Summer 2016 | Sea Island Life Magazine Spring/Summer 2016 | Page 35
NO LONGER DESIGNED
AND SOLD EXCLUSIVELY
FOR KIDS, POP-UP BOOKS
ARE VERITABLE 21STCENTURY MASTERPIECES.
BY JENNIFER PAPPAS YENNIE
T
he first time I heard the term “paper
engineer” it was 2005. Fresh out
of college and fascinated with the
antiquated art of letterpress printing and bookbinding, I was a volunteer at San
Francisco Center for the Book. Once a week,
I sorted metal type, cleaned Vandercook
presses, and cut down paper in exchange for
studio hours. That day, I was helping curators
set up a new exhibit of limited edition popup books, and each masterpiece I handled
seemed magical.
Today, the vocation of paper engineering is
equally enchanting. Manipulating one of our
oldest mediums, paper, into animation with
the sole intention of delighting one’s audience seems especially noble in a world gone
almost completely digital. Many people don’t
realize the longstanding history and technique behind these movable books that many
of us know simply as “pop-ups.”
Once Upon a Time
TOP PHOTOS COURTESY OF MOVABLE BOOK SOCIETY
Long considered amusing novelties for children, pop-up books actually have a lengthy
history, predating printed books. Experts
believe the technique dates back to the
13th century in Spain. They originated as an
An early pop-up by Lothar Meggendorfer
“The ‘Pop-Up’ Pinocchio” (1932)
intricate artistic method for explicating complex processes such as anatomy, astronomy,
medicine and mathematics. It wasn’t until
the 19th century that a number of craftsmen,
mainly in London, were able to produce popup books on a large scale and market them
to children for entertainment.
Out of this transition grew a number of
different techniques, including the use of
liftable flaps, transformational slats and
multidimensional peep boxes, which allowed
books to spring to life like never before. Early
pamphlet-like books with these details went
by a variety of names around the world—
metamorphosis, Harlequinades and turn-up
books are just a few. German artist Lothar
Meggendorfer emerged as a major player at
the height of a golden age for movable books
when he published “Living Pictures” in 1878.
His work made use of thin copper wires,
metal rivets and levers to create multipart
illustrations that simultaneously moved in
innovative directions at the pull of a single
tab. His efforts were a revelation, and are
still considered some of the most intricate
mechanisms ever created.
It was also in the 1880s that America
entered the movable book market with
the Little Showman’s Series, published by
McLoughlin Brothers in New York City.
Production came to a grinding halt during
World War I, however, and it was not until
the 1930s and 1940s that pop-ups once again
flourished thanks to the availability of new
materials and a global push to reinvigorate the way people bought books. London
publisher S. Louis Giraud and his “living
models” were at the forefront of this renaissance. Though the term was not yet in use,
these affordably priced models were authentic predecessors of modern pop-up books,
with dioramas that sprang up when the
pages were opened and retreated as each
spread closed.
A slew of pioneering publishers and artists quickly followed suit, establishing what
would become a new era of movable books
in Europe and the United States. Blue
Ribbon Publishing, headquartered in New
York and responsible for coining the term
“pop-up,” struck gold by bringing to life traditional fairy tales and Walt Disney characters in pop-up format, enjoying widespread
commercial success as a result. The real
sea of change, however, came in the mid1960s, when Waldo Hunt, an enterprising
American, founded Graphics International,
Sam Ita’s “Moby-Dick: A Pop-Up Book” combines a graphic novel with movable art.
SPRING/SUMMER 2016 | SEA ISL AND LIFE 35