Showing posts with label Postcards. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Postcards. Show all posts

Wednesday, 19 March 2014

American Antiquarian Society update: GIGI

Since my post in January 2012, the American Antiquarian Society has launched its Digital Image Archive, called GIGI with beautifully presented tif-format thumbnails. This is in addition to other stand-alone digital projects and online exhibitions. Of particular interest to ephemerists are the 1415 broadsides (Browse and select broadsides).  A keyword search for ephemera yields 3018 results at the time of writing (of 10,000 results from a keyword search in the General Catalogue). There are links from the catalogue into GIGI where appropriate, so the advice to scholars is to start there.

All very exciting for those of us who don't have Readex and want to browse the collections of the AAS.   There is advanced searching too within GIGI.


Search for broadside in GIGI (C) American Antiquarian Society
A list of collections represented includes the following categories of ephemera:
Album cards; Billheads; Broadsides; Christmas cards; Civil War envelopes; Currency; Election Ballots; Invitations; Membership Certificates; Menus; Postcards; Ream Wrappers; Sheet Music; Trade Cards; Valentines; and Watch papers from Graphic Arts, and Trade catalogs from Books. There are also hundreds of prints.

The AAS blog also has posts about ephemera (e.g. the recent post about Irish ballads for St. Patrick's Day) and a very active Twitter account: @AmAntiquarian

Friday, 22 March 2013

Europeana

Wheels within wheels: one of Europeana's contributors is Culture Grid, subject of my last blog post.
(C) Europeana
 
Europeana is work in progress, but already has nearly 6,300 hits for ephemera, mainly so far from The European Library and Hispana.   Additionally, there are over 35,000 entries under postcard (nearly 27,000 under Postkarte), many part of Europeana's major 1914-1918 project.

(C) Europeana


The list of Europeana participants includes the University of Ghent, which will contribute Posters of the late 19th century and ephemera. 

This will be a major resource. Developments can be followed on Facebook, on a blog and on Twitter.

Wednesday, 20 March 2013

Culture Grid

Culture Grid is a platform through which institutional collections can be cross-searched. These include pre-existing cross-searchable projects such as VADS (and therefore the John Johnson Collection Political Cartoons and Trades and Professions Prints) and Exploring 20th century London.

The site is rich in ephemera, notably posters, advertisements, postcards, labels, etc. The three million items can either be searched by such genre terms or by subject (which can be narrowed down to posters, etc), or by institution.

(C) Culture Grid
 
The list of contributing institutions (which can be found by searching, then selecting 'more search options' and activating the 'Select collections' button) is extensive and includes regional collections, with many gems for the ephemerist.

 
(C) Culture Grid

 








 


I didn't find a browse function or a way just to get an overview of the contribution of each institution, but for real researchers doing real enquiries this site will reveal lesser known material.

Thursday, 3 January 2013

Ephemera at Chetham's Library, Manchester

Chetham's Library in Manchester has rich collections of printed ephemera, most of which are catalogued, including bookplates, postcards, chapbooks, broadsides, ballads, theatre programmes, posters, trade cards and bill heads.

The Chethams website has a very useful guide to discrete collections of rare books and printed ephemera, notable among which are the Halliwell-Phillipps collection (donated to the library in 1852), a fne collection of scrapbooks of local material and the Belle Vue zoo and gardens archive.

(C) Chetham's Library, Manchester

There is project to digitise ballads across all Manchester libraries, including the newly-acquired (and already indexed) Robert Holt Collection of Manchester Street Songs and Ballads.

Friday, 21 December 2012

Postcard exhibition in Boston

(C) Museum of Fine Arts, Boston www.mfa.org
 
Many thanks to John Sayers for alerting me to the exhibition The Postcard Age at the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston, which runs until April 14 2013. Although sadly I won't see the exhibition itself, there are screen shots of it online, and I am very much looking forward to reading the accompanying book The Postcard Age by Linda Klich and Benjamin Weiss, which we now have in the Bodleian Library.

The exhibition is a taster of the 100,000 postcards which Leonard A. Lauder (son of Estée) is gradually giving to the Museum. The cards are arranged by themes such as urban life, the changing role of women, sports, celebrity, new technologies, art nouveau and WWI. 

