John S. Fass
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John Stroble Fass (August 25, 1890 - July 19, 1973) was an American graphic designer and a printer of fine press books. Fass designed books for the leading American publishers of limited edition books. Collectors of private press books also remember John Fass for the handcrafted books he printed on a tabletop
printing press A printing press is a mechanical device for applying pressure to an inked surface resting upon a printing, print medium (such as paper or cloth), thereby transferring the ink. It marked a dramatic improvement on earlier printing methods in wh ...
in his one-room apartment at the Bronx YMCA. Fass' books and his photography celebrate his life in New York City, where he lived most of his career. His work also documents his passion for the rural landscapes of his native Lancaster County, Pennsylvania.


Early life

John S. Fass was born in
Lititz Lititz is a borough in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, United States, north of the city of Lancaster. As of the 2020 census, it had a population of 9,370. History Lititz was founded by members of the Moravian Church in 1756 and was named af ...
, Pennsylvania, a borough located in Lancaster County. His father, David C. Fass, was a cigar maker and a laborer. John's mother, Sara C. Fass, supplemented the family income as a dressmaker. The family had deep roots in rural Lancaster County; Fass' family included Moravian and Mennonite ancestry. Although Fass' career kept him in New York City for more than 40 years, he frequently returned to his quiet hometown of Lititz. Fass never married, and maintained close ties with his relatives in Lancaster County, where he returned in old age to live with his sister Esther Wert in Lititz. Fass began his career in the printing trade as a 12-year-old, working summers as an errand boy for a Lititz newspaper's print shop. After graduating from high school, he continued his work at the Lititz print shop, working as a typesetter. After serving in the U. S. Army, Fass moved to Philadelphia in 1918 to work as a compositor for the Holmes Press. Two years later Fass moved to New York City to work as a compositor for David Gildea & Company which specialized in advertising design and
typography Typography is the art and technique of arranging type to make written language legible, readable and appealing when displayed. The arrangement of type involves selecting typefaces, point sizes, line lengths, line-spacing ( leading), and ...
. From 1923 to 1925 Fass worked for the printing and publishing house of
William Edwin Rudge William Edwin Rudge is the name of a grandfather, father and son, all of whom worked in the printing business. The first William Edwin Rudge (1835–1910) operated a small commercial print shop in New York City. William Edwin Rudge II (1876–1931 ...
at Mount Vernon, New York. The town is located in West Chester County, on the border of the Bronx. While employed by William Rudge, John worked alongside Bruce Rogers, who was "the greatest modern book designer" according to a 1939 ''Time'' magazine article. Rogers' modernist-yet-classical design sensibility greatly influenced Fass' own sense of style. Fass' style became characterized by clean, precisionist design accented with finely crafted ornament.


Harbor Press

In 1925 Fass left the Rudge shop to create his own printing house with a Rudge co-worker, Roland Wood and wife Elizabeth Wood. That same year they founded the Harbor Press in a small shop in midtown Manhattan. The press specialized in creating fine-edition books, with Fass focusing on the design, and Roland Wood usually doing the printing. The Harbor Press quickly established a reputation for producing beautifully crafted books. Fass and Wood produced limited editions of works by leading American writers such as Robert Frost and William Faulkner, signed by the writers. George Macy, the publisher of the Limited Editions Club, soon noticed Fass' talents. From 1925 into the 1940s, John designed most of the books published by John Macy. In addition, the Harbor Press designed and printed works for New York's most influential bibliophiles: the members of the
Grolier Club The Grolier Club is a private club and society of bibliophiles in New York City. Founded in January 1884, it is the oldest existing bibliophilic club in North America. The club is named after Jean Grolier de Servières, Viscount d'Aguisy, Tre ...
and members of th
Typophiles
Books printed at Fass' Harbor Press include: * ''Extracts from the Diary of Roger Payne'' (1928) For the American Institute of Graphic Arts. * ''A Way Out: A One Act Play'' (1929) By Robert Frost. * ''Undine'' (1930) By F. De La Motte Fouqué for the Limited Editions Club. * ''The Epping Hunt'' (1930) By Thomas Hood for the Derrydale Press. * ''Idyll in the Desert'' (1931) By William Faulkner for Random House. * ''A Bibliography of the Works of Ernest Hemingway'' (1931) By Louis Henry Cohn. * ''The Golden Ass'' (1932) By Apuleius for the Limited Editions Club. * ''The Angler'' (1933) By Washington Irving. * Hunting Sketches (1933) By Anthony Trollope. * ''The Study of Incunabula'' (1933) For the Grolier Club. * ''Typee'' by Herman Melville (1935) For the Limited Editions Club. * ''The Ballad of Reading Gaol'' (1937) By Oscar Wilde for the Limited Editions Club. Dr Hellmut Lehmann-Haupt, in his ''Book in America'' explained that John Fass and his Harbor Press created books with "...a flavor of good breeding and tradition...which is pleasantly mixed with a sense of humor and intimacy." John Fass and Roland Wood closed the Harbor Press in 1939. Wood pursued a career in acting, while John Fass continued his career as a book designer for leading American publishers, and a graphic designer for New York advertising companies, where he specialized in designing advertising typography. He was a typographer fo
Young and Rubicam
one of Manhattan's largest advertising companies. Fass continued working in New York advertising and publishing for the rest of his career.


