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Exhibit Thumbnail | Title | Locations | Subjects |
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Exhibits | |||
1900: Books from the Collection of Robert Rosenthal
Featuring books published in the year 1900 that were collected by the late Robert Rosenthal, curator of Special Collections from 1953 to 1989, this exhibition recaptures the forgotten culture of the turn of the century. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center Jan. 1 — May 31, 1996 |
Subjects
History |
|
Adventures in the Soviet Imaginary: Children's Books and Graphic Art
Adventures in the Soviet Imaginary examines both the intensive and extensive dimensions of Soviet posters and children books. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center Aug. 22 — Dec. 30, 2011 View web exhibit >> |
Subjects
Slavic/Eastern Europe/Eurasia Art |
|
African-American Studies: Resources in the University of Chicago Library
This exhibition explores the University of Chicago Library's broad array of research materials documenting African-American history and culture. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center Feb. 1 — June 1, 1999 |
Subjects
African-American Studies |
|
Animal-Vegetable-Mineral: Natural History Illustration from the John Crerar Collection
The art and beauty of illustrated natural history books is celebrated in this exhibition. The collection exemplifies the development of natural history illustration and the role of the image in disseminating knowledge of the natural sciences. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center May 1 — Sept. 30, 1991 |
Subjects
History of Science Art |
|
Anthropology at Chicago: Tradition, Discipline, Department
Marking the fiftieth anniversary of the Department of Anthropology, this exhibit traces anthropology at Chicago from the early work of Frederick Starr through the notable era of Fay-Cooper Cole, Edward Sapir, Robert Redfield, William Lloyd Warner, and A.R. Radcliffe-Brown. Concluding sections review the contributions of Sol Tax, Milton Singer, McKim Marriott, Fred Eggan, Lloyd Fallers, David Schneider, Clifford Geertz, and other leaders of late-twentieth-century American anthropology. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center Jan. 1 — Dec. 31, 1979 |
Subjects
Anthropology University of Chicago |
|
Antiquarianism and Archeology: Publications of the Society of Dilettanti
The exhibit illustrates the growth of Dilettantism from self-indulgent pastime of the rich to a founding element of the scientific and historical study of antiquity. The books included in the exhibit reflect the character of both an emergent archeology and the social and cultural atmosphere which surrounded it. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center Feb. 1 — April 1, 1985 |
Subjects
Archaeology |
|
Arcangela Tarabotti: A Literary Nun in Baroque Venice
The exhibition focuses on the writing and cultural context of Arcangela Tarabotti, a Benedictine nun who published defenses of women that protested against social injustice, especially that of forced religious vocations. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center April 1 — Aug. 31, 1997 |
Subjects
Women's Studies Italian Literature |
|
Archetype and Adaptation: Passover Haggadot from the Stephen P. Durschlag Collection
“Archetype and Adaptation” explores the enduring influence of early printed Haggadot as well as the ability of modern versions to reflect political and social developments such as the Holocaust, Zionism, gay rights, and feminism. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center April 2 — May 12, 2012 |
Subjects
Jewish Studies |
|
An Art of Persuasion: Soviet Posters from the Library's Collections
The exhibit showcases twenty-four Soviet political posters from the 1930s. Drawn from the E.M. Bakwin Collection of Soviet Posters and the War Poster Collection in the Library, the exhibition explores the role that these images played in rallying the peoples of the Soviet Union to take up social, political, and war-time causes. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center July 1 — Oct. 31, 1987 |
Subjects
Art Slavic/Eastern Europe/Eurasia |
|
Asia in the Eyes of Europe: Sixteenth through Eighteenth Centuries
From the time of the Renaissance onward, Western consciousness has been shaped by a multitude of diverse and rapidly changing images of Asia and its peoples. This exhibition examines the process of Western exploration and discovery of Asia. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center Jan. 1 — May 31, 1991 |
Subjects
History Southern Asia |
|
The B. Heller & Co. Collection
Founded by Benjamin Heller, whose family practiced sausage-making for generations, Chicago-based B. Heller & Co. began in 1893. Eager to take advantage of new developments in food science and chemistry as well as his skills as a salesman, Benjamin Heller was the quintessential American entrepreneur. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center March 1 — June 30, 2009 View web exhibit >> |
Subjects
Advertising Chicago and Illinois |
|
Banks and Bubbles: The Earl J. Hamilton Collection on the History of Economics
Exhibition of works on the history of economics, in particular, the development of commerce and trade in England, France, and Spain in the 17th and 18th centuries. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center June 1 — Oct. 31, 1995 |
Subjects
Economics History |
|
Beneath the Surface: World War I Submarine Warfare from Robert M. Grant Collection
Robert M. Grant, Carl Darling Buck Professor Emeritus in the Department of New Testament and Early Christian Literature in the Divinity School, maintained an interest in submarines throughout his career. This exhibition, which may surface as a surprise to some, is drawn from Professor Grant's research collection, and is one of a series of exhibits highlighting the breadth and variety of the University of Chicago faculty's private collections. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center Feb. 1 — May 31, 1988 |
Subjects
European History Military & Naval Sciences |
|
The Berlin Collection
Showcasing the collection of nearly 100,000 books and manuscripts purchased by William Rainey Harper in Berlin in 1891, which became the core of the University of Chicago Library's holdings and have had an abiding influence on the course of scholarly investigation at the University. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center Jan. 1 — Dec. 31, 1979 View web exhibit >> |
Subjects
University of Chicago Library |
|
Between the Boards: Collections, Compilations and Curiosities from the John Crerar Collection of Rare Books in the History of Science and Medicine
This exhibition celebrates the surprising discoveries while cataloging over 20,000 volumes from the John Crerar Collection of Rare Books in the History of Science and Medicine. It illustrates the ingenuity of the authors and other compilers, the creative scope of the personal and institutional collectors who brought these items together, the skill of catalogers who described the materials, and the exciting opportunities awaiting researchers. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center March 1 — June 30, 2003 |
Subjects
History of Science History of Print History of Medicine |
|
The Black Metropolis Research Consortium: Fifteen Years of Preserving and Documenting Black History and Culture in Chicago
The Black Metropolis Research Consortium (BMRC) is a Chicago-based membership association that aids in expanding broad access to its members’ holdings of materials that document African American and African diasporic history, politics and culture, with a specific focus on materials relating to Chicago. Our members include universities, libraries, museums, community, arts-based and government archives. It is the mission of the BMRC to connect all who seek to document, share, understand and preserve Black experiences. In 2021, the BMRC celebrates its 15th anniversary. This exhibit documents the origins of the BMRC, its efforts to aid discoverability and access to Black historical collections, and the consortium’s flagship Summer Short-term Fellowship and Archie Motley Archival Internship programs. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center View web exhibit >> |
Subjects
American History History African-American Studies |
|
Books from a Friend: The Old Northwest Depicted from the Collection of Florence Lowden Miller
This exhibit showcases rare books and maps from the Collection which record the exploration and settlement in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries early travelers to the American Midwest. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center Nov. 1 — Jan. 1, 1989 |
Subjects
American History |
|
Building Collections: Celebrating Twenty-Five Years of the Joseph Regenstein Library
Drawing on the concept of "building" as both physical space and intellectual activity, this exhibition highlights twenty-five of the notable book, manuscript, and archival collections acquired by the University Library since 1970. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center Sept. 1 — Jan. 31, 1996 |
Subjects
University of Chicago Library |
|
Building for a Long Future: The University of Chicago and Its Donors, 1889-1930
This exhibition explores the motivations and purposes of the varied group of donors who supported the University of Chicago from the time of its founding in the late 1880s to the conclusion of the extensive campus building campaign of the late 1920s and early 1930s. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center May 1 — Dec. 31, 2001 View web exhibit >> |
Subjects
University of Chicago |
|
But Is It A Book?
