Still Raising Hell

Member for

2 years 11 months
Submitted by Kathryn Dixson on

As artists, activists, and collectors, Billops and Hatch have been raising hell for more than 50 years - elevating public consciousness around "isms" that have shaped American culture, politics, and identities.

Exhibition Type
On-site
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The Art, Activism, and Archives of Camille Billops and James V. Hatch
Hero Subtitle
The Art, Activism, and Archives of Camille Billops and James V. Hatch
Description - Lead Paragraph

"This exhibition reflects on this dynamic couple's commitment to speak truth to power and explores the meaning and purpose of African American art." 

Description - Details

As artists, activists, and collectors, Billops and Hatch have been raising hell for more than 50 years - elevating public consciousness around "isms" that have shaped American culture, politics, and identities. Since 2002 the Stuart A. Rose Manuscript, Archives and Rare Book Library has been home to the comprehensive collection - playscripts, photographs, works of art, and more - of these two leading stewards of African American history.

Featured Photo
artists, activists, and collectors, Billops and Hatch
Robert W. Woodruff Library
Schatten Gallery
Level 3
Location - Map URL
Virtual Event
No
September 15, 2016 - May 28, 2017
Parking Information - Location
Fishburne parking deck
Link to Parking Information
Link Description for Parking Information

Weekdays: Free after 5pm | Weekends: Free

Link to visitor hours
Contact Information - Email address
kathryn.v.dixson@emory.edu
Sponsorship statement

Join us and help bring to life a treasure trove of materials that illuminates the African American experience from the late 19th century to the present.

Ensure the Billops-Hatch collection continues to influence, inspire, and empower. Become a sponsor today at emorylib.info/support-billops-hatch or contact Alex Wan at alex.wan@emory.edu or 404.727.5386

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Shakespeare Artists' Books

Member for

2 years 11 months
Submitted by Kathryn Dixson on

Artists' books are artworks that purposefully make use of, question, or explore the form of the book as an artistic medium. These pieces are usually made in small, limited editions or as unique works of art.

What you will see in this exhibition are examples of a bookmaking tradition that has been active for over 500 years. Like the First Folio, these artists' books are not just repositories of stories and information, but are also exquisite and beautiful works of art.

Exhibition Type
On-site
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Description - Lead Paragraph

"See a variety of artists' books, from miniatures to books created through the Phillips State Prison Book Project."

Description - Details

Artists’ books are artworks that purposefully make use of, question, or explore the form of the book as an artistic medium. These pieces are usually made in small, limited editions or as unique works of art.

What you will see in this exhibition are examples of a bookmaking tradition that has been active for over 500 years. Like the First Folio, these artists’ books are not just repositories of stories and information, but are also exquisite and beautiful works of art.

Featured Photo
Shakespeare's Flowers: Quotations from his Plays with Illustrations from Old Herbals (Malvern, England: De Walden Press, 1998) Photo Credit: Jan Kellett
Robert W. Woodruff Library
Level 2
Location - Map URL
Virtual Event
No
October 20, 2016 - February 26, 2017
Parking Information - Location
Fishburne parking deck
Link to Parking Information
Link Description for Parking Information

Weekdays: Free after 5pm | Weekends: Free

Link to visitor hours
Contact Information - Email address
kathryn.v.dixson@emory.edu
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1

Revealing Her Story

Member for

2 years 11 months
Submitted by Kathryn Dixson on

This exhibit is meant to give researchers and curious students alike a peak inside the collections of 9 African American women intellectuals, that are held in the Manuscript, Archives, and Rare Book Library (MARBL).  Amber L. Moore, the curator and a project archivist in MARBL, has selected items from each of the 9 collections to present.

Exhibition Type
On-site
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Documenting African American Women Intellectuals
Hero Subtitle
Documenting African American Women Intellectuals
Description - Details

This exhibit is meant to give researchers and curious students alike a peak inside the collections of 9 African American women intellectuals, that are held in the Rose Manuscript, Archives, and Rare Book Library. Amber L. Moore, the curator and a project archivist in Rose, has selected items from each of the 9 collections to present.

