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Exhibits in Baker-Berry Library
Throughout the year, the Dartmouth College Library features exhibits highlighting its collections, often in conjunction with college lectures and events. The two main exhibit areas in the Baker-Berry Library are located in Baker Main hall and along Berry Main Street. Other Dartmouth College Library exhibit locations include: The Biomedical Libraries | Rauner Special Collections Library
| Current Library Exhibits | ||||||
Dartmouth College Library Alumni Memorial Books Program Exhibit - Coming Soon to Berry Main Street |
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Facing the North Wind: The Morton E. Wise Collection of Maurice SendakBaker Main Hall, Baker-Berry Library, April 1-June 30 The Dartmouth College Library is honored to acquire the Morton E. Wise Collection of Maurice Sendak in recognition of the 10th anniversary of the Roth Center for Jewish Life at Dartmouth College. The collection offers innumerable opportunities for research especially when placed into the context of the other important children's book collections housed in Rauner Library. Facing the North Wind explores Sendak's work in relation to the Victorian book illustrators he points to as his key influences while investigating dominant themes of his writing. This exhibition was curated by Patti Houghton and Jay Satterfield and designed by Dennis Grady. The materials were prepared by Deborah Howe and Lauren Telepak. |
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| Recent Library Exhibits | ||||||
3-d Modeling and Rapid Prototyping In Architectural DesignBerry Main Street through April 18, 2008 Baker-Berry Library currently has an exhibit of rapid prototyped models of an architectural design class using Biomimicry as an inspiration for building design. Some work was done using computer modeling and rapid prototyping to document traditional Japanese architecture. The models were produced by the Rapid Prototyper Machine at Thayer School of Engineering. This exhibit is a direct result of the Leslie Humanities Center Fellowship in Digital Media; it is a research project of Dartmouth Senior Lecturer, Karolina Kawiaka and includes work by her students in Biomimicry Studio - Architecture 2/3- Fall 2007 from the Studio Art Department. The objective of Senior Lecturer Karolina Kawiaka's Leslie Humanities Center Fellowship in Digital Media research project was for her to study, experience, and digitally document examples of Asian domestic and sacred architecture and gardens. She then developed a series of digitally photographed and modeled construction details and examples of traditional buildings for research and teaching purposes in architecture classes at Dartmouth College. Subsequent work by Kawiaka's students (Anna Stork '08, Patrick Hamon '08, Julian Henderson '08, and Yihan Hao '08) is included in this exhibit. This exhibit will remain on display in Berry Library until mid-April. It is located in the Berry Main Street exhibit cases in front of the Baker-Berry reference desk. Please stop by and take a look. |
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Polar Connections ExhibitBaker Main Street through March 21, 2008 You are welcome to celebrate and explore the Dickey Institute of Arctic Studies Exhibit titled Polar Connections: Dartmouth and the Earth's Cold Regions in Baker-Berry Library. The Baker Library Main Hall panels tell the story of Dartmouth's long and distinguished tradition of polar exploration and research. These "Polar Connections" extend from the earliest days of the College and are built upon generations of faculty and student efforts to unlock the mysteries of the cold regions. This exhibit traces the history and legacy of Dartmouth's role in Northern and Polar Studies by highlighting the accomplishments of students and faculty in the Arctic and Antarctic. The Berry Main Street exhibit, Polar Connections: Ways of Knowing, features items such as sculpture, scientific instruments, texts and video to explore varied perspectives of the polar regions. |
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Puzzled about Math?
Mechanical puzzles from the collection of Mathematics professor Peter Winkler are on display in Baker/Berry Main Street through the end of February. They are on exhibit to complement Mechanical Puzzles Day in the Math Dept. Feb 19th when speakers and collectors will be gathering to discuss and display mechanical puzzles. On Feb 19th Baker/Main will have two tables of hands-on puzzles we can play with and try to solve. These puzzles are on loan from the 30,000 piece Jerry Slocum Collection of Mechanical Puzzles, Brainteasers & Ingenious Objects collection held at the Lilly Library, Indiana University. Following Puzzle Day, these hands-on puzzles will be held at Kresge Library through the end of February. Recreational math titles about or related to the mathematics of mechanical puzzles from the Cook Mathematics Collection are on display near the self check-out in Baker/Berry. Heather Gere designed this eye catching display. Andrea Bartelstein has arranged for a stop on the Cell Phone Library Tour at the Mechanical Puzzles exhibit. Call Call 603-283-6890, then press 30 followed by # to listen to Pete's audio description of the exhibit. |
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Roz Chast ExhibitRoz Chast has been a cartoonist for The New Yorker for 30 years. An artist whose drawings portray the everyday anxieties and insecurities of modern life, she provides a social commentary for our times. She is a Montgomery Fellow in residence at Dartmouth from January 28-30, 2008. Her Montgomery Fellow Lecture entitled Theories Of Everything and Much, Much More is scheduled for Tuesday, January 29 at 4:30 PM in Filene Auditorium. Roz Chast has generously loaned some of her original drawings and they are on display in Baker-Berry Library near the reference area on Berry Main Street. For more information on Roz Chast, see the VOX of Dartmouth article. |
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Mark Doty Book Display |
