Himes & Duniway Society Book Collecting Prize
About the Book Collecting Prize
The bi-annual Book Collecting Prize is newly established in partnership with the Himes & Duniway Society, who has generously donated prize funds, to recognize and encourage undergraduates and graduate students at the University of Oregon to collect printed works, to build their own libraries, to appreciate the special qualities of the printed word, and to read and collect for pleasure and education.
In the interest of encouraging the next generation, we are delighted to award the Book Collecting Prize, with two cash prizes for an outstanding book collection conceived and built by an undergraduate or graduate student. Two cash Prizes will be awarded in the amount of $500 each. In addition, winners will receive a limited-edition, signed, broadside poem printed by Lone Goose Press, an Oregon fine press.
The winning collections must have been started by the contestant, and all items in the collection must be owned but not created by them (as in the case of self-created printed works). A collection may include any printed item, such as books, posters, broadsides, postcards, or ephemera (in paper-based formats); it may be organized by theme, author, illustrator, publisher, printing technique, binding style, or another clearly articulated principle. The winning collection will be more than a reading list of favorite texts: it will be a chosen group of printed items, creatively put together. Collections will not be judged on their size or their market value, but on their originality and success in illuminating their chosen subjects or formats.
Application Details
The competition is open only to undergraduate and graduate students enrolled at the University of Oregon.
To enter, each contestant must submit a portfolio to apply for the competition.
The portfolio should be sent as a Word or PDF document attachment via e-mail to David de Lorenzo, Director of Special Collections, UO Libraries (ddeloren@uoregon.edu). It should include:
- the contestant’s phone number, email address, and mailing address, and expected graduating class
- an essay of up to 1000 words describing:
- The nature and character of the collection
- How and why it was assembled
- When it was begun
- Its significance
- The future direction(s) the collection may take
- An informal list or bibliography of at least 25 items in the collection, selected to illustrate its nature citing the author/creator, title, place and date of publication, type of binding or housing, condition, and any other annotations on the importance of individual pieces
- a minimum of five (5) photographs including both the entire collection and selected collection items
Additional Guidelines
- Judges may ask to speak with contestants about their collection via Zoom. For this reason, the custom of making prize submissions anonymous or under pseudonyms is not observed for this contest.
- Judges will give special consideration to how well the collection reflects the student’s stated goals and interests. Age, rarity, or monetary value of material in the collections submitted is less important than the thought, creativity, and persistence demonstrated in defining a collection and bringing it into being.
- To be eligible, collections must be personally owned and must have been formed by the contestant.
- Collections may be of any kind, whether they deal with authors, subjects, kinds of books, bindings, illustrations, printing processes and technology, etc. Collections may be allied to the student’s career or educational interests but cannot include a collection of contemporary textbooks. Collections do not have to be limited to rare or antiquarian materials.
- Two cash Prizes will be awarded in the amount of $500 each. The judges reserve the right to divide the prize in other proportions if it seems appropriate, or to award no prizes if in their view no submissions warrant it.
- A Prize Event will be held via Zoom, and winners would be expected to attend.
The deadline for submissions is Friday, February 12, 2021.