One of life’s most familiar objects, the codex book, is also one of the most innovative and adaptable technologies for making and sharing meaning devised by humankind. But what makes a book a book? Must it have pages, text, and a rectangular shape to qualify? "But Is It a Book?" is a choosable-path exhibition that investigates the nature of the material text, considering examples from the long arc of book history, from the clay tablet to the contemporary artist’s book. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center Jan. 3 — April 28, 2023 View web exhibit >> |
Subjects
Library Science |
|
Byzantine Manuscripts of the New Testament from the Goodspeed Collection
The manuscripts presented in this exhibition represent a selection from the University's collection of New Testament manuscripts, named for Professor Edgar J. Goodspeed (1871-1962) of the Department of New Testament and Early Christian Literature. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center Oct. 1 — Oct. 31, 1982 |
Subjects
Religion |
|
A Catalogue to an Exhibition of Notable Books and Manuscripts from the Collections of the University of Chicago Library Prepared for the Dedication of the Joseph Regenstein Library
This exhibition showcases 109 highlights from the the Department of Special Collections on the occasion of the dedication of the Regenstein Library. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center Jan. 1 — Dec. 31, 1970 |
Subjects
University of Chicago Library Special Collections |
|
Catalyst for Change: On the Occasion of Martin Runkle's Retirement as Library Director
This exhibition covers the career of Martin Runkle, on the occasion of his retirement as University of Chicago Library Director |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center Aug. 1 — Oct. 1, 2004 |
Subjects
University of Chicago Library |
|
The Chain Reaction: December 2, 1942 and After
This exhibition was organized to commemorate the fiftieth anniversary of the world's first controlled, self-sustaining nuclear chain reaction, an achievement of Enrico Fermi and his colleagues at the Metallurgical Laboratory at the University of Chicago. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center Oct. 1 — Dec. 1, 1992 |
Subjects
History of Science University of Chicago Physical Sciences |
|
The Chicago Settlement Tradition: A Hull-House Centennial Exhibition
The vanguard of settlement houses in Chicago was Hull-House, founded by Jane Addams in 1889. Two other settlement houses with ties to the University of Chicago, Chicago Commons and the University of Chicago Settlement, are also featured int his exhibit, which commemorates Jane Addams and the founding of Hull-House. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center Sept. 1 — Oct. 1, 1989 |
Subjects
Sociology |
|
Christian Hebraic Scholarship
The Rosenberger Library's rich collection of Christian Hebraic scholarship forms the basis of this exhibition which focuses on the sometimes accidental, sometimes deliberate contributions of Christian scholars to the preservation of Hebrew usage, and Jewish legal commentaries and ceremonial practices from the thirteenth through the seventeenth centuries. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center Jan. 1 — Dec. 1, 1983 |
Subjects
Jewish Studies |
|
Closeted/OUT in the Quadrangles: A History of LGBTQ Life at the University of Chicago
Historical view of LGBT faculty, student, and staff life at the University of Chicago. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center March 30 — June 12, 2015 View web exhibit >> |
Subjects
LGBTQIA Studies University of Chicago |
|
Collecting Western Americana: Books from the Library of John Blew
This exhibition examines the work of several important nineteenth-century publishers who edited historical documents of the American West and made them available to a broad audience of readers and scholars. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center Feb. 1 — April 30, 2002 |
Subjects
American History |
|
A Collector's Churchill
This exhibition is one of a series based on faculty book collections. The exhibit provides a fresh look at the public career of Winston Churchill through the eyes of James H. Lorie, a prolific collector of Churchilliana. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center Jan. 1 — Dec. 1, 1981 |
Subjects
European History |
|
Columbian Commemorations 1892-1893: European and American Perspectives
The exhibition surveys the 400th anniversary celebrations of Christopher Columbus's arrival in America. Memorabilia from the 1893 World's Columbian Exposition including invitations, guidebooks, portfolios of photographs, books, and a special commemorative edition of Harriet Monroe's poem, "Ode," which she read at the opening ceremonies of the Fair. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center Aug. 1 — Oct. 31, 1993 |
Subjects
History |
|
Cyrus Leroy Baldridge: Illustrator, Explorer, Activist
Cyrus Baldridge (1889-1977) was an artist, illustrator, and author whose travels took him across Africa, Europe, Asia, and the Far East. His artistic training began at age 9, followed by education at the University of Chicago. Baldridge also developed an acute social and political awareness through a range of experiences, from working in a social settlement house to cattle ranching in Texas. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center June 27 — Sept. 9, 2016 |
Subjects
Humanities Social Sciences Art |
|
December 2, 1942 and After: The Scientist's Movement in America
This exhibit draws on the University of Chicago Archives to present the pivotal role Chicago has played institutionally in the development of the international atomic scientists' movement that took root in America as crucial consequence of the events of December 2, 1942. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center Dec. 1 — March 1, 1983 |
Subjects
University of Chicago |
|
Discovery, Collection, Memory: The Oriental Institute at 100
On the University of Chicago's Campus at 58th Street and University Avenue is one of the world's premier institutions for the study of the Ancient Middle East, the Oriental Institute. The OI has its roots alongside the very founding of the University of Chicago when President Harper mentored a young scholar named James Henry Breasted to pursue a degree in Egyptology. Breasted went on to direct the Haskell Museum around 1900 and secured funding from John D. Rockefeller, Jr. in May 1919 to begin the Oriental Institute. The OI has conducted 100 years of excavation, research, and scholarship. Focusing on the geographical areas of Egypt, Iran, Iraq, Turkey, and Afghanistan, OI scholars have worked rigorously to discover cultural heritage, decipher ancient languages, and to reconstruct the histories of long-lost civilizations. This exhibit remembers the OI's past through a collection of archival fragments, artifacts, and ephemera. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center Sept. 16 — Dec. 13, 2019 |
Subjects
Archaeology - Ancient Near East University of Chicago |
|
The Dreyfus Affair: In the Public Eye
