Printing For The Modern Age: Commerce, Craft, and Culture in the RR Donnelley Archive
Web Exhibits - Special Collections Research Center The University of Chicago Library
  • Introduction

  • Richard Robert Donnelley: Midwestern Business Pioneer
  • The Family and the Company
  • The Evolution of a Graphic Identity: The R.R. Donnelley Indianhead
  • The Architecture of Printing
  • Training Craftsmen: The R.R. Donnelley Apprentice Program
  • Craftsmanship by Example: Fine Binding
  • Early Advances in Technology
  • Research and Development After World War II
  • Promoting the Craft: The Four American Books Campaign
  • "Undivided Responsibility": R.R. Donnelley Advertising, 1920-1945
  • "Undivided Responsibility": R.R. Donnelley Advertising, 1946-1965
  • Promoting the Craft: Public Exhibitions in the Lakeside Press Galleries
  • Printer to the Modernist Movement: A Century of Progress
  • Graphic Design in the C. Prentiss Smith Papers
  • Imaging the Craft: Photography in the R.R. Donnelley Archive
  • Printer to Chicago
  • Mass-Market Magazines Part 1
  • Mass-Market Magazines Part 2
  • Mail-Order Catalogs
  • Printing for the National Marketplace
  • The R.R. Donnelley Community
  • Defining Moments of the Modern Age
  • R.R. Donnelley and World War II
  • Collections within a Collection: Scrapbooks, Ledgers, Albums

  • Exhibit Checklist
  • About the Exhibit
  • Rights and Reproductions

Promoting the Craft: Public Exhibitions in the Lakeside Press Galleries

When RR Donnelley completed the last phase of its flagship building at 22nd Street and Calumet Avenue in 1929, it launched an exhibition program that matched in quality those of some the city's leading museums and galleries. The Lakeside Press Galleries were located on the eighth floor of the "D" wing of the building, which was also the location of a suite of wood-paneled executive offices and the Memorial Library, with its collection of important materials manufactured by the company. These spaces were designed as showplaces, and the public was welcomed.

In 1930 the galleries hosted five exhibitions, all organized by the advertising and graphics-arts departments. The topics included American and English woodblock prints, European posters, aeronautical prints, and contemporary American book illustrations. The following year, which was just as active, included an exhibition on Czechoslovakian printing and modern photography. Between 1930 and 1961, when corporate headquarters moved to a new building, the company organized more than 130 exhibitions, the galleries closing only during World War II.

The materials for each exhibition came from a variety of sources. They featured works on paper from important private collections, for example color aquatints owned by Mrs. James Ward Thorne, flower and fruit prints from the holdings of Gordon Dunthorne, and early Chicagoana amassed by Joseph T. Ryerson. Other displays focused on technology, such as commercial bookbinding, halftone engraving, direct-color photo reproduction, intaglio printing, and offset lithography, to mention a few. Exhibitions were devoted to artists Thomas Hart Benton, John Stuart Curry, Grant Wood, and typographers R. Hunter Middleton and Bruce Rogers.

RR Donnelley's exhibitions received regular coverage in local newspapers, often alongside reviews of shows at the Art Institute of Chicago. Each show was announced with a printed invitation and accompanied by a catalog (often very elaborate) designed and produced by the company. These represent some of the best design and printing available at the time.

item 1 1. Photograph of The Lakeside Press Galleries, Chicago, [1930s]. R.R. Donnelley & Sons Company Archive.
item 2 2. Photograph of The Lakeside Press Galleries, Chicago, [1930s]. R.R. Donnelley & Sons Company Archive.
item 3a 3a. Telegrams between Thomas Hart Benton and W.A. Kittredge, May 19, 1937 and August 23, 1937. R.R. Donnelley & Sons Company Archive.
item 3b 3b. Telegrams between Thomas Hart Benton and W.A. Kittredge, May 19, 1937 and August 23, 1937. R.R. Donnelley & Sons Company Archive.
item 3c 3c. Telegrams between Thomas Hart Benton and W.A. Kittredge, May 19, 1937 and August 23, 1937. R.R. Donnelley & Sons Company Archive.
Printing For The Modern Age: Commerce, Craft And Culture in the RR Donnelley Archive. Kim Coventry and Maija Anderson.
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