Information on Local Art and Artists
Posted: April 3, 2013 Filed under: Art Library, People | Tags: Romuald Kraus, sculpture Leave a comment »Finding information on Local Art and Artists
Have you ever wanted to know more about a local artist whose work you have seen or read about? If so, using the resources on local artists at U of L’s Art Library can help. The library keeps clipping files on local artists containing newspaper articles, exhibition announcements, pamphlets and sometimes even student papers. We have also indexed the Courier-Journal art columns since 1944 and those columns contain a treasure trove of material on local art and artists.
Romuald Kraus (1891-1954) is a perfect example of the art library’s resources. You might have seen his sculpture in the Music School. Called Reminiscence, it was made from Tennessee marble in 1939 and presented to the School of Music in 1952 by the Louisville Philharmonic Chorus and the sculptor. Below is Reminiscence.
A library file on Kraus provides the following biographical information: Kraus was born in Austria and emigrated to the U.S. in 1924. He taught at the Cincinnati Art Academy before coming to the University of Louisville in 1947. A man who eschewed the limelight, he nevertheless was thrust into it when, in 1935 he was awarded a commission in a national competition to sculpt a figure of Justice for the Newark, N.J. federal courtroom. Kraus’ Justice had no blindfold, scales or sword and definitely did not look like a Roman sculpture, the style we are all familiar with. Justice won accolades from most but censure from others. Federal judge Guy L. Fake, in whose courtroom the sculpture was supposed to reside, said the piece smacked “blatantly of Communism,” and that it conveyed “ruthless confiscation” rather than justice.
The astute researcher will also find that the Art Library has the papers of Romuald Kraus which contain correspondence between Kraus and his wife Esther, various Kraus relatives, the sculptor Henry Kreis, and others. The collection also includes Kraus’ sketchbooks and exhibition lists, along with biographical information about Kraus and his brother Leo, catalogs, articles, and photographs related to Justice and Kraus’ other work. Kraus’ papers were instrumental in the work of graduate student Eddie-Sue McDowell whose 1992 master’s thesis was titled Romuald Kraus : Justice and other work for the Works Progress Administration, 1933-1943.
Another researcher, Yale law professor Judith Resnick and co-author Dennis Curtis, used the Kraus papers for their book called Representing Justice; Invention, Controversy, and Rights in City-States and Democratic Courtrooms (Yale University Press, 2011, available in the Art Library). Resnick and Curtis furthered the research on the controversy surrounding Kraus’ Justice. In 1939, during the dust-up, the statue was part of an exhibit of modern art sent to San Francisco. It received not only praise and an award but also a request that it be installed in a federal building in Covington, KY. In 1941, the Covington courthouse got a copy of the work.
Below is a photograph of Kraus with the 7 foot tall, almost 700 pound bronze Justice.
The Nelle Peterson Christmas Card Collection in the Art Library
Posted: December 3, 2012 Filed under: Art Library, Collections Leave a comment » The Nelle Peterson Christmas Card Collection was purchased at auction in 1967 by Margaret Bridwell, then art librarian at U of L. The 550 cards in the collection were created mainly by Louisville artists, most of them in the mid-20th century. The collection has been added to regularly since its purchase. Below is a sampling of some of the cards in the collection.
John Begley, painter and printmaker, is currently Gallery Director and Critical & Curatorial Studies Professor at U of L. Begley received his BFA from the University of New Mexico and his MFA from Indiana University.
Darrell Brothers, from Covington, KY, received his MAT and MFA from Indiana University, taught art in the Cincinnati public schools and later became head of the art department at Thomas More College in Crestview, Kentucky.
Chuck Byrne, a U of L graduate, is a graphic designer who also teaches, and writes about graphic design. His work has been in many exhibits and he has curated exhibits as well.
Nancy Currier, art teacher at Foster Academy, has an art degree from U of L. She created this collaged card using images from plumbing supply catalogs.