Almost one-hundred years after it captured worldwide attention and threatened to topple the government of the Third Republic of France, the Dreyfus Affair continues to evoke strong response. The exhibit explores contemporary popular perceptions of the affair through these media in examples drawn from the Ludwig Rosenberger Collection of Judaica. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center Oct. 1 — March 1, 1989 |
Subjects
European History Jewish Studies |
|
East European Jews in the German-Jewish Imagination from the Ludwig Rosenberger Library of Judaica
This exhibition traces the place of East European Jewry in the imagination and experience of German Jews from emancipation in the nineteenth century to the decline of German-Jewish life on the eve of World War II. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center Sept. 1 — June 30, 2009 View web exhibit >> |
Subjects
Jewish Studies |
|
The Economics of Library Conservation
The exhibit demonstrates the need for conservation through an examination of some of the materials at stake, displayed alongside discussions of preservation concerns and the costs of particular forms of care for the collection. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center Jan. 1 — Dec. 1, 1985 |
Subjects
Library Science |
|
The Ecstatic Journey: Athanasius Kircher in Baroque Rome
Athanasius Kircher (1602-1680), a German Jesuit priest, was called to Rome as Professor of Mathematics at the Roman College in 1635, two years after Galileo's trial and condemnation by the Roman Inquisition. Kircher was also a consummate exploiter of the power of the printed book, as this exhibition illustrates through first and early editions of his works and related materials. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center Feb. 1 — April 1, 2000 |
Subjects
European History |
|
Education for Life: 100 Years of the Laboratory Schools
This exhibition examines the pedagogical philosophy of John Dewey and the founding group of Lab Schools teachers, educators, recent advances in academic standards and educational technology, and demonstrates the varied experiences of students at all levels as they learned and explored individual potential in Lab Schools classrooms, laboratories, theaters, machine shops, art studios, and field trips. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center May 1 — Oct. 31, 1996 |
Subjects
Education University of Chicago |
|
The Eighteenth Century Views of the Past
This exhibition includes historiographical and antiquarian works in the fields of history, literature, art, music, and science, and illustrates the 18th century's preoccupation with its own past as a way to understand the present. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center Jan. 1 — Dec. 31, 1978 |
Subjects
European History |
|
Elective Affinities: Private Collectors and Special Collections in Libraries
Elective Affinities: Private Collectors and Special Collections in Libraries |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center Jan. 1 — Dec. 31, 2001 |
Subjects
Special Collections University of Chicago Library |
|
Emma Goldman in Her Own Words: Perspectives from the Ludwig Rosenberger Library of Judaica
This exhibition features books, pamphlets, and trial reports by Emma Goldman, drawn from the Ludwig Rosenberger Library of Judaica. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center Nov. 1 — May 1, 1993 |
Subjects
Political Science Jewish Studies |
|
En Guerre: French Illustrators and World War I
En Guerre will offer a fresh examination of World War I through the lens of French graphic illustration of the period. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center Oct. 14 — Jan. 2, 2015 View web exhibit >> |
Subjects
European History Art |
|
Encountering the American West: The Ohio River Valley, 1750-1820
This exhibition explores the fascinating history of this first American west from the beginning of European American settlement to the end of the frontier period. Includes interrelated themes such as the contrast between native and European American attitudes toward the land, the encounters and confrontations of the pioneer migration era, the role of politics on the early frontier, and the shaping of Western cultural and social institutions. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center Feb. 1 — April 30, 2002 |
Subjects
American History |
|
Encyclopedism from Pliny to Borges
The exhibit traces the variety of forms the encyclopedia and the idea of encyclopedic knowledge have taken from the first through 20th centuries. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center May 1 — Sept. 30, 1990 |
Subjects
History Linguistics |
|
Enhancing the Legacy: Gifts from Irmgard Rosenberger to the Ludwig Rosenberger Library of Judaica
This exhibition includes a selection of important recent additions to the Ludwig Rosenberger Library of Judaica presented by Mrs. Irmgard Rosenberger, including a 16th-century decree restricting Jewish actions to the visitor's book used at the Palestine Government House in the 1920s and 1930s. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center Oct. 1 — June 30, 2003 |
Subjects
Jewish Studies |
|
Envisioning South Asia: Texts, Scholarship, Legacies
This exhibition introduces the Regenstein Library's extraordinary resources related to South Asia through visual metaphors of imagination, representation, and engagement. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center Jan. 11 — March 18, 2016 View web exhibit >> |
Subjects
Southern Asia South Asia |
|
Ernest W. Burgess, May 16, 1886-December 27, 1966: An Exhibition of Selections from His Papers
This exhibit reflects the substantial teaching, research, and public service of Ernest W. Burgess. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center Jan. 1 — Dec. 31, 1974 |
Subjects
Sociology |
|
Eureka! Discovering Sources in the Ludwig Rosenberger Library of Judaica
This exhibition explores various access tools to the over 17,000 titles in the Ludwig Rosenberger Library of Judaica, from the topically arranged print catalog published when it was a private collection to records in the Library's online catalog. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center Nov. 1 — June 30, 2004 |
Subjects
Jewish Studies |
|
Expanding Sources: Recent Additions to Special Collections
As academic fields expand and diversify, Special Collections is building collections to support these new directions. Researchers are drawing on original materials in many areas including race and gender, cinema and media, graphic design, arts practice, and cross-cultural global studies. This exhibition displays recent acquisitions with research potential for a range of disciplines. The materials represent many formats, including children’s books, family letters, journals, fine book design, posters, research notes, clothing, board games, and printed ephemera. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center Jan. 6 — April 24, 2020 View web exhibit >> |
Subjects
University of Chicago Library Chicago and Illinois University of Chicago |
|
A Family Album--Unfamiliar Faces and Places from the University Archives
This exhibit invites students, faculty, staff, and friends of the University to help identify some of the mysterious people and places represented in unidentified photographs from the University Archives. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center Feb. 1 — April 1, 1982 |
Subjects
Photography University of Chicago |
|
