« June 2011 | Main | August 2011 »

21 posts from July 2011

July 29, 2011

New Arrivals in the History, Art, and Culture Digitization Project!

Greetings once again from the world of the History, Art, and Culture (HAC) Digitization Project! Over the last couple of months, I’ve highlighted digital selections from the Warren M. Robbins Library of the National Museum of African Art as well as the Vine Deloria, Jr. Library at the National Museum of the American Indian, here and here, respectively.

This month, we take a look at SILRA. By any definition, the centerpiece of our digitization efforts at SILRA are the bicycling-related serials. To date, we’ve scanned over 100 items spanning titles like “The Wheel World,” "The Bearings,” and “The Bicycling World and Motorcycle Review.”

New Image

Bicycling was at the center of a craze which hit its zenith in the 1880’s. These titles are replete with fascinating contributions from enthusiastic lovers of the sport. These magazines have it all. Everything from cycling themed prose and poetry, to cartoons, to announcements and minutes of conferences and meetings. Even the advertisements for the “latest” technological advances in bicycle engineering provide clues to the intensity of the bicycling craze of the era.

And contemporary interest in these titles is just as fervent, if not as widespread. The Libraries holds the most comprehensive runs of serials on the subject and according to Mike Hardy, Branch Chief at SILRA, “these are the most heavily used titles in the collection.  Nearly every visitor wants to use one or more of these titles.” I asked him about why researchers were interesed in these titles, here's what he had to say:
"The first visitor I had at our new location was a 72-year-old retired Canadian naval officer from Nova Scotia, whose specialty was training helicopter search and rescue teams from both the U.S. and Canada. His hobby, since age 14, is collecting head lamps from turn of the century bicycles. He was writing an encyclopedia on the subject, and had collected two of every type/model of these lamps ever made in North America — except one, he was still searching for one more of a particular lamp. He spent the better part of week with the serials.

New Image

I had another visitor, a retired gentleman from St. Louis, who was researching bicycle seat designs of the 19th and early 20th century. According to him, importance of seat designs went beyond ergonomics to include cultural aspects considered equally important. Cycling was a popular activity for both men and women in the late 19th century. The seat designs for women were considered critical: no one wanted a women to be ‘injured’ as a result of poor seat design – nor to have seat design be considered as an excuse for the loss of virginity!"

Very proper indeed!

Erin Thomas

Enhanced by Zemanta

July 28, 2011

New and Notable—Cooper-Hewitt Design Museum Library

The Libraries would like to highlight some new titles that have been added recently to the Cooper-Hewitt Design Museum Library.

FaienceHistoire de la faïence fine française, 1743-1843 : le triomphe des terres blanches  by Christian Maire. Le Mans : Éditions de la Reinette, [2008]  NK4305 .M25 2008 CHM

This book accompanies the exhibition" French earthenware: Birth of an Industry, 1743-1843 "Sevres, National Ceramics Museum, October 22, 2008 to February 23, 2009.

Designdesign DesignDesign : furniture & lights by Oscar Asensio. New York : Abrams, 2007. Gift of Roma and David Korris.  NK2399.2 .A8413 2007 CHM

What constitutes good design? Is it form? Is it function? Is it tradition? This title leads the reader on a tour of the furniture designs of the 20th century, from chairs and sofas to end tables and coffee tables to beds to lamps. It provides a survey of contemporary designs for the home and office.

 

FotoFoto : modernity in Central Europe, 1918-1945 by Matthew S. Witkovsky. Washington, DC : National Gallery of Art in association with Thames and Hudson, c2007. TR653 .W58 2007 CHM

In the 1920s and 1930s, photography became an immense phenomenon across Central Europe. This book presents the work of approximately one hundred individuals whose creations exemplify the potential of photography in the region between the two World Wars.

