Designer, critic, pundit and historian, Greer Allen was Senior Critic in Graphic Design at Yale School of Art. He designed publications for The Houghton Library at Harvard, the Beinecke Library at Yale, the Philadelphia Museum of Art, the Art Institute of Chicago, and a number of other distinguished cultural institutions around the country. From 1972 to 1983, Allen was University Printer at Yale. He later served as Honorary Printer to the Cathedral of St. John the Divine in New York City.
Greer Allen died last week after a short illness. He was 83.
Many years ago when I was a graduate student, I spent four days touring presses and paper mills in Vermont with my 17 classmates and with Greer Allen. It was the end of September, the temperature was already in the low 20s — and those four days changed my life.
As the younger of two daughters raised in cities both here and abroad, I viewed this field trip as little more than an imposed sentence of doom. Long windy roads and cramped motel rooms did little to appease my negativity: I was crabby, I was unimpressed and I was impatient for this ordeal to end.
But after we toured Stinehour, something happened.
We drove, caravan style, to the home of Claire Van Vliet. Book artist, letterpress printer, MacArthur recipient and Philadelphian-turned-Vermonter, Van Vliet lived in a house filled with art and books, surrounded by a big garden filled with organic produce. She welcomed and fed us — all 19 of us — and showed us where she made her work. Here, in the middle of nowhere.
I went to sleep that night warm and, drowsy from the food and the wine, happy in a way I hadn't been in ages.
The following day, we travelled to an even more remote part of Vermont, where Greer introduced us to a paper restorer who lived on a water-powered saw mill that had been in her husband's family for generations. Here, the desolate, monochromatic landscape framed yet another life filled with art and books. Our host, also a cellist, had propped her cello in the corner, flanked by two large black labradors sleeping peacefully on the oriental rug. In her studio she showed us rich, Italian kid leathers, Florentine papers, artisinal glues and brushes. While she worked on restotarive bindings for the Folger Library, she listened to National Public Radio, taking breaks to feed the dogs, to play her cello, to fetch her children from school. She was happy and she was busy and she was leading a cultivated life. Here, in the middle of nowhere.
I was twenty-six years old, and I thought: this is how I want to live.
Today, I live in the middle of nowhere. The winters are long and the landscape can be desolate, but here I can have a both studio and a garden. I am a designer with a much richer life than I ever would have had I not taken that trip with Greer Allen. And it is because of Greer that I do.
Comments [13]
07.05.04
03:28
07.06.04
09:53
It will be very exciting to see what else Cassini reveals to us in the next year. Hopefully it will both answer some questions and raise new ones.
07.06.04
11:15
Sure it's a beautiful 'design' but 'as inviting and sleek as' the aforementioned work I found a little disheartening. Can't we just stand back and admire/celebrate/value Saturn for the incredible wonder that it is without having to categorise it as just another design product.
OK, it makes for one groovy logo or two and the images are tempting enough for Mr. Saville snap them up for the next New Order LP but that's not the point. Sorry
07.07.04
06:51
The application of Genetic algorithms in architecture seems to be an interesting parallel. The designer is now the person who defines parameters and rules and lets form emerge from these, endowing the designer with a much more God-like aura.
07.07.04
09:34
01.16.05
08:38
Upon meeting me at a printers' dinner, he treated me to a story about how he came to print a book while at sea. Assigned to a US Navy voyage across the Atlantic by ship, he packed several cases of type and hundreds of sheets of paper on board the ship. Each evening, he would set one page of type, ink it up, and print it by a unique seafaring method: he would place a sheet of paper and a board across the type and a heavyset sailor friend would lean on the board, rock back and forth once with the pitch of the seas, and the page would be printed.
Upon landing in Europe, Greer said, he found a binder to assemble the book. He shipped one copy to a friend at the University of Chicago, which led to a job offer there when he returned from his Navy service. His position as University Printer at Yale followed.
I tell this story often. It inspires me that someone loved printing enough that he found a way to print a page every night, even under the most challenging circumstances. And that this love for printing would be noted and rewarded.
05.01.05
12:04
05.01.05
04:59
On a side note, I got a kick out of his comments about the hunt for Yale blue. He declared that if that color was ever really pinned down, it “would leave Yale a bland, boring and uninteresting University. So my morning prayers regularly include the fervent hope, ‘Dear Lord, please have the answers to the questions surrounding Yale Blue and the Vinland Map forever elude us!’&rdquo
05.01.05
08:28
Rest in peace.
05.03.05
09:13
05.05.05
10:14
I set one book for him, the full catalog of the Yale art gallery's holdings, and I recall his reaction to the first test: not so hot. How horrible to disappoint Greer. I tweaked, I kerned, I cleaned it up, and finally reached a result that met his level of perfection.
What a lovely man he was. I found this item about his passing because I was thinking of Berthold Wolpe, a good friend of his who passed away in 1989. When I was hunting around for a senior project that year, I believe it was either Roland or Greer that said, please put Albertus (Wolpe's perhaps best-known popular typeface) into digital form. There was a degenerate version available, but no pure Albertus.
It's sad to see someone as wonderful as Greer pass, but he touched many tens of thousands of lives in an uplifting and aesthetic way, and it's very hard to ask for more than that.
05.19.05
11:54
12.03.06
11:24