Printing at the Bronx YMCA

For many years John Fass lived in a single-room apartment at the Bronx YMCA. In this room Fass created his most iconic works: small editions printed on small handpresses. Fass was as clean and precise with his YMCA room decor as he was with his book design. Herman Cohen, owner of the Chiswick Book Shop, collected Fass' work and wrote Fass' bibliography. Cohen described Fass' room as the most immaculate room he had ever seen, despite the room being filled with printing and photography equipment. (Fass stored his cases of printing press type under his bed.)


Hell-Box Press

Fass created his first YMCA printing projects using the imprint name Hell-Box Press, named for a print shop hellbox, in which printers threw used metal type for recasting. Fass' hobby was woodworking, so he created miniature wooden printing presses for his Hell-Box printing endeavors. Throughout the 1920s and 1930 Fass used his miniature, 14-inch-high presses to create booklets, bookplates, Christmas cards, and ephemera. He inked the letters with his fingertip. Some of Fass' Hellbox imprints were custom bound in fine leather by another YMCA resident, John Archer, who was supervisor of the print shop and book bindery at the
New York Public Library The New York Public Library (NYPL) is a public library system in New York City. With nearly 53 million items and 92 locations, the New York Public Library is the second largest public library in the United States (behind the Library of Congress ...
.


Hammer Creek Press

In the 1950s and early 1960s, while working for Manhattan advertising agencies, John Fass created immaculate masterworks of letterpress printing in his cramped room at the Bronx YMCA. He named his press The Hammer Creek Press, named for the Hammer Creek which flows near his boyhood home in Lititz, Pennsylvania. Fass printed books, leaflets, broadsides, bookplates and other small works of letterpress art. He created these works for his own pleasure, and as gifts for his friends. He printed these projects with a tabletop Albion press, made in 1905. Fass received the press from his close friend the illustrator
Valenti Angelo Valenti Angelo (1897-1982) (variant name Valenti Michael Angelo) was an Italian-American printmaker, illustrator and author, born June 23, 1897 in Massarosa, Italy. He immigrated to the United States, living first in New York City then sett ...
, who had received the press from Fass' former coworker Bruce Rogers. Fass' printer's device for the Hammer Creek Press was the turtle, which became his symbol of slowly crafted art, and excellence of design. Fass' frien
John DePol
illustrated various works of this press with wood engravings. In 1959 and 1960 Fass also printed collections of leaf prints, printing directly from the leaves onto Japanese tissue. "Fass was essentially a private printer, working alone at his own pace. What he did was done for his own pleasure. But his work, small in size and issued in minuscule editions, was exquisite and executed with impeccable taste. He was a genius at the arrangement of type, ornaments, and wood engravings. Every piece he produced was a small gem, for Fass had the time, skill, and materials to print everything by hand patiently and perfectly," according to collector Aveve Cohen. Despite Fass' modesty about his YMCA printing projects, his friends were determined to showcase Fass' exceptional printing work to the rest of New York. Friends of John Fass created several exhibits in New York during this era. John Archer organized an exhibition of Hell-Box Press and Hammer Creek Press imprints in 1953 for the New York Public Library. In 1962 Herman Cohen helped create an exhibition of Fass' work at New York's Grolier Club, the oldest American society of bibliophiles and book collectors. This was followed by an exhibition at the
Cooper Union The Cooper Union for the Advancement of Science and Art (Cooper Union) is a private college at Cooper Square in New York City. Peter Cooper founded the institution in 1859 after learning about the government-supported École Polytechnique in ...
.


