Heritage + UtopiaMain MenuIntroductionIntroduction to Heritage + UtopiaUtopian Currents in HeritageSection 1Community Futures and UtopiaSection 2My Future YorkSection 3Utopia: Crafting the Ideal BookSection 4Author and Contributor BiosBiographiesReferences and Further ReadingBibliographyElizabeth Stainforth3d3e3051d7a13ea6e4f2b27f7bcb160c4bc167b7Helen Grahamf204c9df947a0fb7f84dae27e743c01016c9be7c
The centrepiece of the exhibition comprises two significant copies of Thomas More's Utopia, held in Special Collections. The first is an early edition, published in 1518 by the famous printer and publisher Johann Froben. The second is an 1893 edition, printed by William Morris at the Kelmscott Press in a limited edition of 300. The theme of utopia will be explored through its dialogue with More’s text, addressed directly by Morris in the foreword to the Kelmscott Press edition, and by drawing attention to the production methods and collection histories of both.
The 1518 edition, which forms part of the Brotherton Collection, is one of 117 volumes purchased from the library of Thomas Evelyn Scott-Ellis, 8th Baron Howard de Walden. Much of the collection was rebound early in the 20th century by Rivière & Sons. The bindings copied historic styles which were often contemporary with the period of the printed work. This was an attempt to recreate the perfect binding, much like the ideal of the perfect society envisaged by Utopia.
Equally, the re-printing of Utopia by the Kelmscott Press reflects Morris’s interest in the book as a work of art and his belief in the transformative role of art and culture in social life. In the short essay, 'The Ideal Book', he wrote:
The picture-book is not, perhaps, absolutely necessary to man's life, but it gives us such endless pleasure, and is so intimately connected with the other absolutely necessary art of imaginative literature that it must remain one of the very worthiest things towards the production of which reasonable men should strive.