Exhibits in Baker-Berry Library
Throughout the year, the Dartmouth College Library features exhibits highlighting its collections, often in conjunction with college lectures and events. The two main exhibit areas in the Baker-Berry Library are located in Baker Main hall and along Berry Main Street. Other Dartmouth College Library exhibit locations include: The Biomedical Libraries | Rauner Special Collections Library | Sherman Art Library | Kresge Physical Sciences Library
| Current Library Exhibits | ||||
Dickens at 200: Sketches, Curiosities, Expectations
Charles Dickens was one of the most beloved and influential authors of the nineteenth century. Dickens sketched a "curiosity shop" of characters and managed his readers' "great expectations" to help us understand Victorian England. This exhibit celebrates the 200th anniversary of his birth by showcasing items from the Dartmouth College Library's collections.
"Dickens at 200" was curated by Laura Braunstein and designed by Dennis Grady. Berry Main Street, Baker-Berry Library, February 6 - April 27, 2012 |
||||
Latin America 1810-2011: The Independence Effect - El efecto independentista
This fall three major events that deal with Latin America as a recurring geographical and historical place are being organized at Dartmouth College: a film festival—The New England Festival of Ibero-American Cinema—was held at Dartmouth in its 2011 edition; a regional conference—the 2011 Annual Meeting of the New England Council of Latin American Studies on November 5, at the Rockefeller Center; and an international symposium—The Independence Effect: 200 Years of Cultural and Intellectual Processes sponsored by the Department of Spanish and Portuguese, October 27-29. The library welcomes these events, and offers that by acquiring, collecting, and disseminating important resources about Latin America, the library fulfills one of its principal missions—to support the very existence of these activities. This exhibit takes the leitmotif of the international symposium's theme in order to open a space for reflection about, first, the notion of what Latin America was in 1810—at the precise moment when processes began that gave rise to the diverse independence movements, and second, how these Hispanic and the Lusophone countries have evolved since then to arrive at today's realities. With this exhibit, the library collaborates in these events, and more importantly forwards its own principal aim, which is to show students in particular how libraries collect material over time that can be relevant in answering contemporary academic questions. Baker-Berry Library—as do other academic libraries— also has the responsibility of making these resources accessible to its users. Each window analyses an aspect of the theme of the symposium to offer a sample of the riches of our library holdings. Our hope is to provoke reflection among students that will inspire them to use the library's vast resources. Exhibit curated by Miguel Vallandares, Romance Languages Bibliographer; designed by Dennis Grady. Baker Main Hall, Baker-Berry Library, October 26 - January 5, 2012 |
||||
| Recent Library Exhibits | ||||
Investing in Women and Girls: An Exhibit Presented by Dartmouth College Library in Conjunction with The Eighth Annual Great Issues in Medicine and Global Health Symposium
"Investing in Women and Girls" is the topic of the Eighth Annual Great Issues in Medicine and Global Health Symposium. This year's program was developed by an interdisciplinary Planning Committee with representatives from Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center, Dartmouth College including Dartmouth Medical School and The Dartmouth Institute for Health Policy and Clinical Practice, The Dartmouth Center for Health Care Delivery Science, Amos Tuck School of Business, as well as community partners devoted to the well-being of women and girls. Women and girls continue to be disadvantaged by lack of access to health care, education, financial services, property, and power. This exhibit includes photos, videos, and artifacts about local, national, and global programs as well as a sample of Dartmouth programs that invest in women and girls. For more information on the Symposium visit www.dartmouth-hitchcock.org/great-issues-symposium/. Exhibit curated by Mary Turco, Director of the Center for Continuing Education in the Health Sciences and Continuing Medical Education and Assistant Professor of Medicine, Dartmouth Medical School/Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center, in collaboration with Planning Committee members and colleagues in Jones Media Library. Exhibit design by Dennis Grady. Video editing and interactive presentation design by Tara Albanese, Digital Media Assistant, Jones Media Center. Berry Main Street, Baker-Berry Library, November 16, 2011 - January 31, 2012 |
