Monday, December 5, 2011

Carey Conference Part Two at Trinity College

The Dublin half of the two-part “Ireland, America, and the Worlds of Mathew Carey” conference co-sponsored by the McNeil Center for Early American Studies, the Library Company of Philadelphia, the Program in Early American Economy and Society, and the University of Pennsylvania Libraries kicked off last month at the National Library of Ireland. In his plenary address, Rutgers Distinguished Professor of History Richard Sher asked if Carey’s publishing practices were best understood as “Piracy or Patriotic Publishing?" Outlining the central debate about competitive reprinting as one between inferior quality of production versus affordable consumption, Sher posited a theory of “heroic reprinting,” in which Carey’s influences include “rich traditions of Scottish and Irish justifications of reprinting on the basis of appeals to public utility rather than to law or needs of the trade.” A lively discussion about Carey’s understanding of copyright ensued.

In the two days that followed at Trinity College Dublin’s Long Room Hub, a number of papers focused on Carey’s milieu in Dublin, showing that the trajectory of Carey’s life was not unique, though the particularities certainly were. Papers examined other Irish radicals of the period, including George Douglas, Matthias O’Conway, and Peter Finnerty.

Despite spending less than a third of his life in Ireland, Carey was influenced by what he experienced there, from his defense of protectionism and staunch patriotism to his magazine formats and his “heroic reprinting” practices. Many papers examined his first newspaper, Volunteers Journal, including James Kelly’s close reading of it and Tim Murtagh’s comparison of it to Mathew’s brother William Paulet Carey’s own radical newspaper. William Paulet Carey received more than a little attention, as Niall Gillespie also gave a paper on him in the “House of Carey” panel. At that same panel, Library Company Librarian Jim Green explained why Carey and Benjamin Franklin were more at odds than we might imagine. Participants also considered how Carey’s perspectives morphed when he crossed the Atlantic: an ardent separatist in Ireland, he would staunchly defend the union of his newfound nation in the Nullification Crisis of 1832.

Following the spirit of Sher’s plenary address, the conference examined Carey’s experiences as a printer and publisher. Sarah Arndt looked at the motivations behind Carey’s bookshop in Baltimore, which Carey called his “Bible Warehouse.” Carl Keyes looked at innovations in Carey’s advertising practices in his newspapers and magazines, and I showed how Carey, Richard Allen, and Absalom Jones used copyright claims to stake authority during 1793 yellow fever debates.

The idea of a Carey biography kept coming up at the conference, but it seems that despite the firmament of eighteenth-century specialists in attendance in Philadelphia and Dublin, no one feels qualified to write his life. The fact that a biography of Carey has not been written speaks volumes about him. The multiple disciplinary specialists at the conference and the dual locations of the conference are indeed representative of the many worlds that Mathew Carey has left us. 

See a report on the Philadelphia half of the conference from November 8 on "Beyond the Reading Room."

Molly Hardy, Andrew W. Mellon Postdoctoral Writing Fellow at Southwestern University, and 2010-2011 Library Company o Philadelphia/American Society for Eighteenth Century Studies Fellow.

International Photography Curators Visit LCP

Photo by Harris Fogel
About twenty-five members of Oracle, an international group of photographic curators, visited the Library Company on November 8. Oracle’s annual meeting had been held in Blue Bell, a Philadelphia suburb, the week before, and attendees from as far away as China, Spain, and the Netherlands stayed on to visit area museums and galleries including the Princeton University Art Museum, the Historical Society of Pennsylvania, and the Philadelphia Museum of Art. Curator of Prints and Photographs Sarah Weatherwax, a new Oracle member, organized and led a tour of the Library Company that included a brief talk outlining the history of the library and our mission today, as well as an opportunity to view the current exhibition John A. McAllister’s Civil War: The Philadelphia Home Front. Visitors also had the chance to see a selection of daguerreotypes displayed in the Logan Room and to tour the Print Department’s second floor reading room where more highlights of the photographic collection were on display. Prior to their visit, very few Oracle members had been aware of the Library Company and the richness of our photographic holdings. From an outdoor daguerreotype by the Langenheim brothers, to early experiments with the paper negative/positive process by Robert Montgomery Bird, to a motion study by Thomas Eakins, our guests were treated to a morning of visual treasures.

