1847: the year of the typographic war. Rafael de Rafael’s specimen and its relevance to the history of Mexican typography

Authors

  • Marina Garone Gravier

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.51358/id.v7i1.86

Keywords:

design history, Mexican graphic design, nineteenth century type specimens

Abstract

The Nineteenth century was a period of intense political change in Mexico, as well as national independence (1810), there were three foreign interventions in Aztec soil. In this effervescent political context significant technological there were changes in publishing and printing letterpress. This essay presents an unknown type specimen from the Catalan printer Rafael de Rafael, who was the first to print in letterpress with various colors in Mexico. The intent of this text is to review the political context in which these advances in the graphic arts were developed, to analyze the importance of type samples as a source for the history of printing, and describe that document to give it the real space and recognition to the Mexican history of printing in the nineteenth century.

 

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Author Biography

Marina Garone Gravier

Marina Garone Gravier es doctora en Historia del Arte por la Universidad Nacional Autónoma de
México, investigadora del Instituto de Investigaciones Bibliográficas (UNAM) y miembro del
Sistema Nacional de Investigadores de México (SNI). Es autora de Breve introducción al estudio
de la tipografía en el libro antiguo (Ambifa- BUAP, 2009), investiga sobre historia del diseño y la
tipografía latinoamericana y las relaciones diseño-género.

Published

2011-03-09

How to Cite

Gravier, M. G. (2011). 1847: the year of the typographic war. Rafael de Rafael’s specimen and its relevance to the history of Mexican typography. InfoDesign - Journal of Information Design, 7(1), 01–10. https://doi.org/10.51358/id.v7i1.86

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