A Family Tradition: An Exhibition of Books from the Gifts of George Eckels and Virginia Eckels Malone
The exhibit offers a selection from the gifts of two generations of notable book collectors and supporters of the University of Chicago Library. Begun in 1916 with the gift of George Eckels's collection of Cromwelliana, the Eckels family's generous support of the University Library has been continued by his daughter Virginia, culminating in her 1979 additions to the Library's collections. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center Nov. 1 — April 1, 1981 |
Subjects
History |
|
Far East: An Exhibition of Resources in the University of Chicago Library
The exhibit represents the breadth of the Library's East Asian holdings, which have developed with the University and the Center for East Asian Studies since the Center's beginnings at the University in the 1930s. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center Jan. 1 — Dec. 31, 1973 |
Subjects
East Asian Studies Chinese Studies Japanese Studies Korean Studies |
|
The Fetus In Utero: From Mystery to Social Media
This exhibition takes an historical approach to exploring the complex evolution of the fetal image in Western Christian culture. We show that before images of the fetus in utero entered the digital age, they have been deployed in three distinctive ways over the past 500 years. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center Jan. 2 — April 12, 2019 |
Subjects
History of Science |
|
Frank Knight 1885-1972
Best known as the founder of the "Chicago School" of free market economics, Frank Knight was an influential member of the University faculty for more than twenty years. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center Nov. 1 — Jan. 31, 1986 |
Subjects
Economics |
|
Friends of the Library
Friends of the Library |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center Jan. 1 — Dec. 31, 1979 |
Subjects
University of Chicago Library |
|
From Palm Leaf to Printed Text: The Traditional Indic Book
Drawn from the collection donated by Mrs. Edwin Asmann, this exhibit highlights the structure and usage of the palm leaf format, from the preparation of the leaves themselves to their illumination and binding. The manuscripts are also discussed in relationship to their role in the transmission of the Buddhist Canon. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center May 1 — July 1, 1989 |
Subjects
Southeast Asia Religion Southern Asia South Asia |
|
Germany on the Eve of the 1848 Revolution: Selections from the Ludwig Rosenberger Library of Judaica
This exhibition focuses on political, social, and cultural trends in Germany during the VormŠrz period, the two decades preceding the March Revolution of 1848. On display are selected works by prominent poets, journalists, and revolutionary theorists, including Heinrich Heine, Ludwig Bšrne, and Karl Marx. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center May 1 — Oct. 1, 1994 |
Subjects
Jewish Studies |
|
The Graphics of Revolution and War: Iranian Poster Arts
Designed for mass distribution and aimed towards a large public audience, posters embed social, political, and religious concerns that frequently are articulated through both text and image. Perhaps more so than at any other moment in recent history, posters served as powerful modalities for mobilization and communication during the Iranian Revolution of 1979 and the Iran-Iraq War (1980-88). |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center Oct. 15 — Dec. 18, 2011 View web exhibit >> |
Subjects
Art Middle East |
|
A Gray City Dinner Party: Commemorative Dinner Plates from the University Archives
In June 1930, the University of Chicago Magazine notified the alumni of the creation of a special set of Spode dinner plates featuring views of twelve of the University's Gothic buildings. The exhibit offers these notable artifacts of the University's invention of its own self-imagination along with documents and advertisements from the original release. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center Jan. 1 — Dec. 1, 1985 |
Subjects
University of Chicago |
|
The Great Ideas: The University of Chicago and the Ideal of Liberal Education
Drawing on the papers of Robert Hutchins, Mortimer Adler, William Benton and Walter Paepcke, this exhibition explores the cultural milieu that made the "Great Ideas" central to the University's educational mission both on and off campus. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center May 1 — Sept. 30, 2002 |
Subjects
University of Chicago Education |
|
Great Is the Gift that Bringeth Knowledge: Highlights from the History of the John Crerar Library
Marking the 100th anniversary of the death of John Crerar, the exhibition utilized documents, photographs, and artifacts from the Crerar collections to chronicle the library's distinguished collections and effective public service programs from its creation until the merger with the University of Chicago. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center Oct. 1 — April 1, 1989 |
Subjects
Library Science |
|
Harold Swift and the Higher Learning
This exhibition marks the centenary of the birth of Harold H. Swift, who in 1914 became the first alumnus to be appointed to the University Board of Trustees, as well as its youngest member. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center Jan. 1 — Jan. 1, 1986 |
Subjects
University of Chicago |
|
Hebraica at the University of Chicago
This exhibition honors the long tradition of Hebrew scholarship at the University of Chicago. The books in the exhibition were selected to provide an overview of the scope of the Library's holdings and to indicate the variety of sources which exist. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center Jan. 1 — Dec. 31, 1965 |
Subjects
Jewish Studies |
|
Highlights from the History of the John Crerar Library
This exhibit presents the history of the John Crerar Library thematically, celebrating the role of the library as an intellectual resource in the city of Chicago, placing the Library within the context of Chicago industrial growth, and highlighting the individuals and institutions that supported, created, and sustained the Library. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center Dec. 1 — April 1, 1990 |
Subjects
University of Chicago |
|
Homosexuality in the City: A Century of Research at the University of Chicago
This exhibition situates the University of Chicago's pioneering approach to the social and cultural study of homosexuality amid the political and cultural developments of the past century, while simultaneously examining the University's role in the policing of homosexuality in Chicago during this same period. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center Sept. 1 — Dec. 1, 2000 |
Subjects
Gender Studies |
|
The Human Fabric
The Human Fabric follows the development of anatomical illustration in print from its beginning as a primitive record of early explorations in gross anatomy in the late fifteenth century to the highly refined studies published just prior to the advent of photography. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center Jan. 1 — Dec. 1, 1981 |
Subjects
History of Science |
|
I Step Out of Myself: Portrait Photography in Special Collections