Featured Photo
Robert W. Woodruff Library
Level 2
Location - Map URL
Virtual Event
No
September 10, 2015 - March 09, 2016
Parking Information - Location
Fishburne parking deck
Link to Parking Information
Link Description for Parking Information

Weekdays: Free after 5pm | Weekends: Free

Link to visitor hours
Contact Information - Email address
kathryn.v.dixson@emory.edu
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Punk's Not Dead

Member for

2 years 11 months
Submitted by Kathryn Dixson on

This exhibit, Punk's Not Dead, tracks punk influence beyond music as it travels into written, visual, and material culture. Highlighting objects from the Rose Library's Punk collections as well as writing by Emory students, Punk's Not Dead invites you to consider how community and art shape one another.

Exhibition Type
On-site
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Punk's not dead exhibit
Description - Lead Paragraph

"... punk's harsh sounds and in-your-face style influenced fashion, art, film, and writing ..."

Description - Details

"Punk’s Not Dead" tracks punk influence beyond music as it travels into written, visual, and material culture. Highlighting objects from the Rose Library’s punk collections as well as writing by Emory students, this exhibit invites you to consider how community and art shape one another.

Featured Photo
Punk's Not Dead Exhibit
Robert W. Woodruff Library
Level 1
Location - Map URL
Virtual Event
No
April 15, 2019 - October 31, 2019
Parking Information - Location
Fishburne parking deck
Link to Parking Information
Link Description for Parking Information

Weekdays: Free after 5pm | Weekends: Free

Link to visitor hours
Contact Information - Email address
kathryn.v.dixson@emory.edu
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Plants Are Set Before Us

Member for

2 years 11 months
Submitted by Kathryn Dixson on

Emory's Herbarium and Dr. Harry Rusche's collection of Shakespearean-themed postcards help us illustrate the plants mentioned in the First Folio.  The Herbarium was established in 1949 to document and monitor plants used in research, medicine, and other significant endeavors.  These collections help reflect the primacy of nature in Shakespearean drama, where characters consistently encounter flowers, vegetables, potions, and poisons that influence their fates. 

Exhibition Type
On-site
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Shakespeare's Natural Worlds
Hero Subtitle
Shakespeare's Natural Worlds
Description - Lead Paragraph

"These collections help reflect the primacy of nature in Shakespearean drama, where characters consistently encounter flowers, vegetables, potions, and poisons that influence their fates."

Description - Details

Emory’s Herbarium and Dr. Harry Rusche’s collection of Shakespearean-themed postcards help us illustrate the plants mentioned in the First Folio.  The Herbarium was established in 1949 to document and monitor plants used in research, medicine, and other significant endeavors.  These collections help reflect the primacy of nature in Shakespearean drama, where characters consistently encounter flowers, vegetables, potions, and poisons that influence their fates.

Featured Photo
Poppy, Papaver Rhoeas, photo credit: Paige Knight
Robert W. Woodruff Library
Level 2
Location - Map URL
Virtual Event
No
March 16, 2016 - June 26, 2016
Parking Information - Location
Fishburne parking deck
Link to Parking Information
Link Description for Parking Information

Weekdays: Free after 5pm | Weekends: Free

Link to visitor hours
Contact Information - Email address
kathryn.v.dixson@emory.edu
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Pearl Cleage

Member for

2 years 11 months
Submitted by Kathryn Dixson on

One of the most acclaimed playwrights, Cleage produces works that celebrate the joy of being free. At the same time, she is committed to telling stories related to African Americans, and the complex issues surrounding racism, classism, and sexism.
 

Exhibition Type
On-site
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A Time for Reflection
Hero Subtitle
A Time for Reflection
Description - Lead Paragraph

"In a word, her work is indispensable."

Description - Details

One of the most acclaimed playwrights, Cleage produces works that celebrate the joy of being free. At the same time, she is committed to telling stories related to African Americans, and the complex issues surrounding racism, classism, and sexism.

Through her work, she explores the lives of African American women and how self-love and self-forgiveness are essential to the development of a healthy existence.

Few writers are able to make a sustained impact on the world during the period in which they live. Cleage has achieved this and more. In a word, her work is indispensable.

To celebrate and reflect on a life filled with tremendous courage, resilience, and brilliance, Emory University’s Rose Manuscript, Archives, and Rare Book Library and the Alliance Theatre have collaborated to bring the Pearl Cleage: A Time for Reflection exhibition to the Woodruff Arts Center.

