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Seminar/konferanse

Symposium: Letterpress as research method

Symposium: Letterpress as research method

A symposium celebrating the 20-year anniversary of the re-establishment of our historic letterpress facilities at KHiO.

KHiO is the only higher education in Norway with access to moveable type and letterpress, which delivers research into letterpress on a high international level. The two-day workshop symposium will reflect on and foster new possibilities for research into letterpress and KUF-based teaching and learning in the post-digital era. 

The symposium will explore letterpress as:
• A medium within artistic research and post-digital experimentation which fosters dialogue and insight into academic research in literature, book history and feminist studies
• A tool for critical thinking, freedom of expression, and democracy
• A method for learning a critical approach to history through integrated form and content

The program is free and open for all, but registration is required. Please note that there is a separate registration for each day. Register in the form at the bottom of this page.

Program

Day 1 – Wednesday March 18th 


Main Auditorium:

09:00 Registration in the Reception

09:30 – 12.00

Welcome: Rectors Opening Speech
Presentation and discussion: Letterpress at KHiO – Past, Present & Future by Ane Thon Knutsen, Maziar Raein og Lotte Grønneberg

The Library:

16:00 Table top exhibition opening

18.00 Drinks at Bortenfor


Day 2 – Thursday March 19th 


Main Auditorium:

13:00 – 18.00 

20-minute presentations by invited guests
o Nordic Letterpress Network
o Edwin Pickstone: Here and Now and Then
o Claire Battershill: Literary Letterpress: Interactions Between Type and Text in Early 20th-Century Books

14:30 Break

15:00
o Aleksandra Ola Kot: The Imprint of Sound: Typography as Resonance
o Angie Butler: Printing and making books: connecting with people and places through a research-practice-knowledge enablement approach.
o Catherine Dixon: Digging beneath the surface: a call for generous criticality

17:30 Closing reflections

The Nordic Letterpress Network (NLN)

The Nordic Letterpress Network (NLN) was established in 2021 with several aims to promote Letterpress (boktrykk/blysats) printing in the Nordic Countries.
The group made up of Angie Butler (UK), Marit Brandsnes (NO), Camilla Gunnar (FI), Edward Johansson (AX), Imi Maufe (NO), Carl Middleton (DK), and Lina Nordenström (SE) have met each year for a short residency at different letterpress museums or printshops. In 2025 we organised an exhibition at Grafiska Sällskapet Gallery in Stockholm showing Letterpress works by over 66 nordic artists. NLN is an open network for anyone to organise events and projects under the name.

Edwin Pickstone

Edwin Pickstone is a Lecturer, Researcher and Typography Technician in the Dept of Communication Design, Glasgow School of Art. Since 2006 he has been responsible for The Caseroom, GSA’s collection of Letterpress printing equipment. His practice-based research focuses on Letterpress and Relief Printing as tools for cross disciplinary collaboration and engagement with design history and visual culture.

Angie Butler

Angie Butler is an artist-printer and practice-led researcher studying embodied research methodologies, Slow methods and practices of care within letterpress printing, stitch practices, artists’ books and small press publishing. Angie utilises the studio and the book as collaborative spaces, to connect people and language through shared haptic experiences.

Catherine Dixon

Catherine Dixon PhD, is a designer and researcher. Her work is focused on the material practices of lettering including the teaching of typography and the value of letterpress in the education of the designer. She teaches on the Graphic Communication Design programme at Central Saint Martins (UAL) where she also supervises typographic research.

Claire Battershill

Claire Battershill is an Assistant Professor of modern book history and digital archives cross-appointed in the Faculty of Informatiom and the Department of English at the University of Toronto. She also holds the Wendy
Cecil Professorship in VicOne at Victoria College. Her monographs include Modernist Lives: Biography and Autobiography at Leonard and Virginia Woolf’s Hogarth Press (Bloomsbury 2018) and Women and Letterpress Printing: Gendered Impressions (Cambridge UP 2022). She is a Co-Founder of the Modernist Archives Publishing Project (MAPP), a critical digital archive of early twentieth-century publishers’ records, and Co-Editor of The Edinburgh Companion to Women in Publishing (Edinburgh UP 2024).

Ola Kot

Ola Kot is an artist specializing in typography, book design, and spatial forms. Her work investigates the relationship between typography, space, and sound, with a particular focus on its narrative role and its connection to movement. She approaches the written word as a catalyst for performative activities, expanding typography beyond static form. Using a range of methods and practices, including experimental approaches to letterpress, her research develops tools and strategies for interactive typographic installations, spanning from experimental books to large-scale spatial works.
A graduate of the Faculty of Graphic Arts at the Academy of Fine Arts in Warsaw, where she earned her PhD and now serves as an adjunct professor, she has over a decade of teaching experience and leads studios in typography and graphic design. She has conducted workshops and collaborative projects internationally, presented her research at major conferences including twice at ATypI (2016, 2025) and collaborated with leading cultural institutions, integrating her artistic practice with curatorial and educational contexts.

The symposium is an initiative by Ane Thon Knutsen, Lotte Grønneberg and Maziar Raein at the department of Design
Research assistant: Kainat Jawaid

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