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Poet and author Mark Doty will be giving the Eighth Annual Stonewall Lecture at Dartmouth College, on Thursday, October 18, at 4pm in Filene Auditorium. The lecture, sponsored by the Women's and Gender Studies Program, is entitled "The Pressure of Reality: Writing in the Age of AIDS." In honor of Doty's appearance, Baker-Berry Library is displaying a selection of his works from the Library's collection. Mark Doty is the author of seven books of poems, three volumes of nonfiction prose, and a memoir. His writings have appeared in many magazines, including the London Review of Books, Poetry, and the New Yorker, as well as anthologies and collections. Doty has received numerous awards and fellowships, including the National Book Critics Circle Award, two Lambda Literary Awards, and a Guggenheim fellowship, and he is the only American poet to have received the T.S. Eliot Prize in the U.K. Doty lives in New York City and in Houston, Texas, where he is John and Rebecca Moores Professor in the graduate program at the University of Houston. |
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Guild of Book Workers 100th Anniversary Exhibition
The Guild of Book Workers 100th Anniversary Exhibition is featured at the Baker-Berry Library from September 21, 2007 through November 30, 2007. This traveling exhibition features the recent works of 62 bookbinders and book artists, members of the Guild of Book Workers. Entries run the gamut from traditional bindings and historic structures, to pop-ups and other playful book forms, to purely sculptural works. Text and imagery are produced by numerous printmaking methods, calligraphy, photography and digital output reflecting classic texts, political viewpoints, personal histories, and the sensual experience of reading a book. |
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Africa in 3-D: Diversity, Demographics & DiscoveryThe theme for Geography Awareness Week in November 2006 was "Africa in 3-D." To highlight that theme and showcase the winners of the 2006 GIS Poster Contest, we have an exhibit which focuses on all aspects of the African continent. The photographs are courtesy of Judith Byfield, a professor in History and Women & Gender Studies. The scenes showing on the monitor are from various episodes of National Geographic's Africa and the Wonders of Africa with Henry Louis Gates, Jr. |
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"This Is My Country": Indigenous Australian Women Speak Their WorldsThis exhibit highlights traditions and social conditions of women from a number of different Australian Aboriginal communities, complementing the Hood Museum's Dreaming Their Way: Australian Aboriginal Women Painters. This exhibit was curated by Amy Witzel and designed by Dennis Grady. |
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Wenda Gu Exhibit
Part of his ongoing global united nations hair monument project, the green house is a massive sculpture created from hair collected from thousands of Dartmouth students, faculty, and staff and Upper Valley community members. Wenda Gu's hair sculptures arise from his dream that through his art he might unite humanity and encourage international understanding. An exhibition of the artist's recent works on paper is presented concurrently in the Hood's galleries. Organized by the Hood Museum of Art, Dartmouth College, in partnership with the Dartmouth College Library, and generously funded by a grant from the LEF Foundation, the William B. Jaffe and Evelyn A. Hall Fund, the Eleanor Smith Fund, and the George O. Southwick 1957 Memorial Fund. For more information, visit the Hood Museum of Art web site at or call (603) 646-2808. For information about Wenda Gu, visit the Wenda Gu web site. |
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Read Banned Books!
Celebrate Banned Books Week (September 23-30) at the Library by reading a book that has been banned or challenged. For the next few weeks, several of the Libraries at Dartmouth will exhibit books that have been banned or challenged throughout the history of reading and scholarship. Baker-Berry Library will display a selection from the American Library Association's list of the 100 most frequently challenged books of 1990-2000. Please feel free to browse through and borrow the books in the exhibit. Dana Library will feature four books that have incited controversy in the life sciences: Charles Darwin's The Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection, Havelock Ellis's Studies in the Psychology of Sex, Sigmund Freud's The Essentials of Psychoanalysis, and Alfred Kinsey's Sexual Behavior in the Human Female. For a historical perspective check out Rauner Library's "500 Years of Banned Books" exhibition. Focusing on only one book from each of five centuries, the exhibition exposes themes that have inspired censorship: controversial philosophy, heretical science, radical political thought, depictions of race, and sexually explicit literature. The exhibition is on view in the Rauner Library Reading Room through October 9. Banned Books Week celebrates the freedom to read and express one's opinion in a democratic society, as well as the importance of ensuring that unpopular viewpoints are made available to those who want to learn about them. The event is sponsored by the American Library Association, the American Society of Journalists and Authors, and the National Association of College Stores, among others. For more information, talk to a librarian or visit the ALA web site. |
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Samuel R. Delany Book Display |
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This exhibition highlights the works of Samuel R. Delany, the author of such classic science fiction novels as The Einstein Intersection, Babel-17, Nova, Stars in My Pockets Like Grains of Sand, and Dhalgren, as well as the Return to Neveryon series. Delany has won the Nebula Award, the Hugo Award and the James Tiptree, Jr. Award for his work in science fiction. He also won the William Whitehead Memorial Award for a lifetime's contribution to gay and lesbian literature. |
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