Featured Photo
Woodruff Arts Center
Virtual Event
No
April 15, 2015 - May 10, 2015
Parking Information - Location
Woodruff Arts Center parking garage
Link to Parking Information
Link Description for Parking Information

Weekdays  
(Monday - Friday before 5 PM)

First 30 Minutes: Free 
First 4 Hours: $12
After 4 Hours: $17
High Museum of Art Members (during Museum hours): $8

Nights & Weekends
(Monday - Friday after 5 PM)  Saturday & Sunday
Flat Rate: $16

Valet (when available): $26

Prepaid
Prepaid Parking: $20
Prepaid Valet (when available): $26
Subscriber Prepaid: $15

Link to visitor hours
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Our Archives Could Be Your Life

Member for

2 years 11 months
Submitted by Kathryn Dixson on

LGBTQ+

Exhibition Type
On-site
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The photographs of Jon Arge & Allie Royce Soble
Hero Subtitle
The photographs of Jon Arge & Allie Royce Soble
Description - Lead Paragraph

"I never knew what I was doing. I just knew I had to do it. I wanted people to look their best and relay what was going on in the room." - Jon Arge

Description - Details

One way to understand a city is through the lives of its residents, the lives of locals like Jon Arge and Alli Royce Soble. These Atlanta artists and photographers carried their cameras everywhere they went. Day after day, week after week, month after month, they photographed their friends, family, places, events, and happenings. Over time these photos took on additional significance and weight; they became documentation of communities in Queer Atlanta. These collections illustrate how the Rose Library’s holdings can reflect your life, your friends, your family, and your community.

View the "Our Archives Could Be Your Life" online exhibit!

Featured Photo
"Azalea and Fern", polaroid by Jon Arge
Robert W. Woodruff Library
Level 3
Location - Map URL
Virtual Event
No
February 20, 2020 - May 15, 2022
Parking Information - Location
Fishburne parking deck
Link to Parking Information
Link to visitor hours
Contact Information - Email address
kathryn.v.dixson@emory.edu
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Othello

Member for

2 years 11 months
Submitted by Kathryn Dixson on

One of Shakespeare's most important works, Othello provides commentary on the 'rise of colonialism and imperialism,' as well as the ongoing struggle to define the qualities related to quintessential manhood and masculinity. Through the archival materials found in the Stuart A. Rose Library, this exhibition will explore the development of the play as a vehicle for African American actors such as Ira Aldridge, Paul Robeson, and Laurence Fishburne to claim the role of the 'Black Moor' from white men in black face. Through the exhibition and programming, we will explore the complexity of being a black man in a white world, and the meanings associated with Shakespeare's provocative representation of race and racism.

Exhibition Type
On-site
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The Moor Speaks
Hero Subtitle
The Moor Speaks
Description - Lead Paragraph

"Explore the meanings associated with Shakespeare's provocative representation of race and racism."

Description - Details

One of Shakespeare's most important works, Othello provides commentary on the “rise of colonialism and imperialism,” as well as the ongoing struggle to define the qualities related to quintessential manhood and masculinity.

Through the archival materials found in the Stuart A. Rose Library, this exhibition will explore the development of the play as a vehicle for African American actors such as Ira Aldridge, Paul Robeson, and Laurence Fishburne to claim the role of the “Black Moor” from white men in black face. Through the exhibition and programming, we will explore the complexity of being a black man in a white world, and the meanings associated with Shakespeare's provocative representation of race and racism.

Featured Photo
Othello Exhibition
Robert W. Woodruff Library
Level 2
Location - Map URL
Virtual Event
No
October 20, 2016 - February 24, 2017
Parking Information - Location
Fishburne parking deck
Link to Parking Information
Link Description for Parking Information

Weekdays: Free after 5pm | Weekends: Free

Link to visitor hours
Contact Information - Email address
kathryn.v.dixson@emory.edu
1
1

Open Access and the Book

Member for

2 years 11 months
Submitted by Kathryn Dixson on

Open access is the free, immediate, online availability of scholarship. Ideally, it includes some rights that allow others to reuse the scholarship at least for noncommercial educational purposes.

With the rise of open access initiatives around the globe, academics and university presses are exploring what it means to make a book open access while also ensuring that the book still serves its intended purpose.