||||
Indian Country Still
This exhibit traces the history of Native American soverignty through the concepts of Nationhood, Home, Generations, and Voices, drawing on a variety of sources available in Baker-Berry Library. The exhibit complements the Lewis and Clark traveling exhibit running concurrently in Berry Library. Exhibit curated by Amy Witzell and designed by Dennis Grady. Berry Main Street, Baker-Berry Library, September 5 - October 31, 2011 |
||||
Together in the Great Alone... Thomas Orde Lees, Ernest Shackleton, and the 1914-16 Transantarctic Expedition
After failing to reach the South Pole in 1909 by only a little over 100 miles during his Nimrod Expedition, Ernest Shackleton (1874-1922) set out to be the first to cross the continent. The plan was to sail the Endurance to the Peninsula region (south of Chile), march to the South Pole, and then continue to the McMurdo Sound (south of New Zealand), where the Aurora and the Ross Sea support party awaited. Disaster struck—the Endurance became trapped in pack ice in the Weddell Sea, never reaching the continent. She was crushed and sank on November 21, 1915, stranding crewman Thomas Orde Lees and 27 others. After months of living on the sea ice, the crew set out in April in three small open boats to reach the uninhabited Elephant Island. Shackleton, fearing his crew might never be found, selected five men to sail 800 miles in a small open boat to a whaling station on South Georgia Island to engage a rescue ship for the Endurance crew. Many consider Shackleton's boat journey the most amazing feat of open water navigation and survival in maritime history. His was the last expedition of the Heroic Age of Antarctic exploration. Thomas Orde Lees (1877-1958), responsible for ship stores and the experimental motorized sledges, was perhaps the least popular member of the expedition. He did however, keep one of the expedition's most complete journals and was an ardent admirer of "Sir Ernest" and his leadership. Orde Lees's journal is one of many historically significant documents in the Stefansson Collection on Polar Exploration, housed in the Rauner Special Collections Library. This exhibit offers a glimpse of Orde Lees's observations, hopes, and doubts as he endured and survived the expedition. It is offered in support of Phantom Limb's performance of 69°S. at The Hopkins Center on September 30th and October 1st. For more information on Phantom Limb go to www.dartmouth.edu/~phantomlimb/. Exhibit curated by Ross Virginia, Myers Family Professor of Environmental Science and Director of the Dickey Center's Institute of Arctic Studies, and Dennis Grady. Exhibit design by Dennis Grady. Baker Main Hall, Baker-Berry Library, September 16 - October 21, 2011 |
||||
A Passion for Perfection: Ann Lee and the Shakers
Despite the Shakers' commitment to living separately, this comparatively small Utopian religious movement has had a tremendous impact on the larger world. Products of consecrated Shaker lives have attracted and inspired generations of non-Shaker artists, artisans and spiritual seekers. Principles of design and construction that informed Shaker material culture are directly related to Shaker spiritual and temporal values. "Anything may, with strict propriety be called perfect, which perfectly answers the purpose for which it was designed" and "Beauty rests on utility" are only two of many aphorisms that inform the material world they created to support their religious vision. This exhibit, drawing on materials housed in Rauner Special Collections Library and Mary Ann Haagen's independent research, is offered in support of Angel Reapers, a multi-disciplinary work by Martha Clarke and Alfred Uhr suggested by the life of Ann Lee, at The Hopkins Center for the Arts on October 7 & 8, 2011 Exhibit curated by Mary Ann Haagen,Visiting Scholar, Music Department. Exhibit design by Dennis Grady. Baker Main Hall, Baker-Berry Library, September 23 - October 21, 2011 |
||||
To Find Oneself Again ... fragments from the real world
The title of this exhibette is borrowed from Antonin Artaud's The Nerve Meter: "To find oneself again in a state of extreme shock, clarified by unreality, with, in a corner of oneself, some fragments of the real world." In the present instance, the fragments were revealed during the repair of broken bindings in the Library's general collections, and collected by Stephanie Wolff, Conservation Technician, Preservation Services, Dartmouth College Library. Each fragment implies a world; together, they generate a multiplicity of universes. This exhibit is offered in support of the Brentano String Quartet's Fragments, a New England Premiere/Co-Commission performance at the Hopkins Center for the Arts, Spaulding Auditorium, Friday, October 14. Exhibit curated and designed by Dennis Grady. Baker Main Hall, Baker-Berry Library, September 30 - October 21, 2011 |
