Our senior colleague Barbara Rannegger accompanied the publishing house Müller & Schindler to London and shares her impressive experiences with us. She talks about the birth of Kulturalis and provides insights into our work: this time, a colour check at the British Library was on our agenda:
London: Kulturalis launch & colour check
The official and personal invitation to the launch of Kulturalis, a publishing house specialising in art books and museum catalogues, arrives in my mailbox. I immediately dig out my diary - yes, I still write my notes the traditional way, namely by hand in my agenda - and I am delighted that nothing stands in the way of my visit to London.
Thus, after a very long time (I lived in London for six months before my studies), I set foot on English soil on the 10th of March 2024, one day before the launch of Kulturalis at the Savile Club and two days before the start of the London Book Fair at Olympia London. Although a lot of water has run down the Thames in the meantime, London has hardly changed: the same smells, the same flair, packed underground trains, fine rain... I enjoy the English atmosphere, let it work its magic on me, and a slight restlessness spreads through me, as I have the feeling that I have far too little time to experience this unique metropolis in all its facets. 48 hours in London isn't much, but it's definitely enough time to enjoy the familiar and experience something new.
Colour check at the British Library
Invigorated by an English breakfast, I take the underground to King's Cross & St Pancras International to start the next day with a visit to the British Library. On the agenda we have the colour check of a 13th century codex from Genoa and I'm allowed to witness how page after page of the original manuscript is compared with the proofs. This step in the production process of a facsimile is one of the most important procedures in order to faithfully reproduce the colours as well as the beauty of a work ensuring the highest quality. Suddenly, time stands still; there is only the codex and us, the silence of the library, the turning of the book pages, an occasional whisper, a fascination with the incredible imagery and the impressive details of the manuscript, absolute peace, and relaxation - mindfulness in the truest sense of the word.











