design and editorial

style emerge from her own individualistic ideas, which bind content

and form inseparably. That makes her work unique.

Irma Boom (b. Lochem, 1960) studied at the AKI academy of fine

art in Enschede. She originally wished to become a painter, but at

the academy a love of book design quickly took root and grew. She

graduated as a graphic designer, and on Jurriaan Schrofer’s advice

she began work in 1985 at the Government Printing and Publishing

Office (SDU) in The Hague. Her first commissions, still as a trainee,

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were for the corporate identity of the Ministry of Welfare, Health and

Cultural Affairs, whose logo was designed by Walter Nikkels. The

collaboration with Nikkels inspired her. In her early years, one can

certainly see his influence and that of other leading figures in graphic

design, but Boom soon set off on her own tempestuous course. That

is clear in the annual reports she made for the Dutch Arts Council for

the years 1987 and 1988. These commissions, which gave her a free

hand, show several design elements that were to appear repeatedly

in her work. Her report for 1987, for example – inspired by the art

magazine Wendingen - shows foldouts, leaves with the fold toward

the fore-edge (as in Japanese binding) and the cut edges of the book

block printed in a single color. Noteworthy in the report for 1988, in

addition to its full-page color compositions, is the wide range of sizes

of type used for the continuous texts, set in extremely long lines and

printed in three colors.

But the publication that was to establish Boom’s name was

Nederlandse postzegels 87+88 (1988): two volumes in an extensive

series about postage stamp issues, with earlier volumes by Karel

Martens, Wim Crouwel and Anthon Beeke. This commission allowed

Boom, for the first time, to develop the entire plan herself. She worked

intensively for three months on her research and design, much of it

devoted to selecting and planning the illustrations. Anyone could see

that her postage stamp books paid no heed to the generally proper

and respectable design of the earlier volumes, which had also been

produced with a more modest budget in a smaller format (Boom still

shows a preference for broader book formats in her work today). Her

design certainly raised a few eyebrows, both through the experimen-

tal typography, where lines of type sometimes run over the edge of

a page and into the next, and because some leaves on transparent

paper (with the fold toward the fore-edge) were printed not only on

the outside, but also on the inside, with illustrations from the devel-

opment phase of the stamp’s designs.

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appendix 01In Nederlandse postzegels 87+88 Boom explored her own boundar-

ies and, in a different way, those of her employer at the time, the SDU

Design Group. In became clear that she would over-run her budget

considerably, but the commissioner agreed to go ahead with the proj-

ect. Her editorial task with the postage stamp books suited her per-

fectly and was to set the course of her further career. She took an

editorial responsibility for later large projects with books she con-

sidered important, emphasizing her contribution as author. The

postage stamp books were selected for the ADCN prize, the City of

Amsterdam’s incentive prize, the Dutch Best Book Designs 1988 and

other prizes. But the jury report for the Best Book Designs – writ-

ten by Boom’s SDU colleague Karel F. Treebus! – rather cautiously

describes it as a ‘brilliant failure’. In literary circles Atte Jongstra

delivered unbridled criticism in the April 1989 issue of Typ maga-

zine, finding the use of ‘printed text as ornament’ irritating. But the

uproar didn’t phase the CPNB) Collective Promotion for the Dutch

Book) or the KVGO (the Royal Association of Graphic Design Firms),

who turned to Boom to design the catalogue of the next Best Book

Designs, for 1989. She presented a rock-solid plan. By using paper

that was glossy on the side and by trimming the margin slightly

closer on every second leaf, she allowed the reader to flip through

the leaves from front to back for for the jury reports or from back to

front for the full-color glossy images of the books selected for prizes.

At Boom’s request, the often blandly interchangeable jury reports

for the awards were replaced with excerpts from the jury’s deliber-

ations, providing unmatched insights into the selection process. For

Boom this astonishing catalogue remains one of her personal favor-

ites. Her relations with the CPNB continue to this day: she designed

their house style and produced the basic plan for one of their annual

public events, Manuscripta.

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After more than five years, Irma Boom left her employer. Anthon

Beeke had roused her to action and in 1991 she set up as an indepen-

dent designer in Amsterdam. Her work at Yale University’s School

of Art, where she is presently Senior Critic, offered new challenges.

She deliberately limits the personnel at her office to a minimum. With

generally only one permanent employee the Irma Boom office never-

theless has about fifteen book projects in various stages of comple-

tion at any one time, along with many other commissions. From the

outset most of her commissioners came from the cultural world, such

as the art centers De Appel (Amsterdam) and Stroom (The Hague).

She produced numerous publications (mostly small catalogues) for

De Appel from 1990 to 2005. One of their finest publications is cer-

tainly the modest The Spine: seven separate quires help together by

the long threads of the sewing in the folds.