 Guglielmo Ulrich by Luca Scacchetti. Milano : F. Motta, 2009. NK2562.U47 A4 2009 CHM

Ulrich

Over 800 images, featuring drawings and sketches of Guglielmo Ulrich's production of furniture pieces, never before published.

 

BaroqueBaroque, 1620-1800 : style in the age of magnificence  edited by Michael Snodin and Nigel Llewellyn ; assisted by Joanna Norman. London : V & A Pub. : New York : distributed by Harry N. Abrams, 2009. Gift of Michael Snodin. N6415.B3 A4 2009 CHM

Published to accompany a major V&A exhibition, beautifully illustrated and international in its scope, Baroque: Style in the Age of Magnificence is an indispensable work of reference, and an enlightening investigation into the nature and significance of one of the most fascinating phases of Western Art. 

Sustainable
Sustainable design : towards a new ethic in architecture and town planning
by Marie-Helene Contal. Basel : Birkhäuser, 2009. Gift of Roma and David Korris.  NA2542.36 .C65 2009 CHM

The Cite de l'Architecture et du Patrimoine and Jana Revedin created the international Global Award for Sustainable Architecture, which honors architects who have specifically excelled in the area of sustainability." "This book documents the work of the prizewinners for 2007 and 2008.

Elizabeth Broman and Stephen van Dyk

Enhanced by Zemanta

July 27, 2011

George Ault — American Painter

At the Smithsonian American Art Museum an exhibit called To Make a World: George Ault and 1940s America is showing until September 5, 2011. This exhibit features the work of painter George Ault during the years surrounding World War II. In addition to the artwork by Ault, the exhibit also features the paintings of Rockwell Kent, Edward Hopper, and Norman Rockwell.

Alexander Nemerov, the curator, concentrates on World War II history. To Make a World is a stunning example of the curator’s careful attention and dedication to the era, going beyond the stereotypical images associated with WWII and focusing on the quiet desperation that many Americans faced hundreds of miles away from the battlefields. Ault’s work in particular is an insightful exploration into the anxiety and emotional turmoil experienced by an artist whose life was plagued by trauma and tragedy.

aultcollage

When I first visited To Make a World, I knew very little about George Ault and his paintings. However, his work seemed familiar to me due to his precise, simple, and eerie style that can be seen in the works of other artists of the time such as Edward Hopper and Andrew Wyeth. There is also a surrealist quality to his work that reminded me of Giorgio de Chirico.  As I toured the gallery, I began to wonder about the common thread that binds Ault to the rest of his contemporaries. All of the works in the show leave the viewer with a feeling of anxiety although the paintings depict ordinary scenes of daily life. Although the works were painted during the years surrounding WWII, none of them feature scenes of violence from the battlefields abroad. Instead, quiet scenes of rural America present a feeling of uneasiness, as if the viewer is holding their breath and waiting for something to happen.

After viewing To Make a World, I returned to my internship with the Smithsonian American Art Museum where I am working in the American Art Museum/National Portrait Gallery Library (AAPG). I knew I was in the right spot to learn more about George Ault. However, among the many biographies on the artist was also the book written by Alexander Nemerov for the show at the American Art Museum. Nemerov’s book is a wonderful guide to the exhibition. Since it was written by the curator, all of the questions that I had compiled after seeing the exhibit were answered in the book. Additionally, I was able to begin to understand the complex emotional trauma behind Ault and his art as he suffered through his own personal hardships and those of WWII.

George Ault was born October 11, 1891 and worked as a painter until his tragic death on December 30, 1948 when he drowned in the Sawkill Creek in Woodstock, New York. The artist’s life was full of tragedy, which suggests reasons for his reclusive nature during his adulthood. In 1915, Ault’s brother and wife committed suicide together. Five years later, Ault’s mother died in a mental hospital followed by his father’s death in 1929. Also that year, the stock market crash lead to the loss of the family’s fortune and brothers Donald and Charles’s suicides.  When Ault married his second wife Louise, the couple moved to Woodstock, New York. It was during his time there where Ault painted some of the most discussed works from To Make a World.