||||
By His Excellency's Command… Celebrating Hanover's Quarter-millennial
From the Town of Hanover's original charter to Corey Ford's ruminations on why his dog likes it here, this exhibit joins the Hanover community in celebrating the town's 250th birthday. Ken Cramer, former Archivist of the College, has selected documents and images from the holdings of Rauner Special Collections Library to take us on an informative and entertaining journey through Hanover's unique history. Exhibit curated by former Dartmouth College Archivist Ken Cramer. Exhibit design by Dennis Grady. Baker Main Hall, Baker-Berry Library, July 1- August 31, 2011 |
||||
Student Library Service Bookplate Program
The Student Library Service Bookplate Program honors the Library's graduating student employees by inviting them to choose books for the Library's collections. Each book receives a bookplate that acknowledges the student's selection and honors his or her service to the Library. Students are eligible if they worked at least two terms in any Library department (including RWIT, The Student Center for Research, Writing and Information Technology). The Library honored nearly seventy students from the class of 2011 with selections ranging from world fiction, graphic novels, musical scores, and DVDs to children's books, inspirational works, and historical scholarship. Exhibit design and photography: Dennis Grady – Library Education & Outreach. Many thanks to Greg Potter, Research and Information Desk Coordinator, and to the thirteen students who volunteered to participate in this exhibit. Berry Main Street, Baker-Berry Library, June 25 - August 31, 2011 |
||||
Where People Get Together - The Co-op at 75 Years / Hanover Consumer Cooperative Society archive
In 1936, seventeen Dartmouth College faculty families formed the Hanover Consumer Cooperative Society, Inc. To honor the Co-op's connection to the College and its 75 years of service to the Upper Valley community, an exhibit at Dartmouth College's Baker-Berry Library is on display from March through May. Featuring early Co-op documents and photographs, the exhibit presents the cooperative principles and key events in the early history of the Co-op. Some related events will take place in the exhibit hall during that time. Exhibit curated by Dartmouth College Archivist Peter Carini and Hanover Consumer Cooperative Society, Inc. staff: Terry Appleby, General Manager, Eugenia Braasch, Board Administrator, Rosemary Fifield, Director of Education and Member Services, Allan Reetz, Communications Director. Exhibit design by Dennis Grady. Baker Main Hall, Baker-Berry Library, March 10 - June 20, 2011 |
||||
The Guild of Book Workers traveling exhibition, Marking Time
In this exhibit of fifty works, traditional fine leather bindings stand alongside contemporary bindings that have been dyed, collaged, or incorporated with photographs or handwriting. Texts selected to be bound are as likely to be poetry or classics as they are science fiction or hard science. The show includes work in the codex format, complex folded structures, wooden constructions, hand-held toys, and sculptural objects. Text and imagery is produced by the most ancient and the most modern mark-making methods: calligraphy, painting, woodcut, letterpress, and digital output. In exemplary work, the artist's facility with craft, structure, material and content allows each individual to create a cohesive whole. Local binders represented in the show are: Stephanie Wolff from Vermont and Deborah Howe and Rutherford Witthus from New Hampshire. Berry Main Street, Baker-Berry Library, November 5th, 2010 - March 20th, 2011 |
||||
Winter Carnival: A Century of Dartmouth Posters
