Hello Ken,
We have in our reference room a two-volume set that may be of
help:
Jackson, Virginia. _Art Museums of the World_.
New York: Greenwood Press, 1987. The US is in vol. 2. Most
of the largest museums in the country are included. Of course, museum
collections change and/or grow with time, so this is a bit out of date, but the
historical information will be helpful to you. Sadly, Pittsburgh is
missing – so nothing on the Carnegie Museum of Art which was founded in 1885.
The Carnegie International began in 1886. (one year younger than the Venice
Biennale). There are some historical volumes on the Carnegie
International that I will let below. I hope other members of ARLIS/NA are
sending you any volumes on the history of museums in their cities. What a
wonderful research idea!
Carnegie Institute. Annual Report. Pittsburgh:
The Institute. Hillman Library – AS36/P691a
Hillman Library has: 1912/1913, 1917/1918-1918/1919,
1926/1926-1982, 1984-1986
A complete set of the Carnegie Institute’s
annual report is located at the Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh.
Carnegie Magazine 57 (September/October 1995).
Special issue on “The Carnegie Centennial.” Frick –
Arranged alphabetically by title. Also available online at
www.carnegiemuseums.org.cmag/
Dawson, Mary R. “Mr. Carnegie’s
Museum.” Carnegie Magazine 57 (November – December
1985): 28-31. Frick – Shelved alphabetically by title.
Gangewere, R. Jay. “The Origins of the
Carnegie.” Carnegie Magazine 56 (November/December
1992): 24+. Frick – Shelved alphabetically by title.
Kinkaid, Agnes Dodds. Celebrating the First 100
Years of The Carnegie in Pittsburgh, 1895-1995. Pittsburgh: The
Carnegie, 1995. Hillman – AS36/P79K559/1995b (copy also in Hillman
– Special Collections – 3rd floor)
The Carnegie Museums has some handbooks of parts of their
collections too. You may also find helpful information on the museum’s
web site.
Clark, Vicki. International
Encounters: The Carnegie International and Contemporary Art, 1896-1996.
Pittsburgh: Carnegie Museum of Art, 1996. Frick Fine Arts Library
– N6487/P57/C373/1996
Includes the
following essays: “Work in Progress: History and the Carnegie
International,” by Vicki Clark; “Mr. Carnegie’s Wise
Extravagance: The Founding of the International,” by Kenneth
Neal; “An American Salon in Pittsburgh: The Carnegie
International in the John W. Beatty Years, 1896-1921,” by Lois Marie Fink;
“Gambling, Fencing, and Camouflage: Homer Saint-Gaudens and the
Carnegie International, 1922-1950,” by Susan Platt; and
“’The Modern World Is Our Business’: The Carnegie
International in the Gordon Bailey Washburn Years, 1950-1962” by Bruce
Altshuler; and “Taking the Walls Off the Mansion of
Modernism: The Carnegie International, 1964-1995,” by Kay
Larson.
Conkelton, Sheryl. An
International Legacy: Selections from the Carnegie Museum of Art.
[Exhibition: Oklahoma City Museum of Art, May 16 – August 10, 2003;
Nevada Museum of Art, January 9 – April 4, 2004; and Mobile Museum of
Art, January 7 – April 3, 2005] New York: American Federation
of Arts, 2003. Frick Fine Arts Library – N6487/P57C373/2003
Includes an essay on the history of
the Carnegie International and the formation of the permanent collection
as well as a large section devoted to biographies of some of the artists
represented in the collection.
Neal, Kenneth. A Wise
Extravagance: The Founding of the Carnegie International Exhibitions,
1895-1901. Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press,
1996. Frick Fine Arts Library - N6487/P57/C375/1995
(Copies also located in Hillman Library, the Archives Service Center, and
Darlington Room Library)
O’Connor, John, Jr. The
History of the Pittsburgh International Carnegie Institute, 1896 – 1952.
Pittsburgh: The Institute, 195?. Frick Fine Arts Library –
N4830/C28/O1
From: ART LIBRARIES
SOCIETY DISCUSSION LIST [mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of Soehner,
Ken
Sent: Saturday, April 17, 2010 12:54 PM
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: [ARLIS-L] History of art museum libraries
I am doing some research on the history of American art
museum libraries. I would be very grateful for pointers to sources on the
founding and development of any art museum library, either the one in which you
work or others you know about. Annual reports, published or internal
histories, news stories, interviews, archival sources, personal reminiscences,
or anything else you can think of are all welcome. These discussions
often appear in museum publications that are not indexed. I know there are some
museum publications in JSTOR that contain articles or references to the
individual museum’s library, but I have found it difficult to locate
other sources.
Any assistance would be greatly appreciated.
Thanks so much and looking forward to seeing friends and
colleagues in Boston.
Ken
Kenneth Soehner
Arthur K. Watson Chief Librarian
Thomas J. Watson Library
The Metropolitan Museum of Art
1000 Fifth Avenue
New York, NY 10028
Phone: 212 570-3934
Fax: 212 570-3847
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