African American history in Brooklyn

from Brooklyn Public Library’s website:
“In honor of Black History Month, the Brooklyn Collection has put together a resource page on African-American history in Brooklyn.  Drawing from several of our digitized collections, including city directories, Brooklyn Daily Eagle photographs, and the Civil Rights in Brooklyn collection, the resource guide focuses in on abolition efforts in Brooklyn, daily life for Black Brooklynites in the 19th century, and the efforts of the Brooklyn chapter of the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE) in the 1960s.  Both collections can be accessed from our Programs and Exhibitions page.  For a wider-angle view of Black history in America, Brooklyn Public Library has also put together several Black History Month webpages, including one focusing on Black genealogy, which can be accessed here.”

Oxford Islamic Studies Online

FireShot Screen Capture #002 - 'Oxford Islamic Studies Online - Oxford Islamic Studies Online' - www_oxfordislamicstudies_com
New in the library–Oxford Islamic Studies Online!
As part of a grant the library received from the American Library Association entitled Muslim Journeys, we got a year’s worth of access to Oxford Islamic Studies Online. Most of the content is from 11 different Oxford publications (largely encyclopedias as well as a dictionary and two different versions of the Qur’an and an Arabic-English concordance). You can find this resource on our ebooks page or the master database page.

ARTStor Black History Month 2013

from the ARTStor blog
Jacob Lawrence | The Migration of the Negro Panel no. 3 | 1940 – 1941 |Image and original data provided by The Museum of Modern Art. © 2008 Estate of Gwendolyn Knight Lawrence / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York
Jacob Lawrence | The Migration of the Negro, panel no. 3 | 1940 – 1941 |Image and original data provided by The Museum of Modern Art. © 2008 Estate of Gwendolyn Knight Lawrence / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York
Last year, we marked Black History month with a summary of some of the excellent resources on Black History available in the ARTstor Digital Library, including many collections that cover African art and culture. This year, we expand the list to include a variety of additional resources that focus on the lives and achievements of African Americans in particular.
Collections
Unidentified | African American woman and sweet peas | ca. 1920 | George Eastman House; eastmanhouse.org
Unidentified | African American woman and sweet peas | ca. 1920 | George Eastman House; eastmanhouse.org
Panos Pictures The independent photo agency specializes in documentary images of critical social issues, including thousands of images from the United States, many of them tackling issues affecting the lives of African Americans.
Milton Rogovin: Social Documentary Photographs Rogovin began his first photographic series in 1958 documenting African-American store front churches in Buffalo, NY, and would go on to record many other topics surrounding the black community.
Ruth Chandler Williamson Gallery (Scripps College) The Gallery includes the Samella Lewis Contemporary Art Collection, which has a special focus on art by women and African-Americans, including Elizabeth Catlett, Samella Lewis, Faith Ringgold, and Alison Saar.
 
Other resources
Jacob Lawrence became a household name after “The Migration of the Negro,” a series 60 small paintings about the passage of African-Americans from the rural South to the urban North, was reproduced in Fortune magazine in 1941. Lawrence saw the series as a single work, but the year after he completed the series, the Museum of Modern Art bought the even-numbered pictures and The Phillips Gallery in Washington bought the others. Thanks to our partnership with both museums, ARTstor users can see the whole oeuvre in the Digital Library; simply do a search for Jacob Lawrence Migration.
For more teaching ideas, visit the Digital Library and click on “Featured Groups,” where you will find Image Groups that include Interdisciplinary Topics: African and African-American Studies, as well as a Travel Awards-winning essay, “Sweet Fortunes: Sugar, Race, Art and Patronage in the Americas” by Katherine E. Manthorne, The City University of New York. Also, visit ARTstor’s Subject Guides page to download the African and African-American Studies Subject Guide. You may also want to read our post about Martin Luther King, Jr.
Upcoming
Unidentified | Unidentified African American young man | ca. 1900 | George Eastman House; eastmanhouse.org
Unidentified | Unidentified African American young man | ca. 1900 | George Eastman House;
eastmanhouse.org
Romare Bearden Foundation ARTstor is partnering with the Foundation to share nearly 1,000 images of Bearden’s work in the Digital Library. These works represent the breadth of Bearden’s enormous output, from his early paintings executed in a range of styles to his pioneering collage work, which highlights his unique combination of painting and collage materials drawn from popular sources. Throughout, Bearden’s art displays his deep engagement with the African American community and the Civil Rights movement.
Mott-Warsh Collection ARTstor is collaborating with the Collection to share 200 images of work by artists of the African Diaspora. Focusing on art produced after 1940, the Mott-Warsh Collection contains work by more than 125 artists working in a range of styles and media, including painting, drawing, printmaking, photography, mixed-media, and sculpture. The Collection includes major figures and underrepresented artists alike, such as Jacob Lawrence, Ron Adams, Faith Ringgold, Richard Yarde, Lorna Simpson, Glenn Ligon, Kara Walker, Howardena Pindell, and Whitfield Lovell.
Byron Company (New York, N.Y.) | Street Scenes, Seventh Avenue Around 30th St., Colored District. | 1903 | Museum of the City of New York; mcny.org
Byron Company (New York, N.Y.) | Street Scenes, Seventh Avenue Around 30th St., Colored District | 1903 | Museum of the City of New York; mcny.org

ARTstor Collections Summary 2012

reposted from http://artstor.wordpress.com/2013/01/17/artstor-collections-summary-2012/

ARTstor Collections Summary 2012

January 17, 2013 by artstor

James Rosenquist | The Swimmer in the Econo-mist, 1997-98
James Rosenquist | The Swimmer in the Econo-mist, 1997-98 | Image and original data provided by ©The Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation, New York; guggenheim.org/new-york/collections/collection-online | Art © James Rosenquist / Licensed by VAGA, New York, NY. This work of art is protected by copyright and/or related rights and may not be reproduced in any manner, except as permitted under the ARTstor Digital Library Terms and Conditions of Use, without the prior express written authorization of VAGA, 350 Fifth Avenue, Suite 2820, New York, NY 10118. Tel.: 212-736-6666, fax: 212-736-6767, email: info@vagarights.com. Continue reading “ARTstor Collections Summary 2012”

New Graphic Novels

Here’s a list of our most recently arrived graphic novels
and comics-related books:

Days of destruction, days of revolt Chris Hedges, Joe Sacco. Nation Books
Cartooning: Philosophy & Practice, by Ivan Brunetti (Yale University Press) Ivan Brunetti Yale University Press
Usagi Yojimbo Volume 26: Traitors of the Earth Stan Sakai (Author, Artist), Diana Schutz (Editor) Dark Horse
Hand of Fire: The Comics Art of Jack Kirby, Charles Hatfield University Press of Mississippi
Milk & Cheese: Dairy Products Gone Bad Evan Dorkin Dark Horse Books
Green River Killer: A True Detective Story Jeff Jensen and Jonathan Case Dark Horse Books
Jim Hensons Tale of Sand adapted by Ramón K. Pérez Archaia
Richard Stark’s Parker: The Martini Edition Darwyn Cooke IDW
Walt Disney’s Mickey Mouse vols. 1-2 Floyd Gottfredson, edited by David Gerstein and Gary Groth Fantagraphics

 

New ARTStor Collections


Contemporary computer art, fine art, and archaeology/anthropology-related collections highlight recent additions to ARTStor. Text below from ARTStor has been edited for brevity.
Rhizome ArtBase: a Web-based archive of works that employ technologies in significant ways and contains more than 2,500 artworks by artists from around the world who use materials such as code, software, websites, games, and browsers to aesthetic and critical ends. Continue reading “New ARTStor Collections”