Lucy Diecks studied at the Corcoran Fine Arts School in Washington, D.C. and received her BFA from Syracuse University. She was one of Louisville’s most influential art instructors, teaching at Atherton for 30 years.
Robert J. Doherty established U of L’s Photographic Archives while a professor of design at the Hite Art Institute. A photographer as well as designer, he left U of L to become director of the International Museum of Photography at the George Eastman House.
Clara Eagle, silversmith, interior designer and photographer, chaired the art department at Murray State for over twenty years and was a founding member of the Kentucky Guild of Artists and Craftsmen.
Louise Galloway was head of the main library’s Circulation Department at U of L for many years. The browsing collection in Ekstrom Library is named for her.
Billy Hertz earned his BFA in pottery at Florida Atlantic University, switching to painting during his graduate studies at U of L. Hertz was instrumental in the formation of the “art zone” on Market Street.
Ainslie Hewett specialized in the decorative arts including antique lettering and ornamental wood carving. He was best known for his distinctive bookplate designs; his bookplate collection is housed in the Art Library and can also be seen online in our digital collections.
Yin Rei Hicks, a native of China and a long time resident of Indiana, studied painting and sculpture at U of L, receiving an MFA. She taught art in the New Albany-Floyd County schools.
Clay Lancaster, native of Lexington, KY, was an independent scholar who researched and wrote about nineteenth and twentieth-century American architecture and the arts and ideas of the Far East. He also wrote and illustrated half a dozen books for children. Lancaster held the Morgan Professorship at U of L in 1983.
Mary Spencer Nay received her BA and MA degrees from U of L. She also studied the Cincinnati Art Academy, the Art Students League and the International School of Art in Mexico. She taught at U of L from 1959 until 1979, and established the first curriculum in creative art. Her award-winning work is in numerous collections.
Mary Louise Speed was a landscape architect, president of the Louisville Society of Landscape Architects and garden columnist for the Courier-Journal. She died in 1971.
Kenneth V. Young graduated from U of L in 1962 with a BS in design and painting. Mary Spencer Nay, whose card is in this exhibit, was one of his teachers. He designed exhibits for the Smithsonian institution from 1964 until 1994 and then worked as a museum consultant.
Louisville Artist Marguerite Gifford
Posted: June 1, 2012 Filed under: Art Library Leave a comment »Marguerite Peters Gifford was a fixture on the art scene in Louisville from the early 1940s through the 1960s. Born in 1887, Gifford was educated in the Louisville public school system and at the prestigious Semple Collegiate School. Early on she became an active member of community organizations such as the Daughters of the American Revolution, and served as president of the Woman’s Club of Louisville. At this point, Gifford’s life was typical of a woman of her class. Then, in 1937, about two years after the death of her husband, she took a trip that changed her life.
Gifford set off in the summer of 1937 for a two-month tour sponsored by the International School of Art. After visiting artists in four European countries, when her tour group was scheduled to depart, the 60 year old widow decided to remain on the continent, traveling extensively until the fall of 1941. During her 4-1/2 year, world-wide travels Gifford witnessed notable events, such as the meeting of Mussolini and Hitler in Florence. She was close enough to see that “Hitler looked cold and ordinary and Mussolini warm and expensive.”
She also sailed to far-off locations, including New Zealand, Bombay, Hong Kong and Thailand.
Greetings from Bangkok
These journeys allowed her to experience the different cultures of the areas and her artwork reflected that variety. In certain areas, like New Caledonia, she was so inspired by the natives that she extended her stay in order to paint them.
Kanaka Chief from New Caledonia
Gifford’s travels also allowed her to learn about and experiment with different artistic mediums. In London she took lessons in watercolor painting and in Japan she was introduced to woodblock printing.