This exhibit accompanies the recent Friends of the Dartmouth College Library publication, Winter Carnival: A Century of Dartmouth Posters (University Press of New England, 2010), featuring full-color plates of each of the Winter Carnival posters housed in the Rauner Special Collections Library and essays by Steven Heller, Gina Barreca '79, Jay Satterfield and Peter Carini. The text for the exhibit is taken directly from the book, which is available for browsing at the Baker Main Hall information desk. The images are from Rauner Library's vast collection of photographs documenting the history of Dartmouth--a collection that is currently being digitized thanks to a generous gift of the Manton Foundation. Order a copy of the book direct from University Press of New England. The essays are both celebratory and critical of the posters and of the social milieu that created them. We could never hope to capture the full spirit and history of Winter Carnival in a single exhibit, so we have opted to try to illustrate the sentiments expressed in the book. We hope you will find the exhibit fun, perhaps a little unexpected, and very thought provoking. Exhibit curated by Jay Satterfield; designed by Dennis Grady. Baker Main Hall, Baker-Berry Library, December 2, 2010 - February 28, 2011 |
||||
The Book Unbound & The Book Arts at Dartmouth
This exhibition highlights the book and the book arts at Dartmouth in anticipation of Marking Time, the new traveling show from the Guild of Book Workers, on display in the Berry Main Street exhibition cases from November 5, 2010 through March 20, 2011. The Book Unbound & The Book Arts at Dartmouth was curated by Stephanie Wolff and Deborah Howe, with help from Barb Sagraves, Professor Alexandra Halasz, Richard Langdell, Laura Graveline, Joe Wright, Jay Satterfield, Pat Cope, McKey Berkman, Laura Braunstein, Book Arts Program participants and CoCo 11 students. Exhibit design by Dennis Grady. Additional Sources: The History of Making Books. New York: Scholastic Inc., 1996; Warren Chappell, A Short History of the Printed Word. Boston: Nonpareil Books, 1980; J.A. Szirmai, The Archaeology of Medieval Bookbinding. Brookfield, Vt.: Ashgate, 1999; Tsuen-Hsuin Tsien. Written on Bamboo & Silk: the Beginnings of Chinese Books & Inscriptions. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2004. Baker Main Hall, Baker-Berry Library, September 7 - November 24, 2010 |
||||
Everyone Is Reading: Strength in What Remains
"Everyone is Reading: Strength in What Remains" will feature book-related programs designed to engage the community in discussions about the trauma of war, global health initiatives, and the power of the individual to make significant changes in society. The month-long series of events begins September 7 with a panel discussion led by clinicians detailing their experiences working at Deo's clinic in Burundi, and will end on October 13 with a discussion focusing on the psychiatric toll of war. This exhibit in the Baker-Berry Library is one of many displays, book discussions, films, and family programs taking place throughout the community. All events and programs for "Everyone is Reading: Strength in What Remains" are free and open to the public. Berry Main Street, Baker-Berry Library, September 3 - October 31, 2010 |
||||
Student Library Service Bookplate Program
The Student Library Service Bookplate Program honors the Library's graduating student employees by inviting them to choose books for the Library's collections. Each book will receive a bookplate that acknowledges the student's selection and honors his or her service to the Library. Students are eligible if they have worked at least four terms in any Library department (including RWIT, the Student Center for Research, Writing, and Information Technology). The Library is honoring over sixty students from the class of 2010, with selections ranging from world fiction in its original language, graphic novels, biographies, and DVDs to children's books, inspirational works, and historical scholarship. This exhibit features fourteen students who have volunteered to share their thoughts with the Dartmouth community. Exhibit design and photography by Dennis Grady. Baker Main Hall, Baker-Berry Library, June 8 - August 31, 2010 For a list of the 2010 Student Bookplate selections go to www.dartmouth.edu/~library/ris/bookplate2010.html |
||||
Anniversaries & Opportunities: Music-thinking at Dartmouth
Exhibit curated by Steve Swayne, Associate Professor of Music, and Pat Fisken, Head of Paddock Music Library. Designed by Dennis Grady, Library Education & Outreach. The four video clips created by Steve Swayne for this exhibit are available on line: Berry Main Street, Baker-Berry Library, May 5 - July 30, 2010 |
||||
The Fire Within: Conversations With Our Past
In conjunction with the conference "Black Theatricality: Race and Representation in Black Literature and Culture," the Dartmouth College Library invited four students to explore the history of African American students at Dartmouth. This exhibit represents their fascinating response to the events and documents they uncovered. The students who collaborated on this exhibit are Danielle Coleman '12, Ryan Williams French '12, Hannah Giorgis '13, and Yueyue Guo '12.
