Treasure trove

'Pictures from the Hay' and Alison Owen's 'Divisibility'
By GREG COOK  |  September 7, 2010

ART_Remington_main
ROUGH RIDER Frederick Remington's "U.S. cavalry trooper in campaign dress" (c. 1890).

Visiting “Pictures from the Hay” is like rummaging through your grandparents’ attic . . . if your grandparents are amazingly curious, incredibly well-connected, and fabulously well-to-do.

The show at Brown’s David Winton Bell Gallery (64 College Street, Providence, through October 31) celebrates the 100th anniversary of Brown’s John Hay Library by digging out of the institution’s special collections a 4000-year-old Sumerian clay tablet, a 2000-year-old papyrus Egyptian Book of the Dead, a pop-up book Lulu Hansen made in Walter Feldman’s “Art of the Book” class at Brown in 1999, and numerous other astonishing treasures.

John Hay, class of 1858, served as President Abraham Lincoln’s private secretary during the Civil War and later became secretary of state. After his death in 1905, the Prospect Street library was built in his honor at the request — and funding — of his pal, steel magnate Andrew Carnegie. Its special collections are mainly the province of determined scholars, except for exhibits at the library. So the 14 curators from the library and Bell Gallery have assembled a rare treat.

ART_de-Bry-Noblilis_main
THE NEW WORLD Theodor de Bry's "Americae tertia pars memorabile provinciae Brasilae historiam" (1592).

The show includes three 16th-century books that shattered ideas that had dominated European thought since Roman times — Leonhart Fuchs’s 1542 Notable commentaries on the history of plants; Nicholas Copernicus’s 1543 On the revolution of the celestial spheres, with a diagram for the first time putting the son at the center of the solar system; and Andrew Vesalius’s 1543 On the fabric of the human body, which revolutionized the study of anatomy. Nearby is a copy of Galileo’s 1610 book The Starry Messenger, which may include margin notes by Galileo himself.

ART_alison-installing_main
ARTIST AT WORK Owen installing 'Divisibility.'
Flemish engraver Theodor de Bry’s illustrated 1590s books recount early European adventures in the Americas, which, curators explain, “provided the European public with its first images of inhabitants of the New World.” One spread shows a cannibal tribe in what’s now Brazil pounding a stick up a captive’s ass.

Patriots will also appreciate Paul Revere’s iconic, hand-colored 1770 engraving of the Boston Massacre and a massive scrapbook by 19th-century newspaper cartoonist Thomas Nast, who invented the Republican elephant and Democratic donkey and pioneered the plump version of Santa Claus. Nast pasted in reference photos of soldiers, newspaper clippings, and his own acid caricature of Confederate President Jefferson Davis.

A graying John Hay makes an appearance in an okay 1903 portrait by John Singer Sargent. More striking is the fawning letter Hay sent to Walt Whitman, thanking him for a copy of his poem “O Captain! My Captain!” that, at Hay’s request, Whitman had written out by hand. That poem sits in the case beside the letter. It arrives uncannily fresh, like Doc’s telegram from the past in the film Back to the Future II, as if Whitman has just dashed it out to us. Over and over a sense of direct contact with our ancestors electrifies the room.

1  |  2  |   next >
Related: Brown's 'Faculty Triennial 2010', Brown’s “Building Expectation” showcases architectural visions, “Nostalgia Machines” at Brown’s Bell Gallery, More more >
  Topics: Museum And Gallery , Museums, Brown University, Brown University,  More more >
| More


Most Popular
ARTICLES BY GREG COOK
Share this entry with Delicious
  •   R.K. PROJECT’S SPRAWLING ‘MICRO-EUTOPIA’  |  October 17, 2012
    If you're looking for where art is headed, "Micro-Eutopia," the 19-artist show at Sam Keller and Tabitha Piseno's R.K. Projects (204 Westminster Street, Providence, through November 10), is a good place to start.
  •   GRAVEYARD OF MODERNISM  |  October 17, 2012
    Iraq's King Faisal II launched plans to modernize Baghdad in 1950 by commissioning a dream team of American and European architects.
  •   LADIES' MAN  |  October 17, 2012
    Mario Testino is best known for photographing Princess Diana for Vanity Fair in 1997, just months before her death.
  •   NEW WORKS BY MONICA SHINN AND ALLISON PASCHKE  |  October 09, 2012
    Providence artist Monica Shinn's paintings at Buonaccorsi + Agniel (1 Sims Ave, #102, Providence, through November 3) feel something like diaries.
  •   ''ELSEWHERE''  |  October 10, 2012
    Every once in a while the city needs a show like "Elsewhere," the round-up of 17 local artists organized by Flux.Boston blogger Liz Devlin, to get a snapshot of the art being produced here.

 See all articles by: GREG COOK