Woodblock Print
Upon her return to the U.S., Gifford became a well-known figure on the local art scene. She was repeatedly featured in the Louisville Courier-Journal, and often exhibited at local venues as well as in galleries outside the state. Gifford also continued to study art, working with Fritz Pfeiffer in Provincetown, Massachusetts. With her global experiences, her work in several media, her strong support of the arts and her Old Louisville community, Gifford established herself as an important force in the Kentucky art scene.
The Bridwell Art Library has the papers of Marguerite Gifford, a small collection that includes her sketchbook, drawings, photographs, her abundantly-stamped passport and the texts of lectures she delivered in Louisville.
Written with Colton Wilson, student assistant in the Art Library
The oldest books in the Art Library, Part VI
Posted: March 16, 2012 Filed under: Art Library, Books | Tags: rare books Leave a comment »This post continues the series on some of the earliest books in the Art Library’s collection, all of which are housed in the Art Library’s rare book room. If you want to see any of them, just ask at the desk.
Our next book to consider is another one with a very long title: Roma Subterranea Novissima : In Qua Post Antonium Bosium Antesignanum, Io: Severanum … et Celebres Alios Scriptores Antiqua Christianorum et Præcipue Martyrum Cœmeteria, Tituli, Monimenta, Epitaphia, Inscriptiones, ac Nobiliora Sanctorum Sepulchra Sex Libris Distincta Illustrantur et Quamplurimæ Res Ecclesiasticae Iconibus Graphice Describuntur, ac Multiplici Tum Sacra, Tum Profana Eruditione Declarantur. It was written by Antonio Bosio and published in 2 volumes in Rome in 1651.
Antonio Bosio (1575-1629) gave up the study of law at the age of 18 to devote himself to the study of early Christian history, particularly the Roman catacombs. He began his exploration of catacombs in 1593 and in the following years made many discoveries as he broke into numerous catacombs and cubiculum, small family tombs often decorated with frescoes. Because of his systematic exploration of the catacombs, he is considered the founder of the science of Christian archaeology.
In 1597 he completed the Historia passionis SS Martyrum Caeciliae (Rome, 1600), illustrated with engravings by Antonio Tempesta. Roma Sotterranea was published in Italian between 1632 and 1634, shortly after Bosio’s death and was profusely illustrated with plans and engravings by Francesco Fulcaro. The book was re-published by Paolo Aringhi in 1651, with considerable alterations and omissions, and it is this later edition, now with Novissima added to the title, which the Art Library owns.
Below is the title page and one of the interior pages of Roma Subterranea Novissima:
Why does the library collect rare books? Because they are primary source materials of art history, offering a first-hand account of an artist’s life, the first critical response to a building or painting, or a new theory of art or architecture. As the building blocks of art history, they remain relevant sources for researchers.
The oldest books in the Art Library, Part V
Posted: February 16, 2012 Filed under: Art Library, Books | Tags: rare books Leave a comment »This post continues the series on some of the earliest books in the Art Library’s collection, all of which are housed in the Art Library’s rare book room. If you want to see any of them, just ask at the desk.
The next book to consider is by Antonio Tempesta (1555-1630), a Florentine painter and printmaker, known for hunting and battle scenes and depictions of nature, particularly animals. After working in Florence, he went to Rome where he was commissioned by Pope Gregory XIII to paint religious scenes in the Vatican Palace and a chapel fresco at S. Stefano Rotondo. This was followed by commissions for several palazzi and villas.
Tempesta created more than 1000 prints which were widely distributed. They covered subjects from the Bible, to Alexander the Great, to the book discussed today: Metamorphoseon, Sive Transformationum Ovidianarum Libri Quindecim, Aeneis Formis ab Antonio Tempesta Florentino Incisi, et in Pictorum Antiquitatisque Studiosorum Gratiam Nunc Primum Exquisitissimis Sumptibus a Petro de Iode Autuerpiano in Lucem Editi. Published in Amsterdam, probably in 1606, the book is comprised of a series of engravings illustrating Ovid’s Metamorphoses. Metamorphoseon was often used as a model book for artists. Students received their initial training using model books and artists often used model books as a source for elements in new compositions. It is possible to trace the imagery in works of even well-known artists, (Jacques Callot, Peter Paul Rubens and Diego Velázquez, for example) to particular model books. Once it became common for sketches to be made for every commission, model books were no longer used by painters, although they continued to be used by artisans and decorative artists.