The Art of the Library Company

Papier-mâché binding, 2010
Jennifer Rosner, Chief of Conservation


The inspiring talents of a number of Library Company staff members are on display at the entrance to the Reading Room through mid-February.  The "Art of the Library Company" exhibition presents a sample of recent work by six current staff members paired with the sources of their inspiration--from an elaborate mother-of-pearl binding, to a broadside with a curious advertisement for the "Dance of the Six Dinner Plates," to a tiny paper love token found tucked in the pages of a bible.

Artists have long been drawn to the Library Company as a place to work, finding wonder and delight in the individual items in the collections as well as in the routine procedures of the library.  The work of collecting, preserving, and interpreting early American imprints and ephemera has also been known to inspire non-artists to express themselves creatively. 

The work displayed in this exhibition shows the breadth of forms in which Library Company artists work, as well as the range of objects, texts, and processes that have inspired them.  They include the arts of printmaking, poetry, bookmaking, collage, drawing, and painting, and were created by staff from the Conservation Department, the Cataloging Department, the Reading Room, and the Digitization Department. 

Thursday, November 3, 2011

On-line Exhibition Celebrates 40 Years of the Print Department

On September 13, 1971, Stephanie Munsing began work as the Library Company’s first Curator of Prints and Photographs. The library had been collecting graphics for a long time and Ms. Munsing’s appointment was public recognition of the significance of our visual materials and the need to provide intellectual and physical control over these collections. Forty years later the Print Department is an integral part of the library with knowledgeable staff offering assistance to both scholars and the general public in the use of graphic materials, researching and publishing about the collection, and leading the library into the digital age.  Most recently, the Visual Culture Program was created to further support the use of visual material in historical scholarship and interpretation.  

To celebrate this 40th anniversary, Curator of Prints and Photographs Sarah Weatherwax put together an on-line exhibition that looks back over the last four decades. This exhibition highlights important gifts received, as well as purchases made, and celebrates the many exhibitions and projects spearheaded by the Print Department. The collection has grown, the staff has increased, and our accomplishments have multiplied. The next 40 years are promising!

Above: Benjamin F. Smith, Jr. and John W. Hill.  Philadelphia from Girard College - 1850 . Tinted lithograph. New York, Francis Smith, 1850.

Click here to view Celebrating 40 Years: The Library Company’s Print and Photograph Department, 1971-2011.

Wednesday, November 2, 2011

Two Emmys for “A Taste of History”

For “A Taste of History,” the television series that explores America’s culinary roots, City Tavern Chef Walter Staib immerses viewers in the dishes and cooking techniques of the nation’s founders as a way into the historical context. Prints, maps, broadsides, pamphlets, and engravings from the Library Company’s collections are used extensively to help illustrate the show’s larger themes. The Academy of Television Arts and Sciences acknowledged Staib’s skill with a Best Host Emmy Award in September and bestowed an additional award upon show director James Davey. 



“We use food as a way to bring history to life,” says producer Ariel Schwarz. In each episode, Staib explores the origins of featured recipes and ingredients to unearth their stories. Past episodes have been taped in significant historic locations, such as Philadelphia’s Rittenhousetown, the banks of the Delaware River at Washington’s Crossing, and Monticello. In each case cooking leads to a larger examination of such subjects as Martha Washington’s contributions at Valley Forge, the Washingtons’ well-known slave-chef Hercules, or the operation of Jefferson’s gardens and kitchen.

“A Taste of History” airs Sunday afternoons on WHYY and PBS NJN.

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