ARLIS/WNY TIMELINE OF SELECTED EVENTS

1973

On July 12, 1973 an organizational meeting was held in Buffalo to discuss the formation of a regional chapter of the Art Libraries Society of North America. Fifteen individuals attended this gathering hosted by Florence DaLuiso at the State University of New York at Buffalo. A full-day meeting offered the attendees a chance to discuss issues including; Who should belong to this chapter? (Limited by Geography/ Driving Distance) How often should the group meet? (Twice a year; Fall and Spring) How should the constitution be drafted? What will dues be? ($1.00) What name should the chapter be called? (BUFFART, Buffalo Chapter, Western New York/Ontario). Florence DaLuiso was nominated as the first chairman. Dr. Edna Lindemann, Director of the Charles Burchfield, spoke about the Center and the Western New York Forum for American Art.

Fall

On Friday, September 21, 1973 the Western New York Chapter of ARLIS/NA met for the second time. Judy Hoffberg, editor of ARLIS/NA Newsletter, visited the chapter in Syracuse on her several week sojourn throughout the country meeting with art librarians. Her inspirational talk announced the new and exciting events of the newly formed ARLIS/NA. The chapter name is firmly established as ARLIS/Western New York at this September 1973 meeting. Dr. Antje Lemke spoke about the Marburg (Philipps) Universitat Collection as well as the Bildarchiv Foto-Marburg.

1974

Spring

The first bylaws were established and ratified on April 5, 1974 at the third meeting held at the Fine Arts Library of the University of Rochester.

Fall

Scholes Library at Alfred University served as the fourth site of theARLIS/WNY meeting. Professor Mario Prisco, Assistant Dean of the College, gave a brief history of the University and the College of Ceramics.

1975

Spring

ARLIS/WNY members enjoyed an informative tour of the Munson-Williams-Proctor Institute and Fountain Elms at their meeting on June 13, 1975.

Fall

Dr. Martin spoke about the 1972 Corning flood and the subsequent preservation efforts in the Corning Museum and Library during the Fall 1975 meeting.

1976

Spring

The Spring meeting of ARLIS/WNY was held on April 30th, 1976 at the Albright-Knox Art Gallery. Jean France, lecturer in the Fine Arts Department, University of Rochester spoke on "Lost Rochester" examining the architectural history of Rochester from 1763 to the present. Jack Randall, president of the Western New York chapter of the Society of Architectural Historians, gave a lecture on the exemplary architecture of Buffalo highlighting the buildings of Frank Lloyd Wright and John Richardson. Attendees enjoyed tours of the Albright-Knox Art Gallery and Darwin Martin House on Jewett Avenue.

Fall

The Fall meeting on October 29 highlighted I.M. Pei's Herbert F. Johnson Museum at Cornell University. In addition members enjoyed demonstrations of materials and techniques of hand bookbinding in the Uris Library Bindery as well as a talk by Don Eddy, Rare Book Librarian, on bindings through the centuries including a display in the Rare Book Room at Olin Library.

1977

Spring

The lectures for the Spring meeting at Syracuse University included a demonstration on basic in-house book repairs by Andrew Degen from Syracuse University and a slide talk on women artists by Linda Bendet, assistant in the slide collection of the Bird Library. Tours included a walking tour of architecture in downtown Syracuse and a visit to the Canal Museum at the Weighlock Building.

Fall

On October 7, ARLIS/WNY members met in Rochester New York at the Memorial Art Gallery in the morning and the George Eastman House in the afternoon. Professor Rowland Collins, Department of English, University of Rochester, lectured on Victorian Cemeteries highlighting Rochester's Mt. Hope cemetery. ARLIS/WNY members attended a behind-the-scenes tour of the Memorial Art Gallery with an emphasis on storage and preservation practices. Members enjoyed tours of the Library at the International Museum of Photography at George Eastman House and a current exhibit of fashion photography. (ARLIS/NA under fiscal constraint. ARLIS/WNY members propose and extend a $75.00 interest free loan from the chapter's funds.)

1978
Spring

SUNY/Binghamton hosted the April 21st meeting of ARLIS/WNY. Members toured the Fine Arts Library and the University Art Gallery's exhibition of 16th century engravings entitled Mirror of Marvelous Rome. A member of the architectural firm, Mowry Associates, gave a talk on a urban renewal project of an old cigar factory renovated to house shops, restaurants, and apartments. Members also took a tour at the Roberson Center by curator Richard Barons of the exhibition Folk Arts and Crafts of the Susquehanna and Chenango River Valleys.

