
Impressive Textiles: Volume 593
Premodern Printing on Fabric
Suzanne Karr Schmidt(Editor)
Arizona Center for Medieval & Renaissance Studies,US (Publisher)
Will be published approx. on 5. September 2026
Book
Paperback/Softback
356 pages
978-0-86698-976-3 (ISBN)
Description
From reproductions of Duerer copperplates to twenty-first-century apparel, this exhibition explores the history of images printed on fabric.
Printing images and texts on luxurious fabrics instead of paper once took portraits, devotional images, and other artworks to the next level, brokering powerful relationships and memorializing important events on resplendent broadsides and serviceable handkerchiefs alike. However, whether fancy or functional, these early imprints from Europe and the Americas and their modern-day equivalents remain understudied and unappreciated for their artistry and deep connections to global economies. Premodern Printing on Fabric, held at the Newberry Library in 2026, is the first exhibition to tell the story of these exceedingly rare objects, highlighting new research that bridges the gap between art and book history, textiles, and printmaking.
This exhibition catalog delves into fabric printings from the medieval to the modern. Examples range from seventeenth-century marriage poems and portraits on silk and devotional printings on linen reproducing cult objects to the nostalgically reprinted Albrecht Duerer copperplates and George Washington-themed handkerchiefs. A flurry of proto-computerized Jacquard-loom activity during nineteenth-century world's fairs offered woven silk memorabilia in collectible sizes, while simultaneously recreating high-end medieval manuscripts. Many unable to afford printed silks could then incorporate swatches into family quilts long before the popularity of graphic t-shirts.
Printing images and texts on luxurious fabrics instead of paper once took portraits, devotional images, and other artworks to the next level, brokering powerful relationships and memorializing important events on resplendent broadsides and serviceable handkerchiefs alike. However, whether fancy or functional, these early imprints from Europe and the Americas and their modern-day equivalents remain understudied and unappreciated for their artistry and deep connections to global economies. Premodern Printing on Fabric, held at the Newberry Library in 2026, is the first exhibition to tell the story of these exceedingly rare objects, highlighting new research that bridges the gap between art and book history, textiles, and printmaking.
This exhibition catalog delves into fabric printings from the medieval to the modern. Examples range from seventeenth-century marriage poems and portraits on silk and devotional printings on linen reproducing cult objects to the nostalgically reprinted Albrecht Duerer copperplates and George Washington-themed handkerchiefs. A flurry of proto-computerized Jacquard-loom activity during nineteenth-century world's fairs offered woven silk memorabilia in collectible sizes, while simultaneously recreating high-end medieval manuscripts. Many unable to afford printed silks could then incorporate swatches into family quilts long before the popularity of graphic t-shirts.
More details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
Arizona
United States
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Illustrations
224 color plates
Dimensions
Height: 305 mm
Width: 229 mm
Weight
454 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-86698-976-3 (9780866989763)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Person
Suzanne Karr Schmidt has been the George Amos Poole III Curator of Rare Books and Manuscripts at Chicago's Newberry Library since 2017. She is also the director of the Movable Book Society, an international organization celebrating the makers and collectors of pop-up books that was founded in 1993. A scholar of the hybridity and materiality of early modern print, her monograph, Interactive and Sculptural Printmaking in the Renaissance, was published in 2018. Karr Schmidt most recently curated the playful blockbuster exhibition Pop-Up Books Through the Ages at the Newberry Library and authored a prizewinning catalog for her exhibition at the Art Institute of Chicago, Altered and Adorned: Using Renaissance Prints in Daily Life.
Content
Foreword by Astrida Orle Tantillo
Introduction: "Why Print on Fabric (Instead of Paper?)" by Suzanne Karr Schmidt
Case Studies:
"Printed Bodies: Bandages and Contact Relic Swag" by Ad Stijnman and Suzanne Karr Schmidt
"Accessorizing Accessible Print: Handkerchiefs, Nightcaps, and Pillowcases" by Theresa Kutasz Christensen and Catharine Roeber
"Printer Widow's Work: Manuela Cerezo's Mexican Thesis on Fabric" by Aaron Hyman and Suzanne Karr Schmidt
"Printing Nostalgia: Medieval Jacquard Loom Throwbacks and Old Master Restrikes" by Sadie Arft and Suzanne Karr Schmidt
Bickford "Quilting, Politics and African Printed Textiles" by Esmeralda Kale and Katherine Berzock
"On Conservation of Textiles and Printing" by Kimberly Nichols and Megan Creamer
Selected Catalog Entries from Getty Paper Project workshop attendees
Glossary
Bibliography
Introduction: "Why Print on Fabric (Instead of Paper?)" by Suzanne Karr Schmidt
Case Studies:
"Printed Bodies: Bandages and Contact Relic Swag" by Ad Stijnman and Suzanne Karr Schmidt
"Accessorizing Accessible Print: Handkerchiefs, Nightcaps, and Pillowcases" by Theresa Kutasz Christensen and Catharine Roeber
"Printer Widow's Work: Manuela Cerezo's Mexican Thesis on Fabric" by Aaron Hyman and Suzanne Karr Schmidt
"Printing Nostalgia: Medieval Jacquard Loom Throwbacks and Old Master Restrikes" by Sadie Arft and Suzanne Karr Schmidt
Bickford "Quilting, Politics and African Printed Textiles" by Esmeralda Kale and Katherine Berzock
"On Conservation of Textiles and Printing" by Kimberly Nichols and Megan Creamer
Selected Catalog Entries from Getty Paper Project workshop attendees
Glossary
Bibliography