Andrew Baron
Quick Facts
Biography
Andrew Baron (born 1962) is a self-taught, award-winning paper engineer and singled out by Robert Sabuda, a leading children's pop-up book artist, as a wunderkind of pull tabs, specific devices used to cause movement in pop-up books.
Biography
Baron was awarded the Movable Book Society's Meggendorfer Prize for Best Paper Engineering in 2004 for Knick-Knack Paddywhack! The book, by Paul O. Zelinsky, has “200 movable parts, 300 glue points – twice the usual number – 15 lift-the-flaps, and 10 parts on the last spread alone, moving simultaneously with one tab!... 500 people [at the Hua Yang Printing Company in China] worked on the book." Of this book, Robert Sabuda noted, "his designs are unique, complex, thoughtful and he doesn't skimp on the amount of paper or rivets needed to accomplish an action."
Baron has also repaired and restored old clocks, music boxes, radios and typewriters since childhood. In 2007, Baron spent about 70 hours repairing the "Draughtsman-Writer" automaton by Henri Maillardet (1745–1830). A version of Maillardet’s automaton, a self-powered robot that writes poetry and draws four different images, was in Martin Scorsese’s movie Hugo and Brian Selznick’s book The Invention of Hugo Cabret.
Selected bibliography
Exhibitions
Year | Title | Location | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
2012 | Pop! The Arthur J. Williams Pop-up Collection | Florida Atlantic University, Wimberly Library | Also included David A. Carter, James Diaz, Harold Lentz |
2012 | Pop-Up! Illustration in 3-D | Brandywine River Museum, Chadds Ford, PA | Items drew largely from the collection of Ann Montanaro Staples, founder of The Movable Book Society |
2011 | The Harold M. Goralnick Pop-Up Book Collection: An Exhibition | Bowdoin College Library, Brunswick, Maine | The collection holds over 1,900 volumes, including works by Baron. |
2010 | Paper Engineering: Fold, Pull, Pop and Turn | Smithsonian Institution Libraries, National Museum of American History | Also included Matthew Reinhart, Bruce Foster, Chuck Fischer |
2004 | Show Me a Story: Children’s Books and the Technology of Enchantment | San Francisco Center for the Book | Exhibit includes inside view of the production of Knick-Knack Paddywhack! |