Fall

SUNY/Buffalo hosted the September 21st meeting of ARLIS/WNY. Members toured the new library facility on the Amherst Campus. The attendees heard a "witty and informative" lecture from architectural historian Rayner Banham on "Megastructures."

1979
Spring

The first workshops were held in conjunction with general tours and business meeting at the Spring 1979 meeting. Stephanie Frontz chaired a workshop on bibliographic instruction and Margaret Webster chaired a session of challenges of visual resource libraries. The rest of April 20th was spent touring the Fountain Elms and the Munson-Williams-Proctor Museum.

Fall

The first two-day meeting was held at Cornell University on October 18 and 19. After the business meeting on October 18th, Janice Caro, a member of the staff of the Herbert F. Johnson Museum of Art at Cornell University, spoke about the services provided by the museum for its non-academic public. In the afternoon of the first day members had the option of taking a tour of Ridley's book bindery or a tour of the slide collections of the Cornell University Architecture School and Art History Department. In the evening, Dr. Esther Dotson, gave a lecture on the interpretation of the Sistine Chapel ceiling. On October 19, Joan Ormondroyd, Head of Uris Undergraduate Library Reference Department at Cornell University, gave a talk on bibliographic instruction. The Visual Resources group participated in a workshop dealing with problems of cataloging architecture slides. Museum and library visits in the afternoon concluded the two-day meeting.

1980
First ARLIS/WNY Newsletter published. Barbara Opar and Stephanie Frontz are co-editors. The first issue of the newsletter focused on artists' books.

Spring

The Spring 1980 meeting took place at the Rochester Institute of Technology on April 17th and 18th. (no notes about program in minutes).

Fall

Staff members from the Bird Library hosted the November 7, 1980 meeting. Florence DaLuiso retires and ARLIS/WNY honors her at this meeting. The forty members attending the meeting enjoyed tours of the Costume Collection as well as a tour of a travelling exhibition of artists' books held at the Lowe Art Center. The day closed with a lecture on local architect Archimedes Russell by Eva Marie Hardin and a visit to the Russell exhibit at the Everson Museum.

1981

Spring

Joint meeting with ARLIS/NYC. (No minutes.)

Fall

Thirty-seven members of ARLIS/WNY met in the Public Room of the Corning Public Library on October 16, 1981. During the business meeting annual dues were set at $5.00 per year. After the business meeting members took part in two workshops: one led by Sherman Clarke on AACR2 and current cataloging practices and another lead by Adrienne Joy on classification of non-traditional slide materials. After lunch, members enjoyed a tour of the Market Street Restoration area, an example of a downtown revitalization project. Members also had an opportunity to see the Corning Museum of Glass.

1982

Spring

The Spring 1982 meeting took place at SUNY-Binghamton on April 15th and 16th. The two-day event was attended by twenty-two members and seven visual resources photographers. The photographers were invited to attend a special Visual Resources Photography Workshop. After the business meeting was adjourned on the first day, members attended a session on Nineteenth Century Publishing and Art. George McKee gave a paper entitled "The Publication of Bonaparte's Louvre," and Roger B. Stein, Associate Professor of Art History at SUNY-Binghamton presented a paper entitled "Prints and Places: Documenting your own Backyards." On Friday, April 16, the group reassembled in the morning to attend two workshops: 1) "Bibliographic Instruction" moderated by Barbara Opar and (2) "Non-Traditional Slide Cataloging" (a continuation of a workshop given in the Fall 1981 meeting) moderated by Adrienne Joy and Margaret Webster. After the workshop the group met at the Roberson Center for Arts and Sciences for a talk by Lawrence McGinniss, Assistant Professor of Art History at SUNY-Binghamton, on "The 'Renewal' of Downtown Binghamton," which included a walking tour of the downtown Binghamton renewal area.