But the most important commissions at the beginning of her

freelance career came from the entrepreneur Paul Fantener van

Vlissingen (1941-2006). He was then CEO of the multinational cor-

poration SHV, a trader and distributor in the fields of energy and

consumer goods. She first designed a publication for the occasion

of his fiftieth birthday in 1991. Soon afterward he gave her and the

art historian Johan Pijnappel the prestigious commission to mark

the 100th anniversary of the family firm in 1996 with an ‘unusual’

production. Van Vlissingen granted then plenty of leeway and his

full trust in their judgment. ‘For Irma and Johan’ he said in 2004,

‘it must have been an extraordinary commission, allowing them to

devote not just a few weeks but a few years to a subject. What lies

at the heart of the SHV? What happens there? How do people there

interact? Where do they come from? Why are they active in the coal

trade? Why are they active in the Makro wholesale outlet stores?

Where are decisions made? How does it relate to personal circum-

stances? They spoke to many people in the firm and after a while

everyone knew who Irma and Johan were.’

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appendix 01Boom and Pijnappel were to spend three and a half years on research

before she actually began work on the design. A monumental book

appeared in May 1996: 2136 pages presenting the history of the com-

pany in reverse chronological order by means of photos, reports,

advertisements and other archival documents. Boom and Pijnappel

do not skirt around the painful departure of SHV Makro from South

Africa in the mid-1980s, forced by a terrorist organization’s arson

attacks, which brought SHV much negative publicity at the time.

This is a book made for non-linear reading, for browsing, and page

numbers are therefore deemed unnecessary. That ‘digital’ character-

istic is strengthened by the rendering of the wide variety of images

as if they were stills from a video. Lots of more or less hidden graphic

treasures await discovery there. The title on the white linen cover, for

example, becomes visible only after intensive use. More remarkable

and truly spectacular is the trimmed edge of the book block: fanned

slightly in one direction it shows a field of tulips, in the other Gerrit

Achterberg’s verse poem, ‘De Bolero van Ravel’. The exploration of

such book edges has become one of Boom’s trademarks. The book

never appeared on the market, but was distributed to shareholders.

In addition to the English edition, it appeared in a Chinese edition

bound in black linen.

Van Vlissingen and Boom continued their collaboration after the

SHV book, which quickly became iconic. In addition to his entre-

preneurial activities, Van Vlissingen was an environmentalist and

philanthropist, and projects he considered important now led to

publications, such as Africa Revisited (2001), Marakele: The Making

of a South Africal National Park (2003). Van Vlissingen comments:

Irma senses perfectly through days, weeks and months of conversa-

tion and activity what is essential for the commissioner, so she can

act as his mirror. She does so masterfully’.

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While the SHV book was in production, a comparable book, also

thick as a brick, appeared: the Dutch architect Rem Koolhaas had

spent years working with the Canadian designer Bruce Mau – both

appear on the title-page – on S, M, L, XL. The resulting book has

‘only’ 1344 pages, but has about the same dimensions as the SHV

book. S, M, L, XL is also designed to be read non-linearly: the intro-

duction says, ‘Architecture is by definition a chaotic adventure’. One

can suspect this also applies to the practice of book design, where

Irma Boom is concerned. When Koolhaas presented S, M, L, XL at

the Amsterdam bookshop in December 1995, Boom stood among

the many hundreds of fans along the canal waiting for a signed copy.

She also got one for Van Vlissingen: she was shocked that someone

else had brought out such a thick book just before theirs. Since 1998

Koolhaas and Boom have collaborated on projects.

For the production of her books, Boom prefers to work with a fixed

group of innovative firms she can trust, including Resbeek, which

unfortunately had to close in 2008. She never lets the prevalent tech-

niques of the graphic industry limit her initial plan. Only by break-

ing through them, she believes, can the book medium retain its vital-

ity. But however complex the technical execution may be, she never

considers hand finishing as an option: she uses industrial produc-

tion as a matter of principle.

After the SHV book, famous international corporations came

knocking at her door. She made Workspirit six for Vitra (1998), the

massive company book Lichtjahre: Zumtobel 2000-1950 for Zumtobel

(2000) and Tutti i motori for Ferrari (2002). The Workspirit six is

remarkable for the fact that it hardly has what could be called prod-

uct photos: they are more like stills and blurry or deliberately blurred

images, made by modifying or rephotographing existing photos. She

creates a new story in pictures using holes punched in the pages. Once

again she makes use of the edges, in this case with a pattern of dotted

lines that yields a changing image as one pages through the book.

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appendix 01The series Grafisch ontwerpen in Nederland (Graphic Design in

The Netherlands) began in the late nineties with support from the

Prince Bernhard Cultural Foundation. It is a series of monographs on

Dutch designers from the post-War period. Irma Boom was invited

to design the first volume, devoted to Otto Treumann. Treumann,

a modernist then well into his eighties, made his name with post-

ers for cultural organizations and with his logo for El Al airlines.

One begins to ‘read’ Otto Treumann (1999) already before opening

the book: the table of contents appears on the spine, and the front

cover contains almost seven hundred tiny illustrations. As picture

editor Boom shows her favorite images at a larger and larger scale as

you turn the pages and sometimes repeat them in rows, while other

images drop out. As one approaches the end, one zooms in to mag-

nified details, which show how effectively Treumann experimented

with overprinted colors. Unfortunately something went wrong with

the lithography in the Dutch edition. None of Boom’s books elicited

so many negative reactions. Some felt the book was more about her

than about its subject – but that problem can easily arise with a book

about a colleague designer. One reviewer found the repeating ele-

ments extremely annoying and headlined his review, ‘Treumann

battered into patterns’ (Eye 42, 2001).