An exhibition of portrait photography collections in the University Archives. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center Jan. 12 — March 20, 2015 View web exhibit >> |
Subjects
Art Photography University of Chicago |
|
Images of Prayer, Politics and Everyday Life from the Harry and Branks Sondheim Jewish Heritage Collection
This exhibition of the Harry Sondheim (A.B. 1954, J.D. 1957) Collection is organized around representations of the events of the Jewish life-cycle: birth, circumcision, naming, bar mitzvah, marriage, and death-and those of the Jewish calendar-the Sabbath, Rosh Hashanah, Yom Kippur, Simchat Torah, Sukkot, and Passover. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center March 1 — July 31, 2008 View web exhibit >> |
Subjects
Religion |
|
Images of Science and Exploration in the Victorian Century
This exhibition examines three of the most notable achievements of the Victorian age: the development of the theory of natural selection by Charles Darwin and Alfred Wallace; the decades-long search for the Northwest Passage by a succession of British expeditions, including the ill-fated venture of John Franklin; and the discovery by Lord Rayleigh and William Ramsay of argon. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center March 1 — June 30, 1997 |
Subjects
Ecology & Evolution Chemistry History |
|
In Lincoln's Time: Sources on 19th century America in the William E. Barton Collection
The exhibition is the first public presentation of the William E. Barton Collection of Lincolniana, and present a balanced account of Lincoln's life in his own work through books, manuscripts, autograph letters, portraits, and artifacts. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center May 1 — Sept. 30, 1986 |
Subjects
American History |
|
Innovations and Innovators: The School of Social Service Administration's Contribution to Direct Practice Social Work, 1945-1975
This exhibition honors the 50th anniversary of the publication of Charlotte Towle's influential work, Common Human Needs (1945), and three decades of innovation in social work practice by Towle and her colleagues at the School of Social Service Administration. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center April 1 — June 30, 1995 |
Subjects
Social Services University of Chicago |
|
Integrating the Life of the Mind: African Americans at the University of Chicago, 1870-1940
This exhibit presents original manuscripts, rarely seen portraits and photographs, African American publications, books by African American graduates of the University of Chicago, and other documents that trace the interlocking strands of academic and gradual social integration through the mid-twentieth century. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center Sept. 1 — Feb. 28, 2009 View web exhibit >> |
Subjects
African-American Studies University of Chicago |
|
Isaac Newton and the Principia: A Tercentenary Celebration
In celebration of the 300th anniversary of the publication of Isaac Newton's "Philosophiae Naturalis principia mathematica," this exhibition displays early editions of the Principia in Latin, English, and French, along with other related works from the collection. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center March 1 — May 1, 1987 |
Subjects
History of Science |
|
Jewish Music and Jewish Culture in Germany, 1918-1938
Drawing upon publications in music and the arts in the Rosenberger Library of Judaica, the works displayed in this exhibit narrate the complex transformation of the German-Jewish community on the eve of the Holocaust. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center Nov. 1 — May 1, 1995 |
Subjects
Jewish Studies |
|
John Gunther: Inside Journalism
The papers of John Gunther, one of the most prominent journalists of the 20th century, have been made public for the first time in this exhibition. Gunther got his start as a literary editor for the Daily Maroon at the University of Chicago, where he graduated in 1922. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center Sept. 1 — Jan. 1, 1991 |
Subjects
University of Chicago Journalism |
|
Joseph Halle Schaffner Collection in the History of Science
This exhibition presents 107 highlights from the Schaffner bequest of over 300 landmark works in science, including works by Bacon, Boyle, Darwin, Descartes, Kepler, and Newton. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center Jan. 1 — Dec. 31, 1978 |
Subjects
History of Science |
|
Julius Rosenwald 1862-1932: An exhibition honoring the One Hundredth Anniversary of his birth
This exhibition commemorates the centennial of the birth of Julius Rosenwald, president and chairman of the board of Sears, Roebuck & Co., and a major philanthropist in support of progressive and social welfare reforms. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center Jan. 1 — Jan. 31, 1962 |
Subjects
Chicago and Illinois Jewish Studies Social Services |
|
Kafka, Kraus, Masaryk, Lilien: Central European Cultural Migration
The careers of Franz Kafka, Karl Kraus, Tomas Masaryk, and E. M. Lilien, featured in this exhibition, illustrate the internal and external migration of cultural and political figures. All had to negotiate the breakdown of empire, World War I, and post-war reconstruction and reconciliation. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center Oct. 1 — June 30, 2002 |
Subjects
Jewish Studies |
|
Karl Marx in the Rosenberger Library of Judaica
Drawing on sources in the Ludwig Rosenberger Library of Judaica, this exhibit explores Karl Marx's complex relationship to Jews and Judaism and his writings on these subjects. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center Oct. 1 — June 30, 2007 |
Subjects
Jewish Studies Economics |
|
Kentucky and the Revolutionary Era, 1770-1815: An Essay Prepared by William T. Hutchinson on the Occasion of an Exhibition of Manuscripts and Early Printed Books from the Reuben T. Durrett Collection
Showcasing the Reuben T. Durrett Collection, which records the early history of trans-Appalachian settlement of Kentucky and the Ohio River valley. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center Nov. 1 — Feb. 28, 1978 |
Subjects
American History |
|
Lexicography at the University of Chicago: An Essay by Mitford M. Mathews, Sr., on the Occasion of an Exhibition in Harper Memorial Library
This exhibition surveys the history of major University of Chicago Press dictionary projects, including The Chicago Assyrian Dictionary, A Dictionary of American English, A Dictionary of Americanisms, The University of Chicago Spanish Dictionary, A Dictionary of Selected Synonyms, and A Greek-English Lexicon of the New Testament. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center Jan. 1 — Dec. 1, 1963 |
Subjects
Linguistics |
|
The Library: A Retrospective View
This exhibit presents a broad, retrospective look at the origins, development, holdings, and operations of the University of Chicago's Library. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center Feb. 1 — Jan. 1, 1981 |
Subjects
University of Chicago |
|
The Life and Legacy of Edmond de Rothschild
This exhibition draws on books, pamphlets, prints, cartoons, caricatures, and other materials, primarily from the Ludwig Rosenberger Library of Judaica, to present the Rothschild family background and the role of Edmond de Rothschild as supporter of Jewish settlements in Palestine and as collector. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center Oct. 1 — June 30, 1998 |