Fall

Colgate University in Hamilton, New York was the site of the Fall 1982 meeting of ARLIS/WNY. On the morning of October 22, members met in the Jerome Room of the Case Library, Colgate University. The business meeting was followed by two workshops: (1) "Materials and Strategies for Reference Service," a panel discussion with Barbara Polowy, Gary Rossi, Sherman Clarke, and Faith Kindness and (2) "Problems in the Classification of Far Eastern Art and Architecture," presented by Kim Kopatz. After a buffet lunch, the group met in the Dana Arts Center for a talk entitled "Keeping Tabs on the Past: The Historic Survey of Hamilton," by Professor Eric van Schaack of Colgate University. The members were then given the opportunity to tour the Dana Arts Center and the Picker Art Gallery, which included a special exhibition "Matisse' Jazz."

1983

Spring

On April 29, 1983, thirty-six members of ARLIS/WNY met in Rochester, New York at the new Margaret Woodbury Strong Museum. After the business meeting, Lyn Poirier, Deputy Director of Collections at the Strong Museum spoke on the history of the museum. After lunch, Elaine Challacombe, Librarian at the Strong Museum, shared her experiences during the planning and construction of the library facilities. The Spring meeting concluded with a tour of the library and the museum.

Fall

Buffalo, New York was the site of the Fall 1983 meeting. The meeting began Thursday evening, October 20th, with an informal reception at the Burchfield Center on the Campus of SUCNY-Buffalo. Members viewed the work of artist Bruce Kurland. Later that evening members attended the opening of an exhibition of rare books at the Buffalo Science Museum. On Friday morning, twenty-four members gathered at the Albright-Knox Art Gallery. After the business meeting, Annette Masling presented a brief history of the gallery as well as a tour of the library. The Education Department provided tours of the current exhibition on Robert Motherwell and Mary Bell gave a tour of the archives. The meeting concluded with the opportunity for ARLIS/WNY members to view the permament collection of the Albright-Knox Art Gallery at their leisure.

1984

Spring

The Spring 1984 meeting, a joint meeting with ARLIS/New England, was held on May 5th at the Sterling and Francine Clark Art Institute in Williamstown, Massachusetts. Sixteen members of ARLIS/WNY joined their colleagues in the beautiful New England town. After the business meeting, the group met in the auditorium for a series of presentations on the Getty Trust. Wolfgang Freitag discussed the background, recent developments, and programs of the Getty Trust. Toni Petersen and Michael Rinehart spoke on the Art and Architecture Thesaurus and RILA respectively. Following these presentations, members had the opportunity to take several tours including the facilities of; RILA, the Library, Photographs and Slide Collection as well as a tour of "Paginations," an exhibition on bookworks. David S. Brook, Director of the Clark Art Institute, presented a talk on the Institute. In the evening, members attended the opening reception of "The Modern Art of the Print: Selections from the Collection of Lois and Michael Torf," at the Williams College Museum of Art.

Fall

Twenty-eight chapter members met at Houghton House at Hobart and William Smith College in Geneva, New York on October 12, 1984. Dr. Cynthia H. Chertos, Director of Research and Implementation at the Center for Women in Government, Albany, New York spoke on the subject of pay equity. Additionally, concurrent sessions were offered on the following topics: "Networking in Slide Collections," a discussion moderated by Jonny Prins (Slide Curator, Syracuse University); "Continuing Education," a session moderated by Shirley Gray (Supervisor, Media Resource Center, Rochester Institute of Technology; "Stress Management Techniques," a session led by Beth Gottlieb (Assistant Director of Career Counseling, Hobart and William Smith College). The meeting concluded with a tour of Rose Hill, the Greek Revival mansion built in 1839 on former Rose family land east of Geneva and now owned by the Geneva Historical Society.

1985

Spring

The Spring meeting was held in conjunction with the ARLIS/East Regional conference in Baltimore, Maryland. Members met at Louie's Bookstore Cafe on June 20, 1985 for a general business meeting to discuss the Fall meeting in Cooperstown, New York. Members also discussed promotional ideas for the chapter including adopting chapter colors, developing sweatshirts and T-shirts, as well as a chapter logo.