Exhibit design by Dennis Grady. Baker Main Hall, Baker-Berry Library, March 26 - June 2, 2010 The 2010 Bildner Symposium • Black Theatricality: Race and Representation in Black Literature and Culture • April 9 and 10, 2010 • Celebrating the 40th Anniversary of African and African American Studies at Dartmouth • For a full schedule, visit www.dartmouth.edu/~lhc/events/2010/blacktheatricality.html. |
||||
Urgent Visions: Portraits of Self-Taught Artists and Their Environments - Photographs & Video by Ted Degener
The Dartmouth College Library is pleased to present here a selection of Ted Degener's portraits and a few examples of the work produced by these artists. Exhibit curated and designed by Dennis Grady, Library Education and Outreach. Berry Main Street, Baker-Berry Library, February 26 - April 30 |
||||
Revealing the Human Interior: Images from De humani corporis fabrica libri septem of Andreas Vesalius
Historical anatomies tell us so much more than just what was known about the body in different times and places. They are concrete expressions of the relationship between science and art, between nature and the body, and between the physician and the patient through history. The reproductions here come from Andreas Vesalius's supremely beautiful 1543 edition of De humani corporis fabrica libri septem (Basileae: Ex officina Ionnis Oporini, 1543), one of many spectacular historical anatomies housed in the Rauner Special Collections Library. These books offer students a dissection lab for uncovering past scientific paradigms while exposing the development of western medicine. —Jay Satterfield, Special Collections Librarian Revealing the Human Interior is part of Collections Showcase, a series of occasional exhibits that highlight Dartmouth College Library's collections. Exhibit design by Dennis Grady. Baker Main Hall, Baker-Berry Library, January 27 - March 26 |
||||
Drawings of Genocide: Darfur Through the Eyes of Its Children
"In June and July 2007, an Article 1 team member conducted a three week fact-finding mission to Eastern Chad. The aim of the mission was to assess the humanitarian, human rights and security situation in the region and to collect testimonies from Darfuri refugees and Displaced Chadians. "While collecting testimonies from adults, women told our researcher how their children had witnessed horrendous events when their villages were being attacked. This prompted her to talk to the children. She gave the children aged 6 to 18 paper and pencils and asked them what their dreams were for the future and what their strongest memory was. "When the children handed our researcher their drawings, she was shocked to see the details of their memories of the attacks. While a handful of children had submitted drawings of daily life in the village or in the refugee camp, the majority of the drawings described the attacks on their village by Sudanese Government forces and their allied Janjaweed militia."