Below are the title page of Metamorphoseon and a typical page from the book.
Why does the library collect rare books? Because they are primary source materials of art history, offering a first-hand account of an artist’s life, the first critical response to a building or painting, or a new theory of art or architecture. As the building blocks of art history, they remain relevant sources for researchers.
The oldest books in the Art Library – Part III
Posted: November 16, 2011 Filed under: Art Library, Books | Tags: rare books Leave a comment »This post continues the series on some of the earliest books in the Art Library’s collection, all of which are housed in the Art Library’s rare book room. If you want to see any of them, just ask at the desk.
Piero Valeriano is the author of the next book we’ll look at. Titled Ioannis Pierii Valeriani Bellunensis Hieroglyphica, Seu, de Sacris Aegyptiorum Aliarumque Gentium Literis Commentarii : Summa cum Industria Exarati, & in Libros Quinquaginta Octo Redacti … : Accessere Nunc Primùm Perutiles ad Marginem Annotationes Nunquam Hactenus Excusae, unà cum Declamatiuncula Pro Barbis, ac Eiusdem Poematibus … cum Indice Gemino, it was published in Lugduni (Lyon, France) by Sumptibus Pauli Frelon in 1602.
Pierio Valeriano (1477-1560) was a scholar and poet and, like many 16th century humanists, worked for rich cardinals and bishops. In Valeriano’s case, the bishop he worked for was Pope Leo X. His book, the beginning of which translates as Hieroglyphics or sacred writing of the Egyptians, argues that the symbolic wisdom of Egyptians accords with the fundamental teachings of Christian theology. His book is a pioneering work on hieroglyphics and emblematic literature, bringing together the allegorical symbolism of medieval bestiaries and the symbolic approach to Egyptian writing.
Emblematic literature flourished in Europe in the 16th and 17th centuries. An emblem combines both words and images, the interpretation of which is meant to require a degree of intellectual effort . The result of that effort is an understanding of the intended moral lesson. Emblems generally consist of three parts: a short motto, a pictorial representation or icon, and the explanation of the link between them in an epigram.
Below are the title page and a typical page:
Why does the library collect rare books? Because they are primary source materials of art history, offering a first-hand account of an artist’s life, the first critical response to a building or painting, or a new theory of art or architecture. As the building blocks of art history, they remain relevant sources for researchers.
The oldest books in the Art Library – Part II
Posted: October 17, 2011 Filed under: Art Library, Books | Tags: rare books Leave a comment »This post continues the series on some of the earliest books in the Art Library’s collection, all of which are housed in the Art Library’s rare book room. If you want to see any of them, just ask at the desk.
Here’s our next book, one with an exceedingly long title, by Giovanni Paolo Lomazzo: Trattato Dell’arte Della Pittura, Scoltura, et Architettura / Di Gio. Paolo Lomazzo … : Diuiso in Sette Libri : Ne’ Quali Si Discorre de la Proportione, de’ Moti, de’ Colori, de’ Lumi, de La Prospettiua, de La Prattica de La Pittura, et Finalmente de le Istorie d’Essa Pittura ; con Vna Tauola de’ Nomi de Tutti li Pitttori [Sic], Scoltori, Architetti, & Matematici Antichi, & Moderni.
It was published in 1585 in Milan by Paolo Gottardo Pontio, Stampatore Regio, a Instantia di Pietro Tini.
Giovanni Lomazzo’s book roughly translates as “A Treatise on the art of painting, sculpture and architecture… in seven books: motion, proportion, color, perspective, light, the practice of painting and the history of painting, including a table of name of all the painters, sculptors, architects and mathematicians, ancient and modern.” Whew!