Fall

!Paid membership reaches 29! The overnight meeting took place in Cooperstown, New York. The business meeting took place in the Baseball Room of the Otesaga Hotel on the evening of October 3, 1985. Becky Simmons, Assistant Librarian at the International Museum of Photography at George Eastman House updated the group on the situation of the museum. The threat of the collection being transferred to the Smithsonian has dissipated. Eastman Kodak donated the sale of real estate in San Francisco worth $16 million to keep the museum in Rochester. The endowment from the sale of this property will generate interest to be used for the Eastman House. A capital campaign was also announced to raise funds for a new addition to the building. After the business meeting and dinner, Connie Brooks, from the New York State Library spoke about the New York State Conservation/Discretionary Grant Program. Members stayed overnight at the Otsego Lake Motel and reconvened at the New York State Historical Association for breakfast hosted by Amy Barnum. Afterward all walked over to the SUNY/Buffalo Art Conservation Department. The graduate program, established in 1969 in conjunction with the New York State Historical Association, was transferred from SUNY/Oneonta to SUNY/Buffalo in 1983, and is expected to move to Buffalo in 1987. The members were divided into two groups for a presentation on the department and a detailed tour of the facilities.

1986

Spring

Shirley Gray and Barbara Polowy of the Rochester Institute of Technology hosted the April 4, 1986 Spring meeting. After the business meeting, members enjoyed a presentation by David Pankow, Curator of the Cary Collection, on the history of book illustration and color printing, with examples from the collection. During the rest of the afternoon meeting participants had a choice of activities --- a demonstration of computer graphics and slide generation systems, a Bevier Gallery exhibit on "The Architecture of the Vessel," the RIT Photo Gallery Exhibition of the MFA thesis shows, an opportunity to make color transfers from slides at the Instructional Media Services department and informal tours of the Cary Collection and various departments of the Wallace Memorial Library.

Fall

The Fall 1986 meeting of ARLIS/WNY was held at the Dowd Fine Arts Center at SUNY Cortland on October 24 with 34 members in attendance! The group split into two concurrent sessions: one, an open discussion on facilities planning, and, two, a round table discussion of the professional status of visual resouce curators, followed by a discussion and demonstration of the computerization of the visual resource collection. After the business meeting and lunch, members had a variety of options to explore -- follow-up demonstrations in the slide room, tour of the 1890 House Museum, and a reception at the Cortland Arts Council Gallery where the works of Marcia Pollenberg were on display.

1987

Spring

The Spring 1987 meeting was held at Bird Library at Syracuse University on April 24, 1987. Dr. Deirdre Stam, Assistant Professor of Information Studies at Syracuse University gave a morning lecture entitled "Moving towards Standardization: Controlled Vocabulary in the Visual Arts."

During the business meeting there was a long discussion on how to manage the over $800 in the bank account. Various suggestions ranged from dividing the accounts into checking and savings account earning interest, to financing members attendance to conferences to paying new members dues to ARLIS/NA to donating funds to the ARLIS/NA anniversary fund drive.

The afternoon speaker was Dr. Mary Lou Marien, Assistant Professor of Fine Arts at Syracuse University and photography reviewer for the Christian Science Monitor. The title of her lecture was "The Schlock of the New." Interested members then went to the visual resources round table discussion on slide collection evaluation and others departed for visits to Lowe Art Gallery and local museums.

Fall

Cornell University staff hosted the October 23, 1987 Fall Meeting. Mr. Alain Seznec, speaker for the morning program, addressed the issues of professional status for librarians, visual resource curators, and other non-teaching professionals.

During the business meeting, Kathy Parker, Chairperson, announced that the executive committee approved the donation of money from the treasury to the ARLIS/NA Fifteenth Anniversary Fund. Initiatially it was hoped that $500 would be donated but in the end $200 was donated.

After the business meeting, members walked to the Johnson Museum for a tour by Curator Emoretta Yany on "Aspects of Chinese and Japanese Art."

1988

Spring

The Spring 1988 ARLIS/WNY meeting was held in Rochester, New York. Kim Kopatz and Rachel Stuhlman hosted the meeting held at the University of Rochester. The meeting sessions focused on the theme of Rochester as a center of Film Studies. Dr. Jan-Christopher Horak, Curator of Film at the International Museum of Photography at George Eastman House. Dr. Horak spoke about the extensive film collections at the museum, including motion picture films, stills, poster collections, scrapbooks, lobby cards and papers from film stars. He also address two major areas of concern to any film collection: preservation and copyright problems. Bob Doyle from Visual Studies Workshop was unable to attend so Rachel Stuhlman talked briefly about the Visual Studies Workshop and their archive of independent films and videos and "No-TV," a program which screens independent videos on a local access cable channel. Betsy Gilbert from the Reynolds Audiovisual Department at the Rochester Public Library spoke about the library's extensive film and video holdings. Professor John Mueller, director of the University of Rochester Dance Film Archives, described the development of the collection. Julia Fleeman, NEA Intern at the International Museum of Photography at George Eastman House gave a talk on historic fan magazines, tying them in with the major movie studios, popular culture and advertising. Skip Battaglia, Professor in the Department of Film and Video, Rochester Institute of Technology spoke about his experiences teaching students creative film making and showed experimental student films. The last program of the day was a viewing of films from the Dance Film Archives.

