:A new exhibition at Winterthur Museum & Country Estate
introduces a collection of the brightly decorated birth and
baptismal certificates, bookmarks and other items known as
fraktur. On view from September 10 to January 8, the exhibition
also explores fraktur by examining the techniques and materials
used to make them.
"Making Fancy: Materials and Methods in Pennsylvania German
Fraktur" focuses on these objects, which commemorated important
life events, including births, baptisms, New Year's greetings,
prayers and records of educational achievements. The American
term derives from the German word Fraktur, the name of a popular
typeface characterized by "fractured," or broken, letter shapes.
The "golden age" of fraktur took place in southeastern
Pennsylvania during the late 1700s and early 1800s.
"Fraktur range from the serious, such as those that emphasize
fundamental religious beliefs, to the whimsical, like the
examples showing simply drawn flowers," said John Krill, senior
paper conservator at Winterthur and curator of the exhibition.
"Many fraktur were personal family documents. Their images became
a blend of text and decoration, so much so that some letters seem
to sprout with imagination."
Birth certificates, or Taufschein, were a popular form of
fraktur. Fraktur, made by Joseph Lochbaum, Pennsylvania, 1810,
watercolor and ink on paper. Museum purchase.
Pennsylvania schoolmasters made many fraktur. Traveling
artists called scriveners, who were trained in penmanship and
copied documents, also made them.
The exhibition also focuses on the papers, colors and techniques
used in the creation of the fraktur. Winterthur's paper
conservators, museum scientists and curators have worked together
for more than 30 years using scientific and historical analysis
to better understand fraktur.
"Through the use of various noninvasive techniques we have
learned much about the fraktur," continued Krill. "Museum
scientists have studied and identified the colors on fraktur
using state-of-the-art equipment in the Winterthur science
laboratories, among the best museum research facilities in the
United States." Fraktur were first analyzed in the late 1970s
using x-ray fluorescence spectroscopy (XRF) to identify the
chemical elements present in the colors. In recent years, the
study of fraktur has expanded to include techniques that identify
chemical compounds. The resulting knowledge has been valuable in
gaining a better understanding of the history and preservation
needs of these often delicate paper artworks.
Winterthur founder Henry Francis du Pont began collecting
Pennsylvania German materials, including fraktur, in the 1920s.
Today, visitors can see more of Winterthur's fraktur collection
on guided tours of the period rooms, and learn more about the
arts and crafts of the German immigrants to Pennsylvania.
Winterthur Museum & Country Estate is on Route 52, six
miles northwest of Wilmington, and five miles south of US Route
1, For information, 800-448-3883, 302-888-4600 or
winterthur.org.