book2

Ault’s series of paintings depicting Russell’s Corners (p. 61 in the catalog), a street corner close to his home in Woodstock, are subjects of much of Nemerov’s essay in the exhibit book. This scene Ault paints repeatedly throughout his career only varying it slightly according to time of day or to the position in which he was viewing the corner. In Bright Light at Russell’s Corners (depicted on the cover) from 1946, Ault depicts the corner at night. One harsh, clear light illuminates the picture and casts shadows onto the barns and telephone wires. The extreme use of chiaroscuro gives the painting high contrast and a theatrical quality, which calls to mind Baroque paintings.

The clarity of Ault’s paintings gives them an eerie quality that gives the impression that the viewer is anxiously waiting for the stillness in the painting to be disrupted by chaos. The author describes Ault’s style as "precise alignments and geometries of barns, telephone wires, and street lights symbolically calm disastrous and unpredictable events” (p.18). According to Nemerov, Ault’s paintings were a way for the artist to come to terms with the chaos in his life and in the world. Their simplicity and order is a reaction to the uncertainty of the world at war around him.

The violence occurring in Europe as a result of WWII was troubling to Ault. He had spent some time in France as a child and was deeply troubled when France fell to Germany. Nemerov discusses how this unhappiness can be seen in Ault’s painting, Memories of the Coast of France from 1944. The painting has a surrealist quality, which according to Ault was intentional, “I have a complete sense of unreality, especially after reading in the newspaper what is going on in the world” (p. 30).

To Make A World is an intimate look into the anxious mind of an American painter as he struggled to make sense of WWII. Nemerov’s book is an excellent guide to the exhibition and provides a comprehensive understanding to the arts and culture of the time. George Ault’s paintings are quiet moments on the surface, but after careful observation reveal much more. To Make a World  is an exhibition very much worth visiting for its insightful and intriguing paintings. However, Nemerov’s book, found in the AAPG Library, gives the visitor an even greater appreciation for George Ault and the worlds he created in his paintings.

The AAPG library holds vertical files on all the artists represented in the exhibition. The file on Ault contains a wide variety of material on the artist including early exhibition lists and records of the first memorial exhibitons after his death. In addition to the exhibition catalog, the library also has several books on Ault including:

Artist in Woodstock : George Ault, The Independent Years by Louise Ault (Dorrance, 1978).

George Ault by Susan Lubowsky (Whitney Museum of American Art, 1988)

Olivia Wood

Olivia Wood is an intern from the Smithsonian American Art Museum and is interning at the AAPG Library. She received her B.A. in Art History in 2011 from Rhodes College.

Enhanced by Zemanta

July 26, 2011

Internships at SIL

Recently, the Libraries were fortunate to have hosted not one, but two knowledge management interns. Doug Dunlop, Suzanne Pilsk, and Erin Thomas facilitated their efforts under the umbrella of "Foundations for Knowledge Management at SI and SIL". In an effort of coordinate activities and increase transparency, SIL brought David Kaufmann (University of Maryland) and Brian Soldo (Pratt Institute) together to investigate the possibilities for the future of KM at SI and SIL.

Intern005

(L-R) Brian Soldo and David Kaufmann, photo by Sam Schubert.

Both graduating in December with Masters in Library and Information Science, David and Brian spent six weeks getting to know the lay of the land of the Institution, and boy were they busy! They performed extensive literature research. They conducted interviews. They met with external experts. They attended internal events and pan-institutional meetings, including an Ideas Fair.

Using the Libraries' strategic plan as the foundation, they  wrote a paper outlining several avenues the Libraries could follow to enhance outcomes in two areas: “expertise location” within the Institution and issues surrounding “knowledge retention” from departing staff. We think they did exceptional work in a very short period of time and we look forward to sharing the final report with you by the end of the summer.

Erin Thomas

Enhanced by Zemanta
RSS Feed