Lomazzo was a northern Italian painter, poet and art theorist, and notable in intellectual circles in the late 16th century. When, at 33, blindness forced him to stop painting, he switched to writing about art. His works are some of the most important of the Mannerist period and remain a major source on Milanese artistic life.
The Trattato is one of his most ambitious and scholarly works. In addition to biographies of contemporary artists, he gave practical instruction for creating art. The treatise is also notable for the emphasis it places on light and psychological expression in art.
Here’s the title page:
and one of the pages:
Why does the Art Library have these books? Because they are primary source materials for art history, offering a first-hand account of an artist’s life, the first critical response to a building or painting, or a new theory of art or architecture. As the building blocks of art history, they remain relevant sources for researchers.
Why Quilts Matter
Posted: September 20, 2011 Filed under: Art Library | Tags: quilts kentucky 2 Comments »Why Quilts Matter is the title of a new program (and DVD) now showing on Kentucky Educational Television. This fascinating 9 part series is not to be missed. Below are just a few of the highlights from the series.
You’ll discover how quilts can illuminate our past. For example,
- Standards of living can be deduced from the fabric choices women made.
- Increasing numbers of quilts made in the American west with fabrics manufactured in the east directly demonstrate improvements in transportation.
- When women from all parts of the country started using the same patterns, it is because national magazines were being published.
- Constrained in their ability to speak out, women got their ideas across in quilts, as long as the viewer could decode the message.
- An increase in the number of quilts made for decoration, not function, indicates an increase in the country’s wealth.
The art marketplace is explained. You’ll understand how value is assigned to a quilt and why some old quilts might be valued very low while new quilts can command high prices. And you’ll get insights into quilts in the museum world as well as the marketplace.
You’ll learn from an extended conversation on what it art and what is craft. Is a quilt an example of craft when it’s on the bed and art when it’s on the wall? Does it even matter?
You’ll get an insight into how huge the quilt world is:
- 30,000 people attend the quilt festival in Paducah, Kentucky each year. That’s more people than live in Paducah!
- 250,000 people visited the most recent quilt festival in Tokyo, Japan, which lasted for 10 days.
- There are 54 magazines devoted to various aspects of quilt making.
Why Quilts Matter was funded and produced by the Kentucky Quilt Project. The UofL Libraries is fortunate to have the Kentucky Quilt Project records in the University Archives. Shelly Zegart, one of the co-founders of the project, is also the moving force behind Why Quilts Matter. Zegart is an internationally-known curator, lecturer and writer on all aspect of quilts.
If you miss the series on KET, stop in the Art Library and watch the DVD. You won’t be disappointed. And make sure to look at the accompanying website, whyquiltsmatter.org. It’s full of helpful information, particularly the download-able Image Resource Guides.
The oldest books in the Art Library – Part I
Posted: September 15, 2011 Filed under: Art Library, Books | Tags: rare books 2 Comments »This is the first in a series of blog posts that look at some of the earliest books in the Art Library’s collection, all housed in the Art Library’s rare book room. If you want to see any of them, just ask at the desk.
The first book is the oldest in the collection – Anton Francesco Doni’s I Marmi del Doni, Academico Peregrino, published in Vinegia (Venice) by F. Marcolini in 1552-53.
Anton Francesco Doni (1513-1574) was an Italian writer and poet. He served at courts in Piacenza, Milan and Pavia but, finding it difficult to accept the conservative rules of court life, he started his own press in Florence. Unfortunately, his business lasted for only two years. He was an eccentric figure in Renaissance Italy, working outside the traditional cultural centers of court and church. I Marmi is a satirical poem, parodying the Petrachan idea of feminine perfection. Below are the title page from I Marmi del Doni and a typical page.
