Saturday, May 1, 2010

TAKE FIVE: PART FOUR OF FIVE!

REFLECTIONS ON THE SPIRIT OF GIVING AND THE LAST FIVE YEARS OF LIBRARY DONATIONS


Another important source of gifts to the Wolfsonian-FIU library have been those institutions or persons who, (through knowing the reputation of, or learning more about us during an actual visit to the museum), have offered us items they believed would be a good fit for our collection. Over the years, a number of libraries and librarians have directed collectors, duplicate copies, or rare items not appropriate for their own collections for consideration by the Wolfsonian. The director at the Bienes Museum of the Modern Book: The Dianne and Michael Bienes Special Collections and Rare Book Library, James Findlay was once the chief librarian here at the Wolfsonian and forwarded several runs of rare periodicals to us that match our own but not his new institution’s collecting interests.

GIFT OF THE BIENES MUSEUM OF THE MODERN BOOK

Samuel J. Boldrick, who recently retired after nearly two score years with the Miami-Dade Public Library System (where he managed the main library’s Florida Collection), has ever kept our collecting interests in mind. Over the years he has donated a number of rare books and art objects from his personal collection to the Wolfsonian-FIU.


GIFT OF SAMUEL J. BOLDRICK


As the Wolfsonian has transitioned in the last fifteen years from a private foundation to a public institution with an important university affiliation, so too has our reputation for excellence among the community of scholars here and around the globe. As a result, in the last few years the Wolfsonian-FIU library has also been contacted by librarians and museum directors offering items which were either duplicated or inappropriate for their own institutional holdings, but which they knew might enrich our own collection. Many gaps in our own holdings have been filled thanks largely to the facilitation of our rare books librarian Dr. Nicolae Harsanyi, and to the generosity of such institutions as:

THE JOSEPH REGENSTEIN LIBRARY, UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO





THE ALUMNI MEMORIAL LIBRARY, UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN, MADISON





THE NEW YORK SCHOOL OF INTERIOR DESIGN

THE HERMAN B WELLS LIBRARY, INDIANA UNIVERSITY


THE WATSON LIBRARY, UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS ; THE CARRIER LIBRARY, JAMES MADISON UNIVERSITY




THE HOLY TRINITY ORTHODOX SEMINARY LIBRARY


THE GREEN LIBRARY, STANFORD UNIVERSITY ; THE ARTS AND SCIENCES LIBRARY, UNIVERSITY OF BUFFALO


THE ADAM CARDINAL MAIDA LIBRARY ; INSTITUTO DE INVESTIGACIONES ESTÉTICAS, COYOACÁN, MEXICO

In addition to those institutions whose caretakers knew enough about the Wolfsonian to selectively direct appropriate rare books, artist monographs, and archives our way, the library has also received offers of gifts from visiting fellows, researchers, and the general public. Often times, a tour through our galleries or an appointment in our rare books library served to provoke casual visitors and serious scholars alike to rummage through long-ignored boxes in their attics and cellars, and to send us a formal gift offer through the mail of some items they believed merited our attention. After a formal review process by the museum’s Collections Review Committee, many such items have been accessioned into our museum to be preserved and made accessible to many future generations of museum visitors and scholars.

While it would be impossible to acknowledge each and every individual who donated some reference book or artifact to the library in this blog, I did want to single out a few individuals, such as: Ruth Kruger, who was inspired by a Miami Herald article about Laurence Miller’s gift of his cruise line industry collection to donate a few of her own rare ocean travel materials; Mark Golebiowski, who was so enthralled by our Second World War collections as to ferret out and donate some rare items documenting occupied Poland; Michael Rosenfeld, who has repeatedly contacted us and sent a number of rare postcards and other ephemera to us on approval; Arno Erban, who following a presentation by myself and a former Wolfsonian fellow at the American Czech-Slovak Cultural Club, donated a rare biographical view book on the first Czech president, T.G. Masaryk; Tim, Bettina and Joe Gleason, who collectively gifted a number of steamship line and World’s Fair artifacts; and Charles L. Marshall, Jr., a Naples resident who visited the museum and afterwards contacted us and donated several World’s Fair ephemera, more than three score vintage sheet music covers in memory of pianist Anna Olson, and several programs from the Chicago Railroad Fair, jointly donated with Richard L. Tooke.