The now defunct annual Grafisch Nederland, which served as a call-

ing card of the Dutch graphic industries, provided a design commis-

sion grounded in the notion of free reign. Each issue was devoted to

a particular theme and Boom’s predecessors had included no less a

figure than Willem Sandberg. Boom had long wanted to make a book

about color and this commission gave her the chance in 2004. The

subject was the relation between fine art and graphic technique: she

was fascinated by the fact the artwork is scanned and separated into

the printer’s four colors for reproduction. In Kleur/Colour she there-

fore produced eighty works of art from four centuries to diagrams

and full-page color swatches. For the swatches, special spot colors

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112

were mixed and designated with the name of the artist. The color dia-

grams or color bar codes lead to new compositions with complicated

color schemes. All leaves have lines of preparations, so the recipi-

ent, by opening the fore-edge fold along one of the perforated lines,

creates the remarkable untrimmed edge. ‘It is a book to be decon-

structed’ says Boom. Many subscribers to Grafisch Nederland had no

idea what to do with the book, and several sent their copies back. But

internationally it was a great success and the foreign market imme-

diately swallowed up the returned copies. Boom was to use some of

these experiments again elsewhere.

The color diagrams proved well suited for merchandising. The

Amsterdam Rijksmuseum – which gave her important commis-

sions for many years – produced items designed by Boom based on

the ‘color bar codes’ of Rembrandt’s The Jewish Bride and Vermeer’s

Milkmaid. The exhibition Van Gogh and the Colours of the Night’ led

the Amsterdam Hilton to invite Boom in 2009 to furnish one of their

rooms. For that occasion she specially produced Starry Night wallpa-

per. Boom had already invented the ‘color bar code’ for Experiencing

Europe (2000) a few years before Kleur/Colour. This is a collection of

essays on the European unification, published by the European Centre

for Work and Society. The flags of the countries in the European Union

appear on the cover, and on the dust jacket they have been integrated

to form a single pattern of vertical stripes. This subtly reflects the

theme of the publication in graphic form.

Irma Boom considers it essential to be involved in a project from

the beginning as a designer and editor. The form emerges only at the

end of the process. She has worked that way from the beginning of

her career. Sheila Hicks (b. 1934), an American textile artist living:

in Paris, asked Boom to make an overview of her work. After several

years of discussions, this led to a commission from The Bard Graduate

Center in New York for the catalogue of an exhibition of Hick’s work.

As with other large projects many dummies and proofs preceded the

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appendix 01end product. Boom likes to keep those dummies, as well as the small

models that she makes herself. Hidden inside them is the promise

of the ultimate book. Sheila Hicks: Weaving as Metaphor appeared

in 2006 and looks almost like a sculpture. Except for the small title,

the front cover is entirely white, with only a relief impression: one of

Hick’s works transformed into a graphic interpretation made with

the artist’s name. To preserve the pure white of the binding when

the book is open, even the inside of the hollow back is made of white

material! The interior of the book, with its colorful textile art works,

is printed on rough, uncoated (matt) paper. Boom generally prefers

this sort of paper, even though she also makes true glossies. She draws

the reader into the text with large sizes of type in the first pages – a

typographic approach she often uses. The finishing of the book block

is noteworthy: the frayed texture of the edges, which are more than

five centimeters wide, alludes to the fringes of the small textile art

works. These edges appear to have been sawn, but Boom doesn’t give

away the details of the procedure. Sheila Hicks: Weaving as Metaphor

has won international prizes, and the third edition appeared in 2010.

It brought both artist and designer recognition, and led the Museum

of Modern Art in New York to include Boom’s work in their perma-

nent ‘Architecture and Design’ collection.

One of Boom’s most important recent works is certainly Everything

Design, published for the occasion of the 2009 exhibition of the same

title at the Museum für Gestaltung in Zürich. In the exhibition, many

varieties of international design confront each other: from old to new,

from high to low and from product to graphic design. Boom brought

out a small, seven centimeter thick, matt black box with more than

860 pages in which the text plays a subordinate role. She is herself

the principal author of this picture book. Even before one reaches

the title-page, one finds a ‘visual prologue’ of nearly two-hundred

pages, and an extensive visual epilogue follows the colophon. The

book concept reflects the exhibition concept: Everything Design has

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surprising sequences of images and spreads that often juxtapose

widely disparate objects – rhyming images based on form, color,

mood or content. It subconsciously forces the reader to look and com-

pare. A porcelain cat from 1896, for example, appears to be walk-

ing into a ‘Swissair pet pak’ cardboard carrying case on the facing

page. As for the design, like Sheila Hicks and most of her other bound

books the spine is flat, the boards thin and their overhang minimal.

The edges are now silk-screen printed, a technique she has often

used in recent years. The word ‘wertewandel’, originally the title of

the exhibition and retained here because it seemed typographically

appropriate, appears in a bold sans-serif running all the way around

the spine and the three cut edges.