Over the last twenty years, open access publishing in the scientific disciplines is commonplace. Yet the practices for open access publishing in the humanities are still developing.

Monographs, or academic books that present a sustained argument on a research question, have long served as the foundation of academic publishing in the humanities. Traditionally published as print books by university presses, monographs are often expensive to produce and to buy.

Publishing open access books yields a variety of benefits for both the reader and the author. This exhibit explores those benefits as well as the tensions that exist between open access and traditional publishing.

Exhibition Type
On-site
Hero Background Image
Description - Lead Paragraph

"Open access is the free, immediate, online availability of scholarship."

Description - Details

With the rise of open access initiatives around the globe, academics and university presses are exploring what it means to make a book open access while also ensuring that the book still serves its intended purpose. Ideally, Open Access includes some rights that allow others to reuse the scholarship at least for noncommercial educational purposes.

Over the last twenty years, open access publishing in the scientific disciplines is commonplace. Yet the practices for open access publishing in the humanities are still developing.

Monographs, or academic books that present a sustained argument on a research question, have long served as the foundation of academic publishing in the humanities. Traditionally published as print books by university presses, monographs are often expensive to produce and to buy.

Publishing open access books yields a variety of benefits for both the reader and the author. This exhibit explores those benefits as well as the tensions that exist between open access and traditional publishing.

Featured Photo
Robert W. Woodruff Library
Level 2
Location - Map URL
Virtual Event
No
October 02, 2017 - December 28, 2017
Parking Information - Location
Fishburne parking deck
Link to Parking Information
Link Description for Parking Information

Weekdays: Free after 5pm | Weekends: Free

Link to visitor hours
Contact Information - Email address
kathryn.v.dixson@emory.edu
Supplemental Content - Section Title
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Mobilizing the Battle of Atlanta

Member for

2 years 11 months
Submitted by Kathryn Dixson on

The Battle of Atlanta (July 22, 1864) figured prominently in the Union¿s conquest of the Confederacy during the final year of the American Civil War and in Abraham Lincoln¿s re-election to the US presidency. This exhibit describes the two-year project to create a mobile tour for exploring the physical traces of the battlefield, remnants of a Civil War fort and rifle pit, and monuments to fallen generals on opposing sides. This web-based mobile application combines a narrative of events by Battle of Atlanta researcher and tour leader Daniel A. Pollock with maps, video clips, and images into a handheld resource directing visitors to 12 tour stops. The project team of more than 30 individuals from the Emory Center for Digital Scholarship (ECDS) and the Robert W. Woodruff Library worked to create the tour app and its accompanying resources.

The mobile tour is accessible via a weblink, BattleAtl.org. The 150th anniversary of the battle is on July 22.

Exhibition Type
On-site
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Working with the Atlanta Cyclorama
Hero Subtitle
Working with the Atlanta Cyclorama
Description - Details

The Battle of Atlanta (July 22, 1864) figured prominently in the Union’s conquest of the Confederacy during the final year of the American Civil War and in Abraham Lincoln’s re-election to the US presidency. This exhibit describes the two-year project to create a mobile tour for exploring the physical traces of the battlefield, remnants of a Civil War fort and rifle pit, and monuments to fallen generals on opposing sides.

This web-based mobile application combines a narrative of events by Battle of Atlanta researcher and tour leader Daniel A. Pollock with maps, video clips, and images into a handheld resource directing visitors to 12 tour stops. The project team of more than 30 individuals from the Emory Center for Digital Scholarship (ECDS) and the Robert W. Woodruff Library worked to create the tour app and its accompanying resources.

The mobile tour is accessible via a weblink, BattleAtl.org.

Featured Photo
The Confederate charge on Leggett's Hill, the present location of the I-20 and Moreland Avenue interchange, is depicted in the background of the Atlanta Cyclorama painting. (Courtesy of the Atlanta Cyclorama).
Robert W. Woodruff Library
Level 3
Location - Map URL
Virtual Event
No
July 17, 2014 - November 30, 2014
Parking Information - Location
Fishburne parking deck
Link to Parking Information
Link Description for Parking Information

Weekdays: Free after 5pm | Weekends: Free

Link to visitor hours
Contact Information - Email address
kathryn.v.dixson@emory.edu
Supplemental Content - Section Title
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