Life after the Bronx YMCA

In 1962 John Fass moved from his room in the Bronx YMCA to the
Hotel Pierrepont Hotel Pierrepont was an establishment located at 43"Hotel Strangely Robbed", ''The New York Times'', November 28, 1908, pg. 1. West 32nd Street (Manhattan), 32nd Street between Broadway (Manhattan), Broadway and Fifth Avenue (Manhattan), Fifth Avenu ...
in Brooklyn. He sold his tabletop printing press back to Valenti Angelo. As Fass' health deteriorated he decided to return to his hometown of Lititz, Pennsylvania, where he lived with his sister Esther Wert. He died in 1973, and is buried in the Lititz Moravian Cemetery. The leading institutions which have collected Fass' books and other printed works include: The New York Public Library, The Rochester Institute of Technology, Amherst College, Columbia University (via the Albert Ulmann Fund), University of California, University of Texas, University of Kansas, etc.


Fass' Precisionist Photography

John Fass was an avid photographer throughout his lifetime. His photographs were not commercially published or exhibited, but were for his own pleasure. His earliest-known photographs are dated 1914, and document Fass' early life in his hometown of Lititz, Pennsylvania. Throughout the 1940s to the 1960s Fass created precisionisist photographic images of New York City and Lancaster County, Pennsylvania. He created works that were as finely crafted and immaculately composed as his printing. Much of Fass' modernist New York photography of the 1940s and 1950s reveals Fass' contributions to the artistic movement known as
Precisionism Precisionism was a modernist art movement that emerged in the United States after World War I. Influenced by Cubism, Purism, and Futurism, Precisionist artists reduced subjects to their essential geometric shapes, eliminated detail, and often u ...
. This art movement was pioneered by Pennsylvania artists Charles Demuth and
Charles Sheeler Charles Sheeler (July 16, 1883 – May 7, 1965) was an American artist known for his Precisionist paintings, commercial photography, and the avant-garde film, ''Manhatta'', which he made in collaboration with Paul Strand. Sheeler is recognized ...
, who were Fass' contemporaries. Demuth and Fass were both from Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, where Fass was born seven years after Demuth's birth. Fass presented a collection of his photography to the New York Public Library, where today some of his photographs are exhibited online in the library's digital collection. Most of Fass' photography remains in private collections.


Notes


References

* Burke, Jackson; Ettenberg, Eugene M. (1998). ''John S. Fass and the Hammer Creek Press.'' Melbert B. Cary, Jr. Graphic Arts Collection, Rochester Institute of Technology . * "Books: Tramp Printer" (April 3, 1939). ''Time the Weekly Newsmagazine''. * Dr. Lehmann-Haupt, Hellmut. (1951). ''The Book in America.'' R. R. Bowker. * Schimmel, Caroline F. (November 1978). "The Man who Printed Books at the YMCA." ''Columbia Library Columns''. * Ettenberg, Eugene M. (April, 1957). "The Private Press of John Fass." "American Artist". * Haskell, Barbara. (1987). ''Charles Demuth.'' Whitney Museum of American Art. Harry N. Abrams, Inc. * VanBrookhoven, Charlene. 2008. "John S. Fass, Typographers." ''The Lititz Historical Foundation's Historical Journal''.


External links


John Fass: A Pennsylvania Dutch Artist in New York City

The Black Art: History of Printing in Lancaster County, PA

Photography by John Fass at New York Public Library

John Fass' Hammer Creek Press Books at New York Public Library

John Fass' Printed Works at the University of San Francisco

John Fass and Roland Wood's Harbor Press Books at Amherst College Library

An Exhibition of John Fass' Letterpress Art on Flickr


{{DEFAULTSORT:Fass, John 1890 births 1973 deaths 20th-century American photographers Bibliophiles People from Lititz, Pennsylvania 20th-century American printmakers Private press movement people