Showing posts with label Wolfsonian library exhibits. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Wolfsonian library exhibits. Show all posts

Friday, May 14, 2010

OUT WITH THE OLD, IN WITH THE NEW…

LAST CHANCE TO SEE BERNARR MACFADDEN AND THE AMERICAN PHYSICAL CULTURE MOVEMENT LIBRARY DISPLAY BEFORE IT IS REPLACED WITH UNREAL(IZED) ARCHITECTURE EXHIBIT

Earlier this week, I completed a draft for the descriptive and interpretative label text for a new library display to be installed in the third floor foyer next week. That means that this weekend will be the last opportunity that museum patrons will have to take a look at body-builder, publishing magnate, and champion of the Physical Culture movement in America, Bernarr Macfadden. Virtually all of the materials on display were donated to the museum library by Robert J. Young, an ardent disciple of Macfadden and the crusade for better living through a regimen of exercise, abstention from tobacco and alcohol, and a healthy diet. Having assembled a large personal library on the subject, Mr. Young donated the materials to the museum to ensure that they would not be lost to future generations of students and scholars.


As the American Institute of Architects will be holding their convention in Miami this June, we thought that our new display ought to show off some of the architectural gems in the library collection. During a brainstorming session, our rare books cataloguer came up with a brilliant suggestion for a unifying theme for the exhibit. Dr. Harsanyi proposed that we focus on some of the illustrious architects and theorists represented in our collection whose designs for edifices and city plans had not been realized at the time. Visitors coming to the museum this summer will be treated to some rare designs by Leopold Bauer, Mackay Hugh Baillie Scott, and Charles Rennie Macintosh and his wife Margaret Macdonald for an early twentieth-century competition to build a House for an Art-lover. Portfolio plates of a Frank Lloyd Wright multiplex housing development and plans for a utopian industrial city by Tony Garnier will also be on display.

As anyone who knows anything about the Wolfsonian might expect, our exhibit on architecture will also touch on the propagandistic element inherent in such project proposals for designs for monuments, buildings, and cityscapes to be built for the totalitarian regimes in the Soviet Union, Fascist Italy, and Nazi Germany. Come in next week and experience the imaginary architectural landscapes envisioned by architects such as Vladimir Tatlin, Boris Mihailovich Iofan Mario Palanti, and Hermann Geisler. As a teaser, here are some other works by these architects that give you a sense of what to expect.



Wednesday, November 4, 2009

VISIT BY MIAMI AD SCHOOL STUDENTS


During the fall and spring academic semesters, the Wolfsonian-FIU library remains open to scholars and researchers for pre-arranged appointments on Saturdays. This past Saturday was no exception as six Miami Ad School students came to the museum for a self-guided tour of Styled for the Road: the Art of Automobile Design, 1908-1948, followed by a look at some of the automobile advertisements from the "Deco" decades on display in the library foyer, and others housed in our back stacks. The students are working on a project for the automobile-themed 33rd Annual Art Deco Weekend, this coming January 15-17, 2010, and sought inspiration from the Wolfsonian library's collection of promotional materials. Pictured here are the cover and an interior page spread of a beautiful French Art Deco advertisement for the Renault Monastella.

Friday, October 23, 2009

NEW WEB DISPLAY GOES LIVE, COURTESY OF DAVID ALMEIDA

Our digital library specialist, David Almeida has recently completed the final touches on the virtual library exhibit, Advertising American Automobiles Abroad to accompany our exhibit by the same name now on display in the third floor foyer of our rare books and special collections library. David’s creative online exhibit joins the many other web exhibits he has created over the last few years to give our far away fans the opportunity to see our materials even when they cannot be here in person.

Enjoy the show!