Subjects
Jewish Studies |
|
Life of the Spirit, Life of the Mind: Rockefeller Memorial Chapel at 75
Drawing on photographs and documents from the University Archives, this exhibition explores how the planners of Rockefeller Memorial Chapel, Chapel Deans, the student body, and the broader community have interpreted this mission to shape the architecture of the Chapel as well as the programs it supports. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center March 1 — June 1, 2004 |
Subjects
University of Chicago |
|
Looking Back at the First Regenstein Library Construction Project
Reproductions of construction photographs produced for the 1995 exhibition celebrating the 25th anniversary of the Regenstein Library provide an appropriate backdrop to the start of the Regenstein Reconfiguration Project. University yearbooks and other publications from the archives complement the images on view. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center Jan. 1 — Dec. 1, 1999 |
Subjects
University of Chicago |
|
Looking to Learn, Too: Visual Pedagogy at the University of Chicago
This exhibition explores the ways in which objects, artifacts, and images have been collected, deployed, and displayed in teaching, research, and self-representation since the early days of the University. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center May 1 — Oct. 31, 1996 |
Subjects
Art University of Chicago |
|
The Ludwig Rosenberger Collection of Judaica: A Selection Exhibited at the Joseph Regenstein Library
This exhibition features 126 items from the Rosenberger Collection, arranged in three sections that correspond to emphases in the collection: Pre-Emancipation, 1200-1777; The Enlightenment and Emancipation, 16656-1858; and The Modern World, 1840-1940. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center March 1 — May 31, 1976 |
Subjects
Jewish Studies European History American History |
|
Ludwig Rosenberger: The Reader as Collector
This exhibition explores the ways in which Ludwig Rosenberger's life and reading shaped his vision as a collector of books and other materials portraying the history of the Jews. Organized in conjunction with "Building Collections," the Regenstein Library's twenty-fifth anniversary exhibition. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center Sept. 1 — June 30, 1996 |
Subjects
Jewish Studies |
|
Mapping the Young Metropolis
Between 1915 and 1940, a small faculty in the University of Chicago Department of Sociology, working with dozens of talented graduate students, intensively studied the city of Chicago . They aspired to use the approaches of social science in developing a new field of research, and they took the city as their laboratory. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center June 22 — Sept. 11, 2015 View web exhibit >> |
Subjects
Sociology Chicago and Illinois |
|
Max Liebermann (1847-1935)
Max Liebermann was a German-born Jewish painter and etcher whose career was marked by both success and controversy. The untraditional, proletarian style of his early work contrasted sharply with the academic art then in vogue in Germany. His later impressionist tendency contrasted no less severely. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center April 1 — April 1, 1986 |
Subjects
Jewish Studies Art |
|
Max Liebermann: The Eye of the Artist
Max Liebermann (1847-1935), the German Jewish artist who shocked audiences in the 1870s with his somber and rough-textured depictions of workers and later rose to prominence with light-infused scenes of leisure that evoke the style of the French Impressionists, is the subject of this exhibition. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center Sept. 1 — March 1, 2001 |
Subjects
Jewish Studies Art |
|
The Meaning of Dictionaries
The exhibit features historical dictionaries from the Special Collections Research Center's holdings, as well as archival materials such as correspondence, page proofs, word citation cards, photographs and other items from the University of Chicago Press Records covering the making of The Dictionary of American English and Dictionary of Americanisms. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center March 1 — July 31, 2007 |
Subjects
English Literature History |
|
Mirror of Marvels: Images of Antiquity in Renaissance Rome
This exhibition traces the varied responses of sixteenth-century scholars as they recovered, reconstructed and resurrected the "half-buried marvels" of Rome. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center March 1 — Sept. 1, 1988 |
Subjects
European History |
|
Moses Mendelssohn
Mendelssohn, who was born the son of a poor Jewish school teacher in the Jewish quarter of Dessau in 1729, achieved prominence in eighteenth-century intellectual and philosophical circles. The exhibition presents his extraordinary career and its enduring relevance for scholarship through a display some of Mendelssohn's books, drawn from the Ludwig Rosenberger Collection of Judaica. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center Jan. 1 — Sept. 1, 1987 |
Subjects
Jewish Studies |
|
My Budapest: Portrait of a European City
Celebrating Budapest and Hungary as a significant part of continental culture and history, the exhibit is drawn from Louis Szathmary's renowned Hungarian collection of over 15,000 volumes, featuring books, artifacts, and documents. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center May 1 — Oct. 1, 1989 |
Subjects
European History |
|
The Napoleonic Sanhedrin: 1807-1808
On 6 October 1806 a body appointed by Napoleon and known as the assembly of Jewish Notables invited members of the Jewish communities of Europe to participate in a "Sanhedrin." This exhibition presents the event through archival materials from the Napoleonic government and from the court itself. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center June 1 — Jan. 1, 1987 |
Subjects
Jewish Studies European History |
|
Nathan the Wise, A Drama of Religious Tolerance
Nathan the Wise, A Drama of Religious Tolerance |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center Sept. 1 — June 1, 2005 |
Subjects
Religion |
|
Nature Disclosed: Books from the John Crerar Library Illustrating the History of Science
This exhibition celebrates the merger of the John Crerar Library and science collections of the University of Chicago. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center Oct. 1 — Jan. 1, 1985 |
Subjects
History of Science |
|
Natures and Cultures: The World Anthropology Series
This exhibit of manuscripts, correspondence, conference artifacts, and many of the books in the 91-volume World Anthropology series. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center Jan. 1 — Dec. 1, 1981 |
Subjects
Anthropology |
|
New Testament Manuscript Traditions: An Exhibition Based on the Edgar J. Goodspeed Collection of the University of Chicago Library
This exhibition features some of the most venerable religious and cultural treasures of the University of Chicago Library, including Gospels, lectionaries, canon tables, and manuscripts of the Apocalypse in Greek, Latin, Armenian, Syriac, and Geez. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center Jan. 1 — March 31, 1973 |