Fall

The Fall 1988 meeting of ARLIS/WNY was held at the Metropolitan Toronto Library on October 21, 1988. Three speakers from Canada spoke about various aspects of Canadian bibliography and collection issues. Mary Williamson, Fine Arts Bibliographer, York University Library, spoke about her work as compiler to Art and Architecture in Canada: A Bibliography and Guide to the Literature. Alan Suddon, former head of the Fine Art Department, Metropolitan Toronto Library gave a slide presentation and description of the costume literature collection at the Metropolitan Toronto Library. Liz Magor spoke on issues related to copyright law in Canada as an artist who uses other peoples photographs found in books and magazines in her own collage work. The meeting ended with a tour of the Royal Ontario Museum.

1989

Spring

The Spring 1989 meeting was held at the Corning Museum of Glass, Corning, New York on April 21, 1989. Twenty-seven members and guests attended the meeting which was planned and hosted by the staff of the museum's Rakow Library. Following the business meeting, Norma Jenkins, Head Librarian of the Rakow Library spoke on the history, scope, function, and services of the library, illustrating her talk with slides of the various materials in the collection, such as books, periodicals, printed ephemera, prints, photographs, drawings, archival documents, and trade catalogs. A tour of the library facilities and collections followed her presentation. Architectural historian Dr. Lorri Lanmon presented a lecture entitled "Quarry Farm and the Philosophy of the Picturesque." The program concluded with "Two Centuries of Presidential Glass," an illustrated lecture followed by a tour of the museum's current exhibition by Jane Spillman, Curator of American Glass at the Corning Museum of Glass.

Fall

The Fall 1989 meeting of ARLIS/WNY was hosted by the staff of the Art Reference Library, Albright-Knox Art Gallery in Buffalo, New York on Friday, October 20,1989. In the morning after the business meeting, sixteen members were lead on a tour by Chief Curator, Michael Auping, of the exhibition "Abstraction -- Geometry: Painting in American since 1945." The afternoon program was a bus and walking tour of major architectural monuments in the downtown Buffalo area. The excursion was lead by Peter Filum of the Preservation Coalition of Erie County.

1990

Spring

The spring 1990 ARLIS/WNY meeting was held at "Harmony in a Time of Change: Finding a Common Ground," a conference sponsored by nine upstate New York library associations on March 22 and 23, 1990 at the Hotel Syracuse in Syracuse, New York. Fifteen members and guests participated in the meeting on March 23, 1990.

Fall

The fall meeting of the Western New York Chapter of the Art Libraries Society of North America was hosted by the staff of the Richard and Ronay Menschel Library at the International Museum of Photography at George Eastman House in Rochester, New York on October 5, 1990. The group toured the Photography Collections, Conservation Lab, Film Department and the Library during the morning session. Tours of the recently restored home and gardens of George Eastman and a demonstration of Minaret, a film cataloging system, were provided during the afternoon. The group was also invited to attend a lecture by photographer James Balog and the opening reception for his exhibition, "Survivors: A New Vision of Endangered Wildlife," that evening.

1991

Spring

The spring 1991 ARLIS/WNY meeting was held in Utica at the Munson Williams Proctor Institute and hosted by staff members Terry McMaster and Cindy Barth on April 1, 1991. Two concurrent morning sessions were held. The visual resources group attended a session chaired by Margaret Webster and Carla Freeman on ways to share information on automation. (Other session not recorded in minutes.) Members also heard a gallery talk on the John LaFarge exhibition given by Director Paul Schweitzer. A luncheon was served on the terrace of Fountain Elms, followed by a tour of Fountain Elms by the Curator of Decorative Arts, Anna Dembrosio.