There is an online slideshow of 10 cards from the exhibition and you can send a virtual postcard from the exhibition. I particularly like the moving images of the display (together with the other current exhibitions), which can be seen from the museum's home page.  Postcards, by virtue of their size, present challenges for display and it is good to see how the museum has approached these.


An online article from the New Yorker, The pleasures of postcards gives the background to Lauder's passion for postcards as miniature works of art.  Other online articles are Wild cards (New York Times), MFA exhibit showcases postcard marvels (Boston Post) and Cards to write home about (Wall Street Journal).



Japanese postcards from the MFA's website: www.mfa.org

Nearly 22,000 Japanese postcards from the Leonard A. Lauder Collection are already at the museum and can be seen online (most with images).

 This is a serious postcard collection, acquired over many years and representing the height of the postcard craze from the 1900s to the beginning of the First World War.  Leonard A. Lauder has collected the jewels of this age, internationally.  It is a pleasure to see these cards given the status of a museum collection, with a dedicated exhibition, and elucidated in a scholarly volume.

Thursday, 13 December 2012

The National Fairground Archive

The National Fairground Archive at the University Library, University of Sheffield, under the leadership of Professor Vanessa Toulmin, has holdings which document fairs, circuses, menageries, magic, optical shows, etc. A subject list gives the scope of the collection, which includes 4,500 books, 250 journals titles, moving images, photographs, drawings, audio material, correspondence, diaries, cuttings, account books, maps, charts, plans, teaching materials, notebooks etc, as well as ephemera: postcards, trade and advertising material, programmes, calendars, almanacs, posters, proclamations, and 20,000 posters and handbills. There are word processed indexes (currently under revision) to each of these genres.

(C) NFA, University of Sheffield
The site includes articles, bibliographies and links to other websites and resources.

Researchers can visit in person, without an appointment Monday to Wednesday, with an appointment on Thursday.  Opening hours are posted online.

The National Fairground Archive has just launched NFA digital, with images added weekly. 19,720 images are currently online  and these can be browsed or searched by collection, period, subject, place and name. The Search tips, especially the explanations of themes and subject terms, are very helpful.

You can follow the National Fairground item on Twitter: @professorvaness


The subscription site: Victorian Popular Culture (Adam Matthew) which will be covered more thoroughly in my next post, includes material from the National Fairground Archive

(C) NFA, University of Sheffield

Thursday, 6 December 2012

The Circus Museum, NL

(C) Circus Museum nl
More ephemera from Holland.

The Circus Museum, NL is a superb site, with a wealth of imagery. There are both Dutch and English versions.  The Foundation (housed at the Teyler Museum, Haarlem) contains the collection of Jaap Best augmented (during his lifetime) by the archives of the German acrobat and circus collector Erdwin Schirmer. This consisted largely of 3,500 chromolithographed posters of Adolph Friedländer.

Online are 8,000 posters, and 7,000 circus photographs and postcards.  Reproductions can be bought for most of them but the zoomable images are ideal for research.  Although predominantly Dutch and German, the collection is truly international, as the scroll-bar list of towns in advanced search reveals.

Searchable fields in Advanced search are Circus, Person, Designer/Photographer, Lithographer, Place, Date range and Material type, and keywords (which can be searched in English: clown, elephant, horse etc).

There is a very useful feature in Simple search: each of the main categories (Acrobatics, Animals, Clowns, Dance, Ethnographic shows, Fairgrounds, Folklore, Freaks, Jugglers, Musicians, Music and Theatre) can be further refined by its own subcategories through a second scroll-bar (e.g  Acrobats, stilt-walkers).

A very effective site, which enables complex searches of its superb collections with the minimum of fuss.


Thursday, 25 October 2012

The Roy Waters Theatre Collection at Royal Holloway. Guest post by Adele Allen

I was fortunate to have been invited to the launch last week of the Roy Waters Theatre Collection at Royal Holloway: a superb, newly available, resource. This guest post is by Adele Allen, Special Collections Archivist, who has just finished cataloguing the collection.

I am delighted to have been invited to write a guest post on the Roy Waters Theatre Collection, held at Royal Holloway, University of London. 