Subjects
Special Collections Religion |
|
On Equal Terms: Educating Women at the University of Chicago
Since the University welcomed its first students in the fall of 1892, women have had very different stories to tell about the experiments in co-education and faculty diversification; the experience of the classroom, the laboratory, the dorm, and the streets of Hyde Park; the issues of mentorship, intellectual community, and career advancement; and the opportunities for political action and community involvement, for friendship, romance, and sexual experimentation. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center March 1 — July 31, 2009 View web exhibit >> |
Subjects
Women's Studies University of Chicago Library |
|
On the Edge: Medieval Margins and the Margins of Academic Life
This exhibition explores the symmetry between medieval margins and the modern margins of academic life. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center May 19 — Sept. 10, 2012 View web exhibit >> |
Subjects
Art European History History of Print |
|
One in Spirit: A Retrospective View of the University of Chicago
An introduction to the scope and diversity of the University Archives; not a history but an array of documentation and iconographic resources for the history of an institution. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center Nov. 1 — March 31, 1974 |
Subjects
University of Chicago |
|
Our Lincoln: Bicentennial Icons from the Barton Collection of Lincolniana
Marking the 200th anniversary of the birth of Abraham Lincoln, this exhibition presents a selection of documents and artifacts from the University of Chicago Library's William E. Barton Collection of Lincolniana. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center Jan. 1 — Feb. 28, 2009 View web exhibit >> |
Subjects
Chicago and Illinois American History |
|
Paul B. Moses: Trailblazing Art Historian
The extraordinary life of the art historian Paul B. Moses (1929–1966) was one defined by barriers overcome. Through his writings, photographs, video clips, personal correspondence, ephemera, and original art, the exhibition tells the story of his journey from Ardmore, Pennsylvania and Haverford College, where he was the first African-American student ever admitted, to the University of Chicago, where he distinguished himself through innovative teaching and scholarship until his untimely death. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center Sept. 12 — Dec. 16, 2022 View web exhibit >> |
Subjects
Chicago and Illinois University of Chicago History Art |
|
Practical Grievance: 200 Years of Anglo-Jewish Emancipation
The exhibition focuses on three events: the re-admission of Jews to England in 1656, the Naturalization Act of 1753, and the lifting of remaining civil disabilities between 1830 and 1858. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center Feb. 1 — Aug. 1, 1992 |
Subjects
Jewish Studies |
|
Prayers and Politics
This exhibit, drawn from the rich resources of the Ludwig Rosenberger Library of Judaica, depicts a variety of prayers, sermons, and other writings composed by Jews in reaction to political events. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center Jan. 1 — Dec. 31, 1984 |
Subjects
Jewish Studies |
|
Preserving the Photofiles: Digitizing Images at the University of Chicago
On view is a selection from the rich collection of more than 60,000 images in the University Archives Photographic Files, documenting individuals, buildings, activities, and events associated with the University, dating back to the pre-Civil War period founding of the Old University of Chicago. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center Sept. 1 — Jan. 31, 2003 |
Subjects
University of Chicago Photography |
|
The Presidents of the University of Chicago: A Centennial View
This exhibition, the fourth in a series marking the Centennial of the University of Chicago, examines the distinctive contributions of each of the ten chief executives of the university over the past century. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center Oct. 1 — Feb. 1, 1993 View web exhibit >> |
Subjects
University of Chicago |
|
Printing for the Modern Age: Commerce, Craft, and Culture in the RR Donnelley Archive
The R. R. Donnelley Archive preserves a fascinating array of historical materials dating from the mid-nineteenth to the late twentieth century, offering research potential in modern social and cultural history, the history of printing and the graphic arts, the history of advertising and mass consumption, economic and labor history, Chicago urban and community history, and modern cultural studies, among many other fields. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center Sept. 1 — Feb. 28, 2007 View web exhibit >> |
Subjects
History of Print Chicago and Illinois American History |
|
Pursuing the "Higher Criticism": New Testament Scholarship and Library Collections at the University of Chicago
This exhibition traces the century-long partnership between Chicago New Testament research interests and library resources. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center July 1 — Oct. 1, 1993 |
Subjects
Religion |
|
Race and the Design of American Life: African Americans in Twentieth-Century Commercial Art
Drawing from collections of food packaging, advertisements, children's books, album covers, and other household goods, this exhibit traces the vexed history of African Americans in commercial art—as images and as makers of their own image—and their vital role in shaping the rise and establishment of our modern consumer society. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center Oct. 14 — Jan. 4, 2014 View web exhibit >> |
Subjects
African-American Studies Art |
|
Reading the Greens: Books on Golf from the Arthur W. Schultz Collection
The exhibition is drawn from the Arthur W. Schultz Golf Collection, which includes more than 1,600 books on the history of golf presented to the University of Chicago Library by Arthur W. Schultz, an alumnus and Life Trustee of the University of Chicago. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center May 1 — Sept. 30, 1998 View web exhibit >> |
Subjects
History |
|
Recipes for Domesticity: Cookery, Household Management, and the Notion of Expertise
This exhibition, drawn primarily from the Rare Books Collection, provides a sampling of European and American cookbooks and domestic manuals from court chefs of the 15th century to cooking icons of the 20th century. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center April 22 — July 13, 2013 View web exhibit >> |
Subjects
European History American History |
|
Red Press
Red Press: Radical Print Culture from St. Petersburg to Chicago represents the Bolshevik revolution as it was waged through broadsides, pamphlets, periodicals and posters. Many materials are drawn from the archive of Samuel N. Harper, son of the University’s founding president, the first American Russianist, and eyewitness to the revolution. Through these rare printed sources visitors can trace the worldwide spread of revolutionary and antirevolutionary media and ideas. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center Sept. 25 — Feb. 2, 2018 View web exhibit >> |