Why does the library collect rare books? Because they are primary source materials for art history, offering a first-hand account of an artist’s life, the first critical response to a building or painting, or a new theory of art or architecture. As the building blocks of art history, they remain relevant sources for researchers.
It’s also very cool to hold a 458 year old book in your hands!
A Trick of the Hand and Eye: Optical Illusions in Art
Posted: August 24, 2011 Filed under: Art Library, Books | Tags: optical illusions in art Leave a comment »Is it two faces or a vase? Could it be a young woman or an old crone? For centuries optical illusions have fascinated onlookers of every age and background. I’m certain the majority of us can remember staring at images of ziz-zagged lines and complementary colors waiting for them to magically twirl or shift. Unsurprisingly, this fascination with perception resonates throughout the art world. Artists employ techniques such as trompe l’oeil, literally translated as “deceive the eye”, to make flat works appear 3-dimensional or imbue patterns with patterns that create multiple images. For those of you wanting to have some fine art with your trickery, here are a few books in the Art Library that discuss the use of optical illusions in various artistic styles.
Masters of Deception: Escher, DalÍ & the Artists of Optical Illusion, by Al Seckel (ART LIB N 7430.5. .S414 2004)
Surrealist Salvador Dalí and Dutch graphic artist M. C. Escher are the undisputed experts on illusionistic images in art. This text juxtaposes a short biography of these figures with a large number of their most enigmatic works, including Dalí’s well-known painting The Hallucinogenic Toreador—in which portions of human faces can be seen on the mid-section of the Venus de Milo—and Escher’s’ print of a Waterfall that continuously flows upstream through a Rube Goldberg-style mechanism to fuel itself. Alongside these two are included more obscure artists, my favorites of which include 16th century Italian painter Giuseppe Arcimboldo—who fashioned portraits out of flowers and pieces of food—and Vik Muniz, a contemporary multi-media artist who works with food, soil and other refuse and whose chocolate version of Gericault’s Raft of the Medusa can be seen at our very own Speed Art Museum.
Guiseppe Arcimboldo, Summer, 1573
Op Art by Cyril Barrett (ART LIB N 6494 .O6B B28 1970b)
The use of optical illusions in art is so pervasive that critics and theorists took it upon themselves to designate the trend an artistic style. The term Op Art has since become an integral part of the art historical lexicon. Barrett’s text begins by considering the historical background of Op Art, citing the style’s origins in Impressionism, Neo-Impressionism, Futurism and modernist Russian movements. It then goes on to detail, in depth, certain aspects of the style, such as the effectual properties of color, line and other common features—a discussion illustrated by examples from famous figures like printmaker Bridget Riley, painter Josef Albers and Hungarian artist Victor Vaserely. Although Barrett’s work was published in 1970, and therefore excludes artists working in the same tradition today, it’s a worthy introduction to the history of the movement and a number of its early proponents.
Victor Vaserely, Zebras, 1932-42
Quilts of Illusion, by Laura Fisher(ART LIB NK 9112. F57 1988)
Optical illusions aren’t only found in more traditional media. Fabric and textiles artists have also found fascinating ways to incorporate deceiving designs into their works. This text includes multiple examples of quilts (a medium one might not perceive to be conducive to tricking the eye) that in fact fool the senses as well as any canonical style of art. Included are sections on various patterns, such as tumbling blocks and windmill blades, which form a particular illusionistic subset of quilting. For those interested in local art forms, the vast majority of these examples are culled from Kentucky and the surrounding areas. What’s more, there’s even a chapter at the end of the text that contains instructions on how to create your own entrancing artwork! If you’re at all intrigued by textile arts, this book is a great introduction to awesome styles a little off the beaten track.
Hattie McWilliams, Target, Kentucky, c. 1930
For more information on optical illusions in art visit the Art Library in Schneider Hall.
Written by Arts & Sciences senior Colton Wilson, student assistant in the Art Library.






























