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31 posts from July 2009

July 27, 2009

Happy Birthday, Bugs!

Bugs-Bunny-with-carrot-frame In 1940, a star was born. Bugs Bunny appeared in A Wild Hare which also starred his ever-hunting co-star, Elmer Fudd. Over the past 69 years, Bugs has starred in over 200 cartoon shorts with notable figures such as Elmer, Daffy Duck, Yosemite Sam, Wile E. Coyote, Marvin the Martian, and the Tasmanian Devil. Bugs is a fixture in American culture and known around the world. Bugs has many accomplishments, including having his own Hollywood Boulevard plaque, being the first cartoon character to be honored with a U.S. postage stamp, and presenting the Oscar for Best Animated Short Subject in 1990. If you’re interested in learning more about Bugs, the National Museum of American History Library has Bugs Bunny: Fifty Years and Only One Grey Hare available. Note: 14 carrot frame not available for checkout.

To our favorite “wascawwy wabbit,” we wish you many more!

Some of our favorite episodes: Water Water Every Hare & Wackiki Rabbit.—Mary Jinglewski

July 26, 2009

Abraham Woodside carte-de-visite - AA/PG Library

Abraham woodside sm Recto: Abraham Woodside (born Philadelphia, PA, 1819; died Philadelphia, PA,1853)

Verso: Carte-de-visite photographer: H. G. DeBurlo, Philadelphia, PA

Abraham Woodside was a prominent artist in Philadephia in the mid-nineteenth century. However, likely due to his death at the age of 34 at the height of his career, not much about his life is readily found. This carte-de-visite is from an alburm of American artists held by the Smithsonian American Art Museum/National Portrait Gallery Library.  Although this album includes many famous artists of the mid-nineteenth century, it also includes many artists that are not as well-known, such as Woodside.

Abraham Woodside was the younger son of John Archibald Woodside, Sr., who gained fame as one of the most acclaimed sign painters of the Federal period in Philadelphia, although he also painted still lifes and animals on canvas, a few of which survive today.  Abraham's older brother John Archibald, Jr. was also an artist who was trained as a wood engraver. Abraham pursued painting and in 1844 he is listed as a portrait painter in the Phildelphia city directory. He opened a studio in the Art Union Building in Philadelphia and gained renown as a portrait and historical painter (Jackson 1933, 65).  After a fire in 1845, Woodside was one of a group of artists that reopened the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts in 1847 (Weigley 1982, 344).  He exhibited at the Pennsylvania Academy as well as the Maryland Historical Society and the American Art Union. His life was cut short at the age of 34 dying, according to the New York Times, "from the effects of the heat."—Doug Litts

Works cited:

Jackson, Joseph. "John A. Woodside: Philadelphia's Glorified Sigh-Painter."  The Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography 57, no. 1 (1933): 58-65.

Weigley, Russell F., ed.  Philadelphia: A 300 Year History.  New York: Norton, 1982.

July 25, 2009

Xmas in July

Garrison-Wagner Company, Christmas Displays, 1955
Garrison-Wagner Company, Christmas Displays, 1955

If the summer heat is getting you down, why not close your eyes and try to conjure up a snowman and celebrate Christmas in July?

The Libraries has many great images to help get you into a cool mood...—Elizabeth Periale

July 24, 2009

Amelia Earhart Day

Amelia EarhartAmelia Earhart, The fun of it : random records of my own flying and of women in aviation, 1932

Amelia Earhart was born today in 1897. A famed aviator, pioneer for women's rights, and worldwide celebrity, she mysteriously vanished on July, 7, 1937.

Many theories abound, and her disappearance is still a hot topic today.

The Libraries catalog lists 60 titles on the legendary flyer.

The Bella C. Landauer Collection of Aeronautical Sheet Music also features songs which celebrate Earhart, Amelia Earhart's Last Flight and Lady Lindy We're all for You.

—Elizabeth Periale

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