Subjects
History Slavic/Eastern Europe/Eurasia |
|
Regional Traditions and Local Patrons: Recent South Asia Acquisitions
The exhibit presents North Indian materials ranging from historical publications to a variety of representations of the epic Ramayana. The volumes exhibited were a gift to the Library by Professor & Mrs. Kali C. Bahl. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center March 1 — June 1, 1986 |
Subjects
Anthropology South Asia Southern Asia |
|
Researching Mexico: University of Chicago Field Explorations in Mexico, 1896-2014
University of Chicago scholars have traveled to Mexico since the late nineteenth century, pursuing research subjects ranging from archival investigation of revolutionary leaders, to documentation of indigenous communities and languages, to the search for the cause of a deadly strain of typhus. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center June 30 — Oct. 4, 2014 View web exhibit >> |
Subjects
Latin American Studies |
|
Robert Rosenthal: A Memorial Exhibition
This exhibition opens the day of the University memorial service for Robert Rosenthal, who died on December 27, 1989, while visiting friends and book dealers in Edinburgh, Scotland. Mr. Rosenthal joined the staff of the University of Chicago Library in 1950 as Assistant Curator for Manuscripts, Archives, and Lincolniana. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center Feb. 1 — March 1, 1990 |
Subjects
University of Chicago |
|
Russian and Soviet Studies at the University of Chicago
This exhibition traces later developments through the career of Samuel N. Harper and other faculty specialists, the growth of library collections in Russian studies, the formation of the Committee on Slavic Area Studies, and the founding of the Department of Slavic Languages and Literatures. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center Jan. 1 — Dec. 31, 1977 |
Subjects
Slavic/Eastern Europe/Eurasia |
|
Samuel Harper and the Russia He Knew
Samuel Harper, son of the University's founding president William Rainey Harper, pioneered Russian studies in this country. The materials he collected during his visits-from postcards to political propaganda-compose this exhibit, displayed in the alcoves of the Special Collections gallery. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center Nov. 1 — Feb. 1, 1990 |
Subjects
History |
|
Scenes of Jewish Life from the Ludwig Rosenberger Library of Judaica
An exhibition of books and prints featuring illustrations of Jewish life and customs and highlighting the work of Bernard Picart, a French Protestant book illustrator who settled in Amsterdam and produced engravings of Jewish life based on first-hand observation. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center Nov. 1 — June 30, 1997 |
Subjects
Jewish Studies Art |
|
Scholars and Scholarship of the Renaissance: An Exhibition from the Collections of the University of Chicago Library
As part of a year-long celebration of the Renaissance, this exhibition features selections from the Library's collections that exemplify "a few of the many varieties of scholarly pursuits that marked the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries." |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center Jan. 1 — Dec. 1, 1964 |
Subjects
European History |
|
Science Through the Ages: A Selection of Pioneer Works in Science, Technology, Medicine in the Collections of the John Crerar Library
This exhibition explores the nature of science and its tendancy to expand man's knowledge of the natural world and the importance of periodicals and publications of academies and societies to the advancement of science. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center Nov. 1 — Jan. 31, 1979 |
Subjects
History of Science |
|
Science and Conscience: Chicago's Met Lab and the Manhattan Project
Based on archives and manuscripts in the Special Collections Research Center, Science and Conscience presents unique historical documents and artifacts, many not previously exhibited. Items on display are drawn from records of scientists’ organizations and the papers of those who worked on the Manhattan Project and at Chicago’s Met Lab, including Enrico Fermi, James Franck, Herbert L. Anderson, Samuel K. Allison, Samuel Schwartz, Francis W. Test, Lawrence Lanzl, John H. Balderston, Jr., Albert Wattenberg, Eugene Rabinowitch, Paul Henshaw, William A. Higinbotham, and Donald MacRae, among others. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center Feb. 19 — April 13, 2018 View web exhibit >> |
Subjects
History University of Chicago |
|
Science in 19th Century Children's Books: An Exhibition Based on the Encyclopaedia Britannica Historical Collection of Books for Children
The 100 books in this exhibition illustrate the relationship of these books books for children to contemporary scientific and technological advances, the attitudes toward these developments, and the prevailing philosophies and methods of teaching science in the 19th century. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center Aug. 1 — Oct. 31, 1966 |
Subjects
History of Science |
|
Science in Manuscript: Some Sources Illustrating the History of Science
This exhibit of original sources form the University's rich manuscript collection in the history of science and medicine traces the history of science through the manuscript form from the thirteenth through twentieth century. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center Feb. 1 — April 1, 1982 |
Subjects
History of Science |
|
Scientific Article: From the Republic of Letters to the World Wide Web
The first scientific journal articles appeared in France and England in 1665, a key historical event in the fledgling enterprise of modern science. This exhibition draws upon a wide variety of communications pertinent to the origin and development of the scientific article. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center May 1 — Sept. 1, 2000 |
Subjects
History of Science |
|
The Search for the Ten Lost Tribes of Israel
Drawing upon eighteen texts and illustrations from travelers, missionaries, explorers, and clerics, the items in this exhibition illustrate the enduring story of the Ten Lost Tribes, as well as depicting isolated Jewish communities throughout the world. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center May 1 — Sept. 1, 2000 |
Subjects
Jewish Studies |
|
Selections of Works by Karl Marx
The majority of items in this exhibition are first or early editions of Marx's work, and represent only a small fraction of the Marx-Engels collection housed in the Rosenberger Library, this 25,000-volume collection of Judaica was given to the University of Chicago in 1979 by Ludwig Rosenberger. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center Feb. 1 — April 1, 1984 |
Subjects
Jewish Studies |
|
The Seminary Co-op Documentary Project: Capturing the Bookstores Distinctive Character and History
After 51 years, the Seminary Co-op Bookstore left cherished home in the basement of the former Chicago Theological Seminary. The importance of the Co-op in the history of the University and for the greater Chicago and intellectual community warranted a significant effort to document it before it began the next phase of its life and to renew interest in this valuable