These days an enormous number of books is published. If you just look at the Dutch book market, you see around 16,000 new titles appearing every year. In this incredible mass production there are books made with love and attention. Books that stand out in the crowd because publisher, author, designer, lithographer, printer and binder have worked together to create the most ideal product, within the confines of budget and technical feasibility.
The Best Dutch Book Designs is an annual competition where a professional panel of judges selects 33 books that excel in design, typography, picture editing, lithography, printing and binding. In the selection process the judges also assess the relation between form and content and which decisions the commissioners (publishers) have made. And, of course, the relevance of making that particular book.
The relevance or need to select a book as the main form to publish content is also subject of debate at the graphic design departments of the Dutch art academies. The Best Dutch Book Designs saw an opportunity to create an exchange of ideas and experiences between the next generation of bookmakers and the established order. As of last year, a student panel is installed. They follow the same procedures as the professional panel, examining the books on a number of days and later spending two days to arrive at their own final selection. This year 298 books were submitted from which the student panel chose 32 books.
The student panel also presents a report with their decisions. Both the selection and the judges’ report are being made available online (as an appendix to the Stichting’s website, www.bestverzorgdeboeken.nl) and in a catalogue. Last year the website and catalogue fell under the care of ArtEZ; this year the catalogue is produced by students of the Royal Academy of Art in The Hague.
Last year The Best Dutch Book Designs also made the decision to waive entry fees for students at academies and colleges, and for new graduates. It offers the professional panel a great opportunity to see what’s brewing at the academies and colleges. For the students themselves there is the challenge of aiming for a prestigious award. So far, there has been no increase in the number of submissions. It will be a project for the long term but I have high hopes.
One of the elements that make the student panel very interesting is the mixture of different backgrounds. First, you have differences in teaching at the separate academies, different ways of thinking about design. Secondly, the backgrounds of the students themselves differ, not in the least because they come from different countries (Poland, Switzerland, Italy and the Netherlands). This resulted in heated and passionate discussions.
The student panel and the students who have made this catalogue have put in a great deal of effort and passion. Thank you Anna, Audrey, Irene, Jan and Michiel (student panel) and also Daan, Taya and Daniel (the designers of the catalogue). I hope you are all proud of this project. I know I am.
Esther Scholten
Director
De Best Verzorgde Boeken | The Best Dutch Book Designs