Berry Main Street, Baker-Berry Library, January 7 - February 14 |
||||
El Mundo Alrededor de Cuba - The Cuban Revolution: a Suite in Seven Parts
Through a conference organized by The John Sloan Dickey Center for International Understanding, the Dartmouth community is invited to think critically about the 50th Anniversary of the Cuban Revolution within the context of present United States-Cuban relations. Baker-Berry Library is participating in this event by presenting an exhibit focusing on the large collection of resources the Dartmouth College Library possesses about Cuba in particular, and Latin America in general. One aim of the exhibit is to show students how library material, collected over time, remains relevant in answering questions about our present and our future. This exhibit narrates the events leading to the triumph of the 1959 Cuban Revolution through a small number of primary sources framed with commentaries by current scholars. The events covered took place during a short period of just two years, but their intersection with the world -- and more specifically with U.S. politics -- dramatically reshaped the last decades of the 20th century. The consequences of the Cuban Revolution are still part of today's reality. As Gerardo Canet noted in his 1949 Atlas de Cuba, a page of which serves as a recurring motif in the exhibit, "Within Cuba is the center of gravity of the Americas." Baker-Berry Library--as do other academic libraries-- also has the responsibility of making its resources accessible to its users. In this exhibit, we have chosen a difficult topic in order to provoke reflection among students; they will, after all, have the opportunity to discover future solutions to emerging social and political conflicts and issues. El Mundo Alrededor de Cuba: The Cuban Revolution, a Suite in Seven Parts was curated by Miguel Valladares, Latin American Studies Librarian, and Dennis Grady, Library Education & Outreach. Exhibit design by Dennis Grady. Baker Main Hall, Baker-Berry Library, October 29 - December 31 |
||||
Celebrating Five Years of DCAL - Dartmouth Center for the Advancement of Learning
Berry Main Street, Baker-Berry Library, August 24 - December |
||||
One Sustainable Dartmouth
Global climate change is a defining sustainability challenges of our time. In the fall of 2008 Dartmouth committed to reducing campus greenhouse gas emissions by thirty percent below 2005 levels by 2030, starting with a twenty percent cut by 2015. Curbing Dartmouth's greenhouse gas emissions will require us to work together to conserve energy through individual choices; improve the energy efficiency of existing buildings; and diversify the fuel sources that power the Dartmouth campus. The six stories in the Sustainable Dartmouth exhibit highlight some of the ways in which hundreds of Dartmouth students, engaged in more than a dozen organizations, have embraced the challenge of stemming climate change by reducing our carbon footprint. This exhibit was designed by Jermaine Johnson, Graphic Designer at Dartmouth's Office of Public Affairs. Text by Kathy Fallon Lambert '90, Dartmouth's Sustainability Manager. Baker Main Hall, Baker-Berry Library, August 1 - September 23 |
||||
An Extraordinary History: James Wright at Dartmouth
This exhibit was curated and written by Susan Warner; co-curated and designed by Dennis Grady. Photography (1995-2009) and photo research by Joseph Mehling '69. Special thanks to Nariah Broadus in the President's Office; and to Patricia Cope, Sarah Hartwell, and Joshua Lascell in Rauner Special Collections for help with records location and retrieval. Baker Main Hall, Baker-Berry Library, May 16 - June 30 |
||||
"In Antient and Modern Books Enroll'd": John Milton at 400
Berry Main Street, Baker-Berry Library, April 8 - June |
||||
Seven Selected Inaugural Addresses
Baker Main Hall, Baker-Berry Library, January 7 - March 27 |
||||
Sons of Dartmouth - Sons of Lwala
Berry Main Street, Baker-Berry Library, January 26 - March 27 |
||||
Bringing Russia to Dartmouth: the Legacy of Ralph Sylvester Bartlett
Baker Main Hall, Baker-Berry Library, October 1- December 10 |
||||
Latinos and Latinas at Dartmouth: Community, Culture, and Scholarship
(photo: Joe Mehling) Berry Main Street, Baker-Berry Library, October 1 - November 14 |
||||
Publishers' Bindings From The Stacks of Baker-Berry Library
Baker Main Hall, Baker-Berry Library, July 10 - September 19 |
||||
Barro sin Plomo - Clay Without Lead
Berry Main Street, Baker-Berry Library, July 1 - September 26 |
||||
Dartmouth College Library Alumni Memorial Books Program ExhibitBerry Main Street through June 15, 2008
|
||||
Facing the North Wind: The Morton E. Wise Collection of Maurice SendakBaker Main Hall, Baker-Berry Library, April 1-June 30, 2008
This exhibition was curated by Patti Houghton and Jay Satterfield and designed by Dennis Grady. The materials were prepared by Deborah Howe and Lauren Telepak. |
||||
3-d Modeling and Rapid Prototyping In Architectural DesignBerry Main Street through April 18, 2008
This exhibit is a direct result of the Leslie Humanities Center Fellowship in Digital Media; it is a research project of Dartmouth Senior Lecturer, Karolina Kawiaka and includes work by her students in Biomimicry Studio - Architecture 2/3- Fall 2007 from the Studio Art Department. The objective of Senior Lecturer Karolina Kawiaka's Leslie Humanities Center Fellowship in Digital Media research project was for her to study, experience, and digitally document examples of Asian domestic and sacred architecture and gardens. She then developed a series of digitally photographed and modeled construction details and examples of traditional buildings for research and teaching purposes in architecture classes at Dartmouth College. Subsequent work by Kawiaka's students (Anna Stork '08, Patrick Hamon '08, Julian Henderson '08, and Yihan Hao '08) is included in this exhibit. This exhibit will remain on display in Berry Library until mid-April. It is located in the Berry Main Street exhibit cases in front of the Baker-Berry reference desk. Please stop by and take a look. |
||||
Polar Connections ExhibitBaker Main Hall and Berry Main Street through March 21, 2008
|
||||
Puzzled about Math?
