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[PADG:935] 2006 Banks Harris Preservation Award
- To: PADG <padg@xxxxxxx>
- Subject: [PADG:935] 2006 Banks Harris Preservation Award
- From: "Patricia P. Selinger" <patricia.selinger@xxxxxxx>
- Date: Thu, 30 Mar 2006 10:48:36 -0500
- Message-id: <442BFDD4.9050700@vcu.edu>
- Organization: Virginia Commonwealth University
- Reply-to: patricia.selinger@xxxxxxx
- User-agent: Thunderbird 1.5 (Windows/20051201)
Banks/Harris Preservation Award to Gary L. Frost
Gary L. Frost, Conservator at the University of Iowa Libraries, Iowa
City, and Instructor at the University of Iowa School of Library and
Information Science and at the Iowa Center for the Book has been named
the recipient of the 2006 Paul Banks & Carolyn Harris Preservation
Award. The award is sponsored by Preservation Technologies, L.P. and
includes $1,500 and a citation.
The Paul Banks and Carolyn Harris Preservation Award honors the memories
of Paul Banks and Carolyn Harris, early leaders in library preservation,
who were teachers and mentors for many in the field of preservation. The
award recognizes the contribution of a professional preservation
specialist who has been active in the field of preservation and/or
conservation of library and /or archival materials.
Mr. Frost’s professional career began after he completed an M.F.A. at
the Art Institute of Chicago in 1969. That year he joined the staff of
the Newberry Library under the supervision of Paul Banks and Norvell
Jones. By the time he left the Newberry in 1981, he was managing the
conservation program. Beginning his formal teaching at the School of the
Art Institute of Chicago in 1972, Mr. Frost has served as a role model
for a generation of conservators and preservation librarians. He joined
the faculty of the School of Library Service at Columbia University in
the Preservation/Conservation training program founded by Paul Banks
1981. In 1983, while with Columbia University, he helped begin the Book
and Paper Intensive (PBI) and still serves as an advisor and teacher to
the organization. The Preservation/Conservation training program moved
to the University of Texas at Austin Graduate School of Library and
Information Science and Mr. Frost joined the faculty from 1992 to 1999.
Since moving to the University of Iowa Libraries, he joined the faculty
of the School of Library and Information Science where he continues to
mentor and inspire a new generation of conservators and librarians. His
students work in many of the top institutions of the country, including
the Library of Congress, MIT, Harvard, Yale, UCLA, and Brown.
Mr. Frost’s ongoing and detailed research into historical and modern
book structures has resulted in cut-away models that reflect bookbinding
from many different eras as well as geographical locations. He developed
an Ethopian binding kit to provide preservation and book arts
instructors with an affordable way to allow students to sew a book model
representing an early binding technique. From his research into modern
inexpensive paperbacks he developed the “sewn boards binding”, a modern
adaptation of an ancient design that is now used in conservation labs
across the country. While at BookLab, he changed the way libraries
looked at vendor services and developed efficient, cost-effective
treatments for circulating collections. He also created a functional and
economical cloth for rebacking nineteenth century publishers’ bindings.
As a writer and thinker, Mr. Frost’s numerous publications range from
the theoretical to the practical. A few of his classic publications
include “A Brief History of Western Bookbinding without One Mention of
Decoration”, “Historical Paper Case Binding and Conservation Rebinding”,
“Structure and Action in Hand Bookbinding”, and “Digital Preservation in
the Context of Changing Reading Behaviors and Reading Methods”. He also
writes on a range of related topics on his Weblog,
www.futureofthebook.com <http://www.futureofthebook.com/>, which began
in 2000.
Mr. Frost is a highly respected colleague in the preservation field. His
ability to inspire individuals to utilize their skills for the benefit
of libraries is impressive. His creativity and dedication are
inspirational; his heartfelt sincerity is sublime, and his talent as a
book conservator, teacher, and artist are extraordinary.
--
Patricia Palmer Selinger
Head, Preservation Department
Virginia Commonwealth University Libraries
patricia.selinger@xxxxxxx
(ph) 804.828.1096
(fax) 804.828.0151