Английская Википедия:Andrew Baron (paper engineer)

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Andrew Baron (born 1962) is a self-taught,[1] award-winning paper engineer and singled out by Robert Sabuda, a leading children's pop-up book artist, as a wunderkind of pull tabs,[2] specific devices used to cause movement in pop-up books.

Biography

Baron was awarded the Movable Book Society's Meggendorfer Prize for Best Paper Engineering in 2004 for Knick-Knack Paddywhack! The book, by Paul O. Zelinsky, has “200 movable parts, 300 glue points – twice the usual number – 15 lift-the-flaps, and 10 parts on the last spread alone, moving simultaneously with one tab!... 500 people [at the Hua Yang Printing Company in China] worked on the book."[3] Of this book, Robert Sabuda noted, "his designs are unique, complex, thoughtful and he doesn't skimp on the amount of paper or rivets needed to accomplish an action."[4]

Baron has also repaired and restored old clocks, music boxes, radios and typewriters since childhood.[5] In 2007, Baron spent about 70 hours repairing the "Draughtsman-Writer" automaton by Henri Maillardet (1745–1830).[6] A version of Maillardet’s automaton, a self-powered robot that writes poetry and draws four different images, was in Martin Scorsese’s movie Hugo and Brian Selznick’s book The Invention of Hugo Cabret.[7][8]

Selected bibliography

Exhibitions

Year Title Location Notes
2012 Pop! The Arthur J. Williams Pop-up Collection[9] Florida Atlantic University, Wimberly Library Also included David A. Carter, James Diaz, Harold Lentz
2012 Pop-Up! Illustration in 3-D[10] Brandywine River Museum, Chadds Ford, PA Items drew largely from the collection of Ann Montanaro Staples, founder of The Movable Book Society
2011 The Harold M. Goralnick Pop-Up Book Collection: An Exhibition[11] Bowdoin College Library, Brunswick, Maine The collection holds over 1,900 volumes, including works by Baron.
2010 Paper Engineering: Fold, Pull, Pop and Turn[12] Smithsonian Institution Libraries, National Museum of American History Also included Matthew Reinhart, Bruce Foster, Chuck Fischer
2004 Show Me a Story: Children’s Books and the Technology of Enchantment[13] San Francisco Center for the Book Exhibit includes inside view of the production of Knick-Knack Paddywhack!

External links

  • Official Andrew Baron Website http://popyrus.com/
  • Video lecture, The Birth of a Corporate Pop-Up Book, given at the National Museum of American History, on April 18, 2011, as part of the Smithsonian Institution Libraries Paper Engineering Lecture Series.
  • The Baron of Santa Fe,[14] a studio interview with Baron, by Adie C. Pena, 2001

References

Шаблон:Reflist

Шаблон:Authority control