Fall

The fall 1991 meeting was hosted by Margaret Webster at the Architecture School slide library at Cornell University, Ithaca, New York on October 10, 1991. After the business meeting the groups broke out into two different sessions -- (1) the art librarian members attended a session organized by Barbara Opar on cooperative collection development issues; (2) the visual resource members attended a session given by Jonny Prins and Kim Kopatz on experimenting with Iconclass. After these morning sessions members took a bus to the fascinating Arts and Crafts style Miller-Heller House for lunch. After lunch, the group divided once again -- part of the group went to Worldwide Books and the rest visited the slide room at Ithaca College.

1992

Spring

The spring meeting of the Western New York Chapter of the Art Libraries Society of North America was hosted by Barbara Polowy and Susan Williams at the Rochester Institute of Technology, Rochester, New York on April 24, 1992. R. Roger Remington, Professor of Graphic Design at RIT, gave a demonstration and discussion of RIT's Graphic Design Archive (GDA) videodisc project. Two afternoon programs were offered simultaneously. One program included an informative tour by David Pankow, Curator of the Cary Collection, of the new Melbert B. Cary Jr. Graphic Arts Collection facility which included the opportunity to pull the letterpress. The other program included a demonstration of a prototype for a new Eastman Kodak product, a photo compact disc "jukebox."

Fall

The joint fall meeting of the Western New York and the New England Chapters of the Art Libraries Society of North America was held at Camp Huntington on Racquette Lake in the Adirondack Park on the weekend of October 16 - 18, 1992. The meeting, planned primarily by the ARLIS/WNY chapter, was a sucess with a total of 31 members attending the chilly, yet invigorating, and informative meeting. Members of both chapters met at 4:30 pm on Friday, October 16 at Antlers Dock to catch a boat which would carry them across the waters of Racquette lake to the remote peninsula where Camp Huntington was located. After a social hour and family style dinner members met in the lodge around a roaring fire and heard Joe Pierson, Director of Camp Huntington, talk briefly about the history of the Camp and the role of Cortland College Outdoor Education Center in the college's activities and curriculum. Afterward the two chapters met separately for their business meetings.

On Saturday, members met for an early morning tour of Camp Huntington, formerly Camp Pine Knot, "first of the famous 'great camps of the Adirondacks.'" Director Joe Pieson, gave an informative tour of the camp built by William West Durant. Following Joe Pierson's tour participants climbed in the boats and headed to the mainland to carpool to Sagamore, another Durant camp built for the Vanderbuilts. After this fascinating tour, with plenty of photo-opportunites including the outdoor bowling alley, members carpooled to the Adirondack Museum at Blue Mountain Lake to view part of the collection. After a thorough visit, members returned to Camp Huntington. Following the social and dinner hours, participants listened to two lectures. Bruce Austin, form the Rochester Institute of Technology, spoke on the "Arts and Crafts Movement in Western New York," and Margaret Adams, from the State University of New York at Alfred, spoke on the "Father of American Ceramics: Charles Fergus Binns."

On Sunday morning participants awoke to a fresh dusting of snow. After a hearty breakfast of pancakes and sausage, members had the option of a discussion of Adirondack camps with camp director, Joe Pierson, or a final walk in the woods. At 10:00 am all climbed into the boats for their final trip across the waves of Racquette lake and departed in opposite directions to points east and west.

1993

Spring

The spring meeting of the Western New York Chapter of the Art Libraries Society of North America was hosted by staff members of the Scholes Library of the New York State College of Ceramics at Alfred University in Alfred, New York on April 20, 1993. During the businees members outlined the details for the ARLIS/WNY travel award. After lunch members tour the Terra Cotta, the unique historic building made of Ceramic Tiles, and Alfred's extensive studio facilities for cermamics and glass in Harder Hall, as well as the shops and artist's studios featuring Alfred pottery, glass and crafts. Members also had an opportunity to return to the Scholes Library for further exploration of the collections.

Fall

The fall meeting was hosted by Barbara Opar and the staff of the Fine Arts Department of the Bird Library at Syracuse University on October 22, 1993. During the morning session, the group heard a presentation by Professor Wayne Frantis on his reseach and ideas for a recent publication entitled, Paragons of Virtue: Women and Domesticity in Seventeenth Century Dutch Art. Members toured the facilities of the Fine Arts Department at Bird Library before a buffet lunch. Following lunch the group heard a joint presentation on the Industrial Design Archives by Arthur Pulos, Professor Emeritus and author of American Design Ethic and the American Design Adventure, and Terry Keenan, Special Collections Librarian.

1994-present

Forthcoming.


The New York Chapter of the Art Libraries Society