RW/1/7/6: Photograph of Roy Waters in Boscastle, 1948



 The collection of theatrical ephemera was bequeathed to the university in 2010 by the former 
teacher, school inspector and theatre enthusiast Roy Waters (1928-2010). It was Roy’s despair about how to conceal the elaborate flock wallpaper covering the walls of his new home and the subsequent suggestion of a friend that he use framed playbills and posters so as to make the space resemble a theatre foyer, which led him to spend over forty years carefully acquiring an impressive array of autograph letters, printed ephemera and artefacts reflecting his passion for the theatre.

The collection provides a fascinating insight into theatrical entertainment through the interests of a private collector. With a particular emphasis on well known actors, actresses and dramatists, the collection vividly illustrates their careers via autograph letters, programmes, playbills, photographs, news cuttings, prints and artefacts, ranging from the eighteenth to the twenty first century. We also hold Roy Waters’ personal papers, providing insight into the man behind the ephemera.  

RW/4/4/2/6. Playbill, 1807
 The focus of the collection on individual actors, actresses and singers is emphasised by the fact that the many series, including autograph letters and sheet music, are arranged alphabetically by performer - from Frances Abington writing in 1786 to Doris Zinkeisen, painter, theatrical costume and set designer in 1955 in the case of the letters, and from the dulcet tones of Henry Ainley to those of Tom Woottwell in the sheet music. However, as is the nature of private collections, particular enthusiasms emerged over the course of Roy’s collecting, and these are given special emphasis. Oscar Wilde, Henry Irving and Noel Coward at various times were the focus of his list of ephemera ‘wants’, and as a consequence  there are discrete series of material relating to these individuals, including, for instance, two 1882 cabinet card photographs of Oscar Wilde taken by Napoleon Sarony in New York. Likewise, there is a wonderful selection of scene sheets from continental toy theatre publishers such as Paluzie [Spain] and Schreiber [Germany].

The material, eclectic and varied as it is, can be brought together to tell a compelling story about the relationship between the theatre and the society in which it operated. Newspapers from 1681-1945 allow not only an insight into shows being advertised and reviewed, but the political and social context within which the plays were staged. Playbills and posters equally can provide information beyond cast lists and scene summaries, a Princess’s Theatre playbill for ‘King Lear’ dating from 1858 includes a passage written by Charles Kean about the production and the Princess's Theatre's staging of the play, with reference made to other Shakespearian revivals at the theatre. Likewise, a Theatre Royal, Covent Garden playbill of 1809 is largely given over to a response to the O.P [Old Price] Riots, with a notice from the committee 'for examining the affairs of Covent Garden', justifying the rise in the price of admission with audited accounts covering the previous seasons.

RW/15/1/5 Toy theatre print, 1831
Visually appealing as well, the collection contains a fantastic sequence of portrait and satirical prints, as well as cabinet card photographs and over 3000 photographic postcards. A small but varied collection of original art work ranges from a Samuel de Wilde painting of Stephen Kemble as Falstaff – reputedly the only English actor to play the role without artificial padding (!) – to a limited edition print of a David Bowie self portrait, signed by the artist. Six Agatha Walker wax figurines of characters from ‘The Beggar’s Opera’ as well as another of Gwen Ffrangcon Davies in ‘The Barrett’s of Wimpole Street’ add a three dimensional appeal to the collection. The world of film and radio is in fact well represented, with over 400 cigarette cards, a discreet series of material including a number of photographs relating to the actor Edmund Gwenn, the only actor to receive an Academy Award for playing the role of Santa Claus, and a file of correspondence from the Hollywood actress Una O’Connor.


RW/14/3/14: Cabinet photograph by Félix Nadar of Sarah Bernhardt as Lady Macbeth, 1899

The collection is now available for study due to the kind inclusion in the Roy Waters bequest of funds to undertake a project to catalogue and re-house the material. A launch hosted at Royal Holloway last week announced the new availability of the collection with an exhibition and drinks reception and it is our hope Roy’s array of ephemera will be well used by researchers. The collection may be searched via our online catalogue at www.rhul.ac.uk/archives. We welcome enquiries and requests to view the material and may be contacted by email: archives@rhul.ac.uk.

Adele Allen
Special Collections Archivist (Roy Waters Theatre Collection)