GIFT OF RUTH KRUGER


GIFT OF MARK GOLEBIOWSKI


GIFT OF MICHAEL ROSENFELD


GIFT OF ARNO ERBAN





GIFT OF TIM, BETTINA, AND JOE GLEASON


GIFT OF CHARLES L. MARSHALL, JR, IN MEMORY OF ANNA OLSON, PIANIST



GIFT OF CHARLES L. MARSHALL, JR. AND RICHARD L. TOOKE

Wednesday, April 28, 2010

TAKE FIVE: PART THREE

REFLECTIONS ON THE SPIRIT OF GIVING AND THE LAST FIVE YEARS OF LIBRARY DONATIONS


In addition to the rare books, periodicals, and other ephemeral materials donated by persons interested in finding permanent homes for their cherished collections, the Wolfsonian-FIU library has also received many works originally collected by design researchers and enthusiasts with a specific project or agenda in mind. Sometimes these collections grew slowly over time as an individual began collecting a few items here and there related to a lifelong obsession or passion; other times, items were selected deliberately and relatively quickly as authors and researchers prepared publications or exhibitions.

Over the last few years, the Wolfsonian-FIU library has had the privilege of collaborating with a number of educators, enthusiasts, and authors interested in design aesthetics. Vicki Gold Levi, for example, has assembled a large collection of materials, ranging in topic from the promotion of Atlantic City as a resort town; the U.S.-Cuba tourist trade in the pre-Castro era; Times Square and Broadway productions in New York City; and U.S. “Victory” propaganda from the Second World War. Following the publication with Steve Heller of Cuba Style: Graphics from the Golden Age of Design (2002), Vicki gifted several hundred rare periodicals, advertisements, and other ephemeral items to our library. She has since worked with Mr. Heller on another publication, Times Square Style (2004) and again gifted some of the original items acquired in the course of researching that book to the Wolfsonian library for which we are deeply grateful.



HIGHLIGHTS OF A GIFT OF VICKI GOLD LEVI


Steve Heller not only consulted and used a substantial number of Wolfsonian objects and artifacts in writing his Iron Fists: Branding the Twentieth Century Totalitarian State; he also assembled an impressive collection of primary resource materials on his own. Following the publication of his impressive tome, he generously donated hundreds of Italian Fascist, German National Socialist, and Russian and Chinese Communist visual propaganda to the museum. Although the Wolfsonian is renowned for its collection of political propaganda from this period, there was virtually no duplication in the donation, and the gift has done much to add to our strength and depth on the subject.




HIGHLIGHTS OF A GIFT OF STEVEN HELLER


William H. Helfand has been interested in and writing about pharmacy-related topics for many years. He has also spent much of his life collecting pharmaceutical and medicine-related propaganda. In 2002 organized and exhibition at the prestigious Grolier Club in New York City and concurrently published an illustrated history of medical quackery entitled Quack, Quack, Quack: The Sellers of Nostrums in Prints, Posters, Ephemera & Books. Thanks to a donation by Robert J. Young (mentioned in an earlier blog), the Wolfsonian Library was also beginning to build an important collection of popular health, hygiene, and physical fitness materials, even as Florida International University began to establish its own College of Medicine. Contacts between our founder and curator and Mr. Helfand recently resulted in his gifting more than a thousand pharmaceutical, medical, and propagandistic ephemera to the Wolfsonian-FIU library.


HIGHLIGHTS OF A GIFT OF WILLIAM H. HELFAND

Local Miami artist and long-time Wolfsonian supporter, Michelle Oka Doner also pulled together an impressive collection of Miami Beach memorabilia in the course of working with Micky Wolfson to create an artistic memoir, Miami Beach: Blueprint of an Eden: Lives Seen through the Prism of Family and Place. Her beautifully crafted book (which uses natural materials in each limited edition binding) documents the development of Miami Beach as a tourist destination from the 1930s through the 1960s. As both the book and the archive of photographs, blueprints, clippings, and correspondence she later donated to the library demonstrates, Michelle and Micky’s fathers ably served as Miami Beach mayors and were “movers and shakers” who helped transform and shape the image, history, and culture of the city.



HIGHLIGHTS OF A GIFT OF MICHELLE OKA DONER

Frederic A. Sharf, (who recently donated more than fifty rare view books documenting the Spanish American war, the Russo-Japanese war and Sino-Japanese conflicts), not only loaned and gifted some extraordinary automotive design drawings for an exhibition our curators were organizing; he also introduced us to Theodore W. Pietsch III. Theodore’s father was a talented automobile design artist and had left his son a large collection of sketchbooks and design drawings, many of which were reproduced in Theodore W. Pietsch II (1912-1993) and the Development of Automobile Design in the Golden Age. In the wake of the publication and an exhibition held at the Wolfsonian, Frederic Sharf facilitated the donation of thirty sketchbooks and a hundred or so drawings by Ted Pietsch by his son, establishing the Wolfsonian as an important repository of automotive design history. The librarians and digital library specialist are feverishly working to catalog and link digital images of these original works to our OPAC (Online Public Access Catalog). http://207.67.203.78/W10054

HIGHLIGHTS OF A GIFT OF THEODORE W. PIETSCH III, FACILITATED BY FREDERIC A. SHARF

TO BE CONTINUED…