Mechanical puzzles from the collection of Mathematics professor Peter Winkler are on display in Baker/Berry Main Street through the end of February. They are on exhibit to complement Mechanical Puzzles Day in the Math Dept. Feb 19th when speakers and collectors will be gathering to discuss and display mechanical puzzles. On Feb 19th Baker/Main will have two tables of hands-on puzzles we can play with and try to solve. These puzzles are on loan from the 30,000 piece Jerry Slocum Collection of Mechanical Puzzles, Brainteasers & Ingenious Objects collection held at the Lilly Library, Indiana University. Following Puzzle Day, these hands-on puzzles will be held at Kresge Library through the end of February. Recreational math titles about or related to the mathematics of mechanical puzzles from the Cook Mathematics Collection are on display near the self check-out in Baker/Berry. Heather Gere designed this eye catching display. Andrea Bartelstein has arranged for a stop on the Cell Phone Library Tour at the Mechanical Puzzles exhibit. Call Call 603-283-6890, then press 30 followed by # to listen to Pete's audio description of the exhibit. |
||||
Roz Chast ExhibitRoz Chast has been a cartoonist for The New Yorker for 30 years. An artist whose drawings portray the everyday anxieties and insecurities of modern life, she provides a social commentary for our times. She is a Montgomery Fellow in residence at Dartmouth from January 28-30, 2008. Her Montgomery Fellow Lecture entitled Theories Of Everything and Much, Much More is scheduled for Tuesday, January 29 at 4:30 PM in Filene Auditorium. Roz Chast has generously loaned some of her original drawings and they are on display in Baker-Berry Library near the reference area on Berry Main Street. For more information on Roz Chast, see the VOX of Dartmouth article. |
||||
Mark Doty Book Display |
||||
|
Mark Doty is the author of seven books of poems, three volumes of nonfiction prose, and a memoir. His writings have appeared in many magazines, including the London Review of Books, Poetry, and the New Yorker, as well as anthologies and collections. Doty has received numerous awards and fellowships, including the National Book Critics Circle Award, two Lambda Literary Awards, and a Guggenheim fellowship, and he is the only American poet to have received the T.S. Eliot Prize in the U.K. Doty lives in New York City and in Houston, Texas, where he is John and Rebecca Moores Professor in the graduate program at the University of Houston. |
||||
Guild of Book Workers 100th Anniversary Exhibition
The Guild of Book Workers 100th Anniversary Exhibition is featured at the Baker-Berry Library from September 21, 2007 through November 30, 2007. This traveling exhibition features the recent works of 62 bookbinders and book artists, members of the Guild of Book Workers. Entries run the gamut from traditional bindings and historic structures, to pop-ups and other playful book forms, to purely sculptural works. Text and imagery are produced by numerous printmaking methods, calligraphy, photography and digital output reflecting classic texts, political viewpoints, personal histories, and the sensual experience of reading a book. |
||||
Africa in 3-D: Diversity, Demographics & DiscoveryThe theme for Geography Awareness Week in November 2006 was "Africa in 3-D." To highlight that theme and showcase the winners of the 2006 GIS Poster Contest, we have an exhibit which focuses on all aspects of the African continent. The photographs are courtesy of Judith Byfield, a professor in History and Women & Gender Studies. The scenes showing on the monitor are from various episodes of National Geographic's Africa and the Wonders of Africa with Henry Louis Gates, Jr. |
||||
"This Is My Country": Indigenous Australian Women Speak Their WorldsThis exhibit highlights traditions and social conditions of women from a number of different Australian Aboriginal communities, complementing the Hood Museum's Dreaming Their Way: Australian Aboriginal Women Painters. This exhibit was curated by Amy Witzel and designed by Dennis Grady. |
