Category Archives: Picture Collection

Magazine Covers–Alysha Colangeli

As an introduction to a series of posts I will be doing in the near future concerning Magazine Covers, I would like to present Alysha Colangeli’s collage, currently on display in the library. Alysha, a graduating Fine Arts student, has worked with me in the picture collection for the past 2+ years. I will be sad to see her go. She leaves us with this parting gift, completely comprised of color copies of magazine covers from our collection. She used at least one from every chronologically divided subdivision: Pre-1920, 1920-1929, 1930-1939, 1940-1949, 1950-1959, 1960-1969, 1970-1979, 1980-1989, 1990-1999, 2000-2009, 2010-2019. Please enjoy, and make sure to come take a gander in person.

FABRICS & SEWING — FABRIC SAMPLES

Not Ideas About Things But The Thing Itself

At the earliest ending of winter,
In March, a scrawny cry from outside
Seemed like a sound in his mind.

He knew that he heard it,
A bird’s cry, at daylight or before,
In the early March wind.

The sun was rising at six,
No longer a battered panache above snow…
It would have been outside.

It was not from the vast ventriloquism
Of sleep’s faded papier-mache…
The sun was coming from the outside.

That scrawny cry–It was
A chorister whose c preceded the choir.
It was part of the colossal sun,

Surrounded by its choral rings,
Still far away. It was like
A new knowledge of reality.

–Wallace Stevens

A subcategory of FABRICS & SEWING, FABRIC SAMPLES is unique to its 909 other cousin subjects in this Picture Collection family. Why? Because these are not visual representations of fabric samples, they are fabric samples. Now, that doesn’t mean that through photocopying, scanning, or rendering their likeness with your hand that you cannot transform these textured colors and colored patterns into pictures, or otherwise appropriate their likeness for your own creative ends. In fact, this is all just an invitation to do just that. Examples and examples follow:

Incidentally, you can find the above, and many other Wallace Stevens poems, in your library:

Location: Main Stacks
Call Number: PS3537.T4753 A6 1997

Advertising–Tourism

The tag-line of this blog is “A tiny window into 637 Periodical Titles & 200,000+ images divided into 910 Picture Subjects.” 95 of those subjects have the parent subject Advertising. There are 16 subcategories of Advertising (Beer, Cigarettes, Cosmetics & Grooming, Drugs & Medicine, Fashion, Finance, etc.). Those subcategories are then divided chronologically, for the most part into decades. This arrangement allows users to see how illustration (or the lack of it), graphic design, copy, and advertising strategies have evolved over time.

Advertising–Tourism, which has nearly 1000 items, is divided thus: 1890-1919, 1920-1929, 1930-1939, 1940-1949, 1950-1959, 1960-1969, 1970-1979, 1980-1989, 1990-1999, 2000-2009, and soon 2010-2019. A generous sampling follows.

October 1904

From Travel Magazine, November 1926

From Travel Magazine, December 1926

1932

By Horace Taylor, From The Artist, June 1933

1949. 62 Years later, the Florida Vacation persists.

1950. This is a whole pamphlet published by the Pan American Union.

 

National Geographic, June 1968

Smithsonian, October 1972

1980's

1990

Culture & Travel, July/August 2008

Anatomy–Animals

Oh, the mandibular condyle

Yes, the glandula parotis

Indeed all the way to the end

of the jugular vein.

Be you a superficial flexor tendon

Or a deep flexor tendon

A Phalanx prima, secunda, or tertia

You are invited to dig in your hind claws

And sink in your unpaired canine tooth.

The Visual Arts Library Picture Collection Presents:

ANATOMY—ANIMALS

A subdivision of ANATOMY (which refers to human anatomy and which has the further subdivisions of ANATOMYEYES ANATOMY—HANDS, and ANATOMY – NERVOUS SYSTEM) ANATOMYANIMALS has approximately 100 items. Please find a sampling below.

Da Vinci

Da Vinci sussing out the horsely dimensions.

Antonie van Leeuwenhoek, the “father of microbiology,” sketches out the intestinal protozoa of frogs.

The Visual Arts Library Picture Collection Presents…

another installment of “Let the Pictures Tell You.”

Now that you look your best, it’s time to feel your best. It’s time to get glad,  and so it’s apt that we turn to the picture subject “Humor.”

[Please note the quotations–before I added the quotes I could not bring myself to add anything to the folder, I would just imagine some smartypants going through the folder and snidely remarking, “oh yeah, this is real funny.” But with the quotes I freed myself from the constraints of judging something humorous. When adding an image I am simply recognizing that someone else thought that it was funny.]

Also featured: Dance and Sports–Exercise & Fitness.

Start your day with some Mysore-style Ashtanga Yoga (in Mysore, India, if possible).

If gladness remains elusive, and you feel like your world is deteriorating around you, you can  at least still dress the part.

And this, absolute gladness.

Next up, wealth.