Irma Boom has said she works from the outside to the inside. Most

graphic designers do the opposite: they begin thinking about finish

and choice of paper once the layout is complete. An extreme example

of working from outside to inside is the 2010 catalogue Steven Aalders:

Cardinal Points. The book has the exact dimensions (including even

the thickness) of one of Aalders’s paintings, which it illustrates. Not

only is the front of the canvas reproduced on the cover; the painted

sides folded over the stretcher are reproduced on the spine and the

three cut edges: the book as an art multiple. Aalders makes color

analysis of art, and facing the title-page Boom displays two recent

American color studies after Barnett Newman and Elsworth Kelly.

She greatly admires both artists. She also collaborates extensively

with other Dutch artists, photographers and designers of her gener-

ation, including Jacqueline Hassink, Petra Blaisse, Helle Jongerius

and Aernout Mik. But also international commissioners continue to

turn to her, such as Geneva based Aga Khan Award for Architecture,

the Museum of Modern Art in New York and the Spanish shoe man-

ufacturer Camper.

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appendix 01However innovative Irma Boom’s work may be, she respects the

tradition of the book. Her library includes printed matter from many

cultures. She says she wants to develop the book further, influenced

in part by insights and structures from the new media. For that reason

she experiments with manipulating images and texts without wor-

rying too much about failures. For the final design her contributions

to the content, her role as editor and commentator, are essential. The

commissioner has to grant her that latitude. Her art monographs are

often explicitly aesthetic but never uncritical representations. She

hates coffee-table books.

In the digital era Boom’s work clearly shows that a printed book is

a tactile object with its own intimacy. Panguin paperbacks are well

suited to digitization, but what would survive from Boom’s work if

it were rendered in Google Books? It is simply not possible to sep-

arate the form and content. For Irma Boom the possibilities of the

printed book have by no means been exhausted. And she always

works toward the ultimate book.

Quoted in Mathieu Lommen, Ontwerpen & opdrachtgever: Harry

N. Sierman & Querido, Reynoud Homan & Wim Quist, Irma Bom &

Paul Fentener van Vlissingen. Amsterdam: Amsterdam University

Library, 2005.

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APPENDIX 2

Gutenberg-Galaxie II includes one of the best written overviews of

Irma Boom’s books as well as her contribution to the history of the

book. This volume, with its modest print-run of five hundred books,

is rare and only available for inspection. This text is an important

contribution to the study of Irma Boom’s books and therefor repre-

sented here to generate future study.

The book serial ‘Gutenberg Galaxie’ is dedicated to the winners

of the Gutenberg Prize’ awarded by the City of Leipzig. ‘Gutenberg

Galaxie’ is edited by Julia Blume and Günter Karl Bose, ‘Institute für

Buchkunst Leipzig’, and supported by the Cultural administration of

the City of Leipzig. Eulogy by Professor Friedrich Friedl on the occa-

sion of the presentation of the Gutenberg award of the City of Leipzig

on 22nd March 2001, in the new City Hall in Leipzig:

When we, stimulated by today’s event, once again remember the

names of all those outstanding personalities and institutions, who

since 1959 were deservedly honored with the Gutenberg Award of

the city of Leipzig, an award, which is paid great attention interna-

tionally, thus the reach and the significance of this year’s honoring

is an event, which, besides the recognition of the person, is an act of

actually innovative power and quality, which honors the immedi-

ate present and points towards future.

Today a personality is honored, who beyond the discussions about

historical assessments or subject-specific ideals, in the last years

not only met the technical changes and, connected with that, above

all, also the esthetic possibilities, as well as the necessity, to venture

the new, but who for that stands like a synonym for new design with

her powerful and successful results worldwide. Irma Boom, and it

is her, who is to be honored and praised unreservedly today, Irma

Boom created a varied work of art full of surprises in the relatively

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short period of her creative career so far, which lacks all dissatis-

faction facing backwards, which illustrates the creative and con-

ceptual possibilities for interpretation of our present without nos-

talgic over-attentiveness and who, without taking to the airs and

graces of a self-satisfied or chosen superstar, did not like herself in

a short-term successful styling concept, like it was frequently to be

observed elsewhere in the last years (and actually again and again).

If one tries to understand what one sees, the knowledge and the

analysis of the past are indispensable. The twentieth century, which

still is our next neighbor, showed design in all areas ways, often with

sheer brute force, but also frequently with convincing and sustain-

able results, to break away from the slowing down embrace of lim-

iting patterns from the past and to encourage the respectively new

generations to new creative power of expression in their time. The

reception and acceptance of unspent esthetic information and inno-

vation, which was enabled by that, was an essential driving force

of the Modern Age in the 20th century, which was inseparably inte-

grated into our daily life. Despite of that, forms were favored and

mandated often by the respectively dominating social circumstances,

which offered no new way, but were to support over-attentive trivi-

ality only. Or, like for example in the present, in which the aesthet-

ical vision is often substituted by rapid turbo design, which lacks

any search, any experimenting, and which is made only to quickly

achieve financial successes.