||||
Wenda Gu Exhibit
Part of his ongoing global united nations hair monument project, the green house is a massive sculpture created from hair collected from thousands of Dartmouth students, faculty, and staff and Upper Valley community members. Wenda Gu's hair sculptures arise from his dream that through his art he might unite humanity and encourage international understanding. An exhibition of the artist's recent works on paper is presented concurrently in the Hood's galleries. Organized by the Hood Museum of Art, Dartmouth College, in partnership with the Dartmouth College Library, and generously funded by a grant from the LEF Foundation, the William B. Jaffe and Evelyn A. Hall Fund, the Eleanor Smith Fund, and the George O. Southwick 1957 Memorial Fund. For more information, visit the Hood Museum of Art web site at or call (603) 646-2808. For information about Wenda Gu, visit the Wenda Gu web site. |
||||
Read Banned Books!
Celebrate Banned Books Week (September 23-30) at the Library by reading a book that has been banned or challenged. For the next few weeks, several of the Libraries at Dartmouth will exhibit books that have been banned or challenged throughout the history of reading and scholarship. Baker-Berry Library will display a selection from the American Library Association's list of the 100 most frequently challenged books of 1990-2000. Please feel free to browse through and borrow the books in the exhibit. Dana Library will feature four books that have incited controversy in the life sciences: Charles Darwin's The Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection, Havelock Ellis's Studies in the Psychology of Sex, Sigmund Freud's The Essentials of Psychoanalysis, and Alfred Kinsey's Sexual Behavior in the Human Female. For a historical perspective check out Rauner Library's "500 Years of Banned Books" exhibition. Focusing on only one book from each of five centuries, the exhibition exposes themes that have inspired censorship: controversial philosophy, heretical science, radical political thought, depictions of race, and sexually explicit literature. The exhibition is on view in the Rauner Library Reading Room through October 9. Banned Books Week celebrates the freedom to read and express one's opinion in a democratic society, as well as the importance of ensuring that unpopular viewpoints are made available to those who want to learn about them. The event is sponsored by the American Library Association, the American Society of Journalists and Authors, and the National Association of College Stores, among others. For more information, talk to a librarian or visit the ALA web site. |
||||
Samuel R. Delany Book Display |
||||
|
|
||||
| Student Exhibits | ||||
Ryan Yuk '09: 5 Chairs
Ryan's work has been funded in part by a Peter D. Smith Student Initiative Award and the Nathan W. 1932 & Kathleen P. Pearson Fund. Berry Main Street, May 16 - June 30, 2009 |
||||
Screening eMotions: An Installation by Si Jie Loo
In this public art project, I attempt to create a scenario that allows Dartmouth community members to express their hidden emotions. By putting a two-sided mirror and a "Grafitti" wall in public space, I anticipate the direct interaction between the art and its viewers, with each spectator reacting to what has been expressed before. In this way, one will be able to see how emotions can be experienced, related, and relayed. The public display of art brings people together at a personal level. This project aims to provide a public setting for Dartmouth community to express their private emotions and to recognize, unexpectedly, each other's emotions in a setting where they are customarily hidden within traditions, social patterns, and expectations. Carson-Novack Corridor, June 30 - July 7, 2009 Part of The Leslie Center for the Humanities 2009 Summer Arts festival. |