This uni-dimensional utilization of esthetics has to be encoun-

tered with analytic sight and assessment, which is capable to sepa-

rate important things from unimportant ones, which opposes this

uni-dimensionality of the fast banalities with an emancipated visual

awareness, conscious looking has to substitute banal idolization.

Since as fast as one often has to think today, relevant new design

absolutely cannot be created. When we consider, that the most used

signs of our communication besides speech, are the letters, which

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appendix 02base on forms from the times of Renaissance and earlier, it becomes

clear, that there are only few extraordinary and changing creative

models, which continue the development. And it is a matter of find-

ing them out or preparing them.

In the whirl of the banal speed surrounding us in design, Irma Boom

was and is guarantor for interesting, intelligent, innovative design.

One suspects, that she knows the avant-gardes of the past, that she

knows the history of visual communication and that she registers new

attempts in the present. Un-tested and open she treads a path with

each new work, with each new order, which was not treated that way

before, which is conceptually and compositionally surprising, which

is experimental and still fulfills the communicative necessities of the

customers. Irma Boom makes no l’art-pour-l’art (art for art’s sake)

exercises. Although she is mediator between sender and receiver,

however, she makes extraordinary design. This working attitude

shows the high seriousness, the high responsibility, with which she

practices her design interpretation and by which she protects her-

self from being average. This is, to not leave it unmentioned, achiev-

able with hard work only, and not with supernatural inspirations or

excessive enjoyment of leisure time, as could be wrongly assumed.

Where the designer Irma Boom will lead us with her works in

future, we don’t know, and she still cannot know it either. But some-

one, who in such a short time made such incredibly good and signif-

icant work, deserves it, that the attention is drawn to it, that these

works are awarded and exhibited, that it is tried, to re-enact and

understand these realized thoughts on design. And when one wants

to comprehensively think about the work of Irma Boom and wants

to understand it, a remark on the place of origin must not be forgot-

ten. In few regions of the world, such an amount of extraordinary,

exemplary, emancipated design contributions was created like in The

Netherlands in the twentieth century. This probably is due to how

education for design is handles here, how it is taught and accepted

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and how design is integrated into this row of trend-setting person-

alities (and twenty, thirty, forty names could be stated here illustri-

ously, which are internationally praised and esteemed, which char-

acterized a style and had influence, and still do or have), well, that

Irma Boom is extremely well integrated into this row of brilliant

Dutch designers and continues this row in the twenty-first century,

too, which she deserves very much and for which we have to con-

gratulate her warmly.

Irma Boom is no functionalist. This interpretation of style experi-

enced great heights between 1920 and 1960, when it was the matter to

substitute senseless ornamental decorations, to represent contents as

clear as possible, as elementary as possible. Today it is very rare, that

with this style high quality is achieved. Irma Boom is a creative inter-

preter of the respective contents of the task, which she understands

by using her personal interpretation, which is surely not accepted

by typographic hardliners, but is also often not understood by them

or they are even not familiar with it at all. But when we remember,

how often book design spread exhaustive boredom with trained

uniformity (and still does), the conceptual interpretations of Irma

Boom and quite some newer developments really are a sensuous and

intellectual treat. Her perceptions appear like a successful interpre-

tation of the present. Not they already have an exemplary function

for the searching, following generations, whom they give courage

and direction in their research for the creative possibilities in their

respectively new time. And that is good, because relevant design can

never be a bureaucratic act, which always proceeds according to the

same rule and pre-opinions again and again. An especially remark-

able and extensive work block of Irma Boom, are her extraordinary

books, which are even dedicated a whole exhibition in connection

with the presentation of the award. In these books shows her creative

search and finding in a medium, which only slightly changed since

Gutenberg, but over and over again, which today seems to be chal-

lenged by the new media, but which due to that draws new attention

to it, too. How will the books of tomorrow look like?

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appendix 02 Irma Boom resolves this task with a finely nuanced love for the

detail and a well thought-out total concept. At first, her book propos-

als are irritating objects of variety, which by and by reveal insights

due to the urge to read, the urge to understand to a well-tuned concept

of the consciously selected and combined elements of script, image,

color and paper. They are reading objects, which also result from the

confrontations with the new influences of liberal art and other form

of media. But they are never self-contained objects of art, but always

solutions, which are always directed to mediation, to understand-

ing, to communication. All the positive, which can be said about her

books, is also applicable for her other graphic design works like poster,

brochures or catalog, since Irma Boom is a designer, who elaborates

complete problem solving. And all the things said is also applicable

to her conceptual and creative advisory function, which renowned

international institutions demand from her. Irma Boom is a per-

sonality, whose creative work, her intellectual quality and her per-

sonal integrity is known and esteemed worldwide. She is a respon-

sible preserver of the effort for the new and for the future aspects in

design. It is therefore a logical and delighting decision, that she was

honored with the Gutenberg Award of the city of Leipzig. Concluding

I would like to congratulate the jury and the city of Leipzig on this

far-sighted and also courageous decision, to introduce Irma Boom

in the selection of the Gutenberg Award winners.

Once again, I congratulate Irma Boom very warmly on this

deserved award and wish her more extraordinary ideas for her future

work, and you, ladies and gentlemen, I wish a stimulating time in the

treatment with the views and works of the award winner.

Professor Friendrich Friedl, Darmstadt.

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LIST WITH ILLUSTRATIONS

Fig. 1. Dummies of Irma Boom’s books. Irma Boom: Book Design Exhibition, 2009, Museum für

Gestaltung, Zürich. Photo curtecy of Museum für Gestaltung, Zürich.

Fig. 2. Irma Boom, Nederlandse Postzegels 87+88, vol. 2 (Amsterdam: CPNB, 1988), 210-211.

Fig. 3. Nederlandse Postzegels 1977, 1978, 1982, 1983, 1980, 1987, 1988.

Fig. 4. Wim Crouwel, Nederlandse Postzegels 1977, (Amsterdam: CPNB, 1978), 46-47.

Fig. 5. Wim Crouwel, Nederlandse Postzegels 1978, (Amsterdam: CPNB, 1979), 32-33

Fig. 6. Karel Martens, Nederlandse Postzegels 1982, (Amsterdam: CPNB, 1985), 48-49.

Fig. 7. Karel Martens, Nederlandse Postzegels 1983, (Amsterdam: CPNB, 1986), 66-67.

Fig. 8. Anthon Beeke, Nederlandse Postzegels 1980, (Amsterdam: CPNB, 1984).

Fig. 9. Irma Boom, Nederlandse Postzegels 1987+88, vol. 1 (Amsterdam: CPNB, 1984), XX-XXI.

Fig. 10. Irma Boom, Nederlandse Postzegels 1987+88, vol. 1 (Amsterdam: CPNB, 1984), XLII-XLIII.

Fig. 11. Francesco Colonna (?), Hypnerotomachia Poliphili (Venice, 1499).

Photo courtesy of the Meermanno Museum, The Hague.

Fig. 12. Irma Boom, Nederlandse Postzegels 1987+88, vol. 1 (Amsterdam: CPNB, 1984), IIL-1.

Fig. 13. Irma Boom and Johann Pijnappel, SHV book Chinese and English editions

(Utrecht: SHV, 1996). Photo courtesy of the Meermanno Museum, The Hague.

Fig. 14. Irma Boom and Johann Pijnappel, SHV book hidden title (Utrecht: SHV, 1996).

Photo courtesy of the Meermanno Museum, The Hague.

Fig. 15. Irma Boom, Workspirit Six (Amsterdam: Vitra Nederland, 1998) 144-145.

Fig. 16. Irma Boom, Workspirit Six (Amsterdam: Vitra Nederland, 1998) 146-147.

Fig. 17. Nine spreads, Graphic Design in the Netherlands: Otto Treumann

(Rotterdam: 010 Publishers, 2001).

Fig. 18. Irma Boom, Culture Chanel (Paris: Editions de la Martinière, Abrams, 2013).

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Fig. 19. Irma Boom, Gutenberg-Galaxie II (Leipzig: Institute für Buchkunst, 2002).

Photo curtecy of Kristina Brusa.

Fig. 20. Irma Boom, Sheila Hicks: Weaving as Metaphor (London and New Heaven: Yale

University Press, 2006). Photo courtesy of the Meermanno Museum, The Hague.

Fig. 21. Irma Boom, Six spreads, Sheila Hicks: Weaving as Metaphor (London and New

Heaven: Yale University Press, 2006).

Photo courtesy of the Meermanno Museum, The Hague.

Fig. 22. Irma Boom, Biography in Books (Amsterdam: University of Amsterdam, 2010).

Photo courtesy of the Meermanno Museum, The Hague.

Fig. 23. Irma Boom, James Jennifer Georgina (Rotterdam: Erasmus Publishing, 2010).

Photo courtesy of the Meermanno Museum, The Hague.

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BIBLIOGRAPHY

Case Studies:

Boom, Irma and Paul Hefting. Nederlandse postzegels 87+88. ’S-Gravenhage: Staatsbedrijf der PTT; Staatsuitgeverij, 1986.

Rosbeek, Cor, Hadders, Gerard, van Lindonk, Smaal, Niek and Karel F. Treebus. De Best Verzorgde Boeken 1998. Amsterdam: CPNB, 1990.

van Vlissingen, Paul Fentener, Boom, Irma and Johan Pijnappel. SHV. Utrecht: SHV, 1996.

Boom, Irma. Workspirit Six. Amsterdam: Vitra (Nederland), 1998.

Broos, Kees, Ramakers, Renny and Jan van Tooren. Graphic Design in the Netherlands: Otto Treumann. Translated by John Kirkpatrick. Rotterdam: 010 Publishers, 2001.

Boom, Irma. Gutenberg-Galaxie II. Leipzig: Institute für Buchkunst, 2002.

Danto, Arthur Coleman, Simon, Joan, Stritzler-Levine, Nina and Irma Boom. Sheila Hicks: Weaving as a Metaphor. New Haven, London: Yale University Press, 2006.

Lommen, Mathieu, Boom, Irma and Sonja Haller. Irma Boom: Biography in Books. Books in Reverse Chronological Order, 2010-1986, With Comments Here and There. Translated by John A. Lane. Amsterdam: University of Amsterdam.

Butler Jennifer, Butler James, Butler Georgina, Boom Irma and Erwin Olaf. James Jennifer Georginna are the Butlers. London: Erasmus Publishing, 2010.

Froment, Jean-Louis and Irma Boom. No 5 Culture Chanel. Paris: Editions de la Martinière, Abrams, 2013.

Videos:

———. “Irma Boom: Personal Views 44.” Portugal, 2008. Accessed August 1, 2013. http://esad.pt/pt/eventos/irma-boom.

———. “Insights Design Lecture Series: Irma Boom.” Walker Art Center Minneapolis, 2010. Accessed August 1, 2013. http://www.walkerart.org/channel/2010/irma-boom.

Boom, Irma. “TEDxDelft. Irma Boom: Manifesto for the Book.” Delft, 2011. Accessed August 1, 2013. http://tedxtalks.ted.com/video/TEDxDelft-Irma-Boom-Manifest-to.

———. “Dutch Profiles: Irma Boom.” DutchDFA, 2012. Accessed August 1, 2013. http://www.dutchprofiles.com/profile/361/irma-boom.

———. “TYPO London 2012 Social International Design Talks. Irma Boom: Manifesto for the Book.” London, 2012. Accessed August 1, 2013. http://typotalks.com/london/2012/speakers/about-the-speaker/?tid=2916&et=TYPO%20London%202012.

———. “No 5 Culture Chanel: Interview with Irma Boom.” May, 2013. Accessed August 1, 2013. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J3kwJOm75j8.

Zaborov, Victoriya and Roey Tsemah. “Book as Art.” Accessed August 1, 2013. http://www.book-as-art.info/.

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Books:

Bartram, Alan. Five Hundred Years of Book Design. London: The British Library, 2001.

Bertram, Marij, Janssen, Frans A., Vermeulen, Rick, van der Waals, Tessa and Ronald Widdershoven. De Best Verzorgde Boeken 1998. Amsterdam: CPNB, 1999.

Beeke, Anthon and K. Schippers. Nederlandse Postzegels 1980. ’S-Gravenhage: Staatsbedrijf der PTT; Staatsuitgeverij, 1984.

Beeke, Anthon and Gerrit Komrij. Nederlandse postzegels 1981. ’S-Gravenhage: Staatsbedrijf der PTT; Staatsuitgeverij, 1985.

Bierma, Wigger, Lee, Warren, Rube, Anne, Slangen, Brigitte and Martien Ulder. De Best Verzorgde Boeken 2003 Amsterdam: CPNB, 2004.

Breuer, Gerda and Julia Meer. “Never Do Anything Just for Money! An Interview with Irma Boom.” In Women in Graphic Design 1890-2012. Berlin: Jovis, 2012.

Boswinkel, Ebelin and Paul van Capelleveen. Style: Unique Acquisitions by the Koninklijke Bibliotheek during the Directorship of Wim van Drimmelen. The Hague: Koninklijk Bibliotheek, 2008.

Crouwel, Wim. Nederlandse postzegels 1977. ’S-Gravenhage: Staatsbedrijf der PTT; Staatsuitgeverij, 1978.

Crouwel, Wim and André Toet. Nederlandse postzegels 1978. ’S-Gravenhage: Staatsbedrijf der PTT; Staatsuitgeverij, 1979.

Crouwel, Wim. Wim Crouwel Gerrit Noordzij Prize. The Hague: Royal Academy of Art, 2012.

Hara, Kenya. Designing Design. Baden: Lars Müller Publishers, 2007.

Hefting, Paul, van den Hoek, Kees, Noyons, Esther, Slaugen, Brigitte and Pieter Tielen. Best Verzorgde Boeken 1996. Amsterdam: CPNB, 1997.

Hefting, Paul, van den Hoek, Kees, Noyons, Esther, Slaugen, Brigitte and Pieter Tielen. Best Verzorgde Boeken 2006. Amsterdam: CPNB, 2007.

Jury, David. Graphic Design Before Graphic Design: The Printer as Designer and Craftsman 1700-1914. London: Thames & Hudson, 2012.

———. Book Art Object. Berkeley, CA: The Codex Foundation, 2008.

Drucker, Johanna Ruth. The Century of Artist’s Books. New York: Granary Books, 1995.

Fawcett-Tang, Roger and Caroline Roberts. New Book Design. London: Laurance King Publishing Ltd, 2004.

Klima, Stefan. Artists Books: A Critical Survey of the Literature. New York: Granary Books, 1998.

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Koolhaas, Rem and Bruce Mau. S,M,L,XL. Rotterdam: 101 Publishers, 1995.

Lommen, Mathieu,ed. The Book of Books: 500 Years of Graphic Innovation. London: Thames & Hudson, 2012.

Martens, Karl and Arie van den Berg. Nederlandse postzegels 1982. ’S-Gravenhage: Staatsbedrijf der PTT; Staatsuitgeverij, 1985.

Martens, Karl and Paul Hefting. Nederlandse postzegels 1983. ’S-Gravenhage: Staatsbedrijf der PTT; Staatsuitgeverij, 1986.

Meggs, Philip and Alston W. Purvis. Megg’s History of Graphic Design. 4th ed. New Jersey: John Wiley & Sons, Inc, 2006.

Middendorp, Jan. Dutch Type. Rotterdam: 010 Publishers, 2004.

Nikkels, Walter and Gert Holstege. Nederlandse Postzegels 1979. ’S-Gravenhage: Staatsbedrijf der PTT; Staatsuitgeverij, 1981.

Peterson, William S., ed. The Ideal Book: Essays and Lectures on the Arts of the Book. Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, 1982.

Purvis, Alston W. and Cees W. De Jong. Dutch Graphic Design: A Century of Innovation. London: Thames & Hudson, 2006.

Smaal, Niek, Unger, Gerard, van Lindonk and Cor Rosbeek. De Best Verzorgde Boeken 1988. Amsterdam: CPNB, 1989.

Spencer, Herbert. The Pioneers of Modern Typography. First edition 1969, revised edition 2004. Cambridge: MIT Press, 2004.

Vanderlans, Rudy. Emigre No. 70: The Look Back Issue. Selection from Emigre Magazine #1-#69, 1984-2009. Berkeley, CA: Gingko Press, 2009.

Wasserman, Krystyna. The Book as Art: Artist’s Books from the National Museum of Women in the Arts. New York: Princeton Architectural Press, 2007.

Articles:

Albrecht, Jürgen, Bailey, Stuart, Bil’ak, Peter and Tom Unverzagt. Dot Dot Dot 3 (Summer 2001): 8-16.

Beekmans, Jeroen. “Interview: Irma Boom.” Volume, March, 2012. Accessed August 1, 2013. http://volumeproject.org/2012/03/interview-irma-boom/.

Bil’ak, Peter. “Irma Boom: Interview.” Typotheque, 2012. Accessed August 1, 2013. https://www.typotheque.com/articles/irma_boom_interview.

----. “Irma Boom, Book Designer.” Typotheque, 2001. Accessed August 1, 2013. https://www.typotheque.com/articles/irma_boom_book_designer.

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Carson, David. “Ted Talk: David Carson on design + discovery.” February, 2003. Accessed August 1, 2013. http://www.ted.com/talks/david_carson_on_design.html.

CPNB. “About CPNB.” Accessed August 1, 2013. http://web.cpnb.nl/cpnb/index.vm?template=over.

De Best Verzorgde Boeken. “About.” Accessed August 1, 2013. http://www.best-verzorgdeboeken.nl/en/about/.

Epstein, Jason. “The End of the Gutenberg Era.” Library Trends 57 (2008): 8-16.

Google Books. “Sheila Hicks: Weaving as Metaphor.” Accessed August 1, 2013. http://books.google.nl/books/about/Sheila_Hicks_Weaving_as_Metaphor.html?id=0ACUnVjqBwYC&redir_esc=y.

Holtrop, Lies. “De Boeken van Irma Boom.” Made in Holland (Winter 2001): 36-38.

Hubben, Hub. “Kunstboeken domineren tentoonstelling Best Verzorgde Boeken. Ware meesterproef van drie miljoen.” de Volkskrant. September 19, 1997.

Kinross, Robin. “Treumann Battered into Patterns.” Eye (Winter, 2001): 78.

Kuitenbrouwer, Carel. “A Monument Made of Money.” Eye, Spring, 1997. Accessed on August 1, 2013. http://www.eyemagazine.com/review/article/a-monument-made-of-money.

Leijdekkers, Petri. “Building Books: The Powerful Book Designs of Irma Boom.” The Low Countries 18. Translated By Chris Emery (2010): 244-253.

Meermanno Museum. “Modern Book Design. Irma Boom: SHV 1896-1996.” Accessed August 1, 2013. http://www.meermanno.nl/index/-/p-irmaboomshv1896-1996124.

Nadel, Daniel. “The Book as Sculpture.” Eye, Autumn, 2003. Accessed August 1, 2013. http://www.eyemagazine.com/review/article/the-book-as-sculpture.

Nagler, Erich. “Irma Boom’s Visual Testing Ground.” Metropolis. 2013. Accessed August 1, 2013. http://www.metropolismag.com/December-1969/Irma-Boom-rsquos-Visual-Testing-Ground/.

Poynor, Rick. “XXXL.” I.D. Magazine. November, 1996.

Rene. “1,136 postcards and a smoking nun…” The Stimuleye, 2011. Accessed August 1, 2013. http://jamesjennifergeorgina.com/interview.html.

Silverberg, Michael. “Muffins with Irma Boom.” Print, July, 2011. Accessed August 1, 2013. http://www.printmag.com/article/interview-with-irma-boom/.

Vignelli, Massimo. “Big Think Interview with Massimo Vignelli.” Big Think, April, 2010. Accessed August 1, 2013. http://bigthink.com/videos/big-think-interview-with-massimo-vignelli.

Williams, Eliza. “Boom and her Books.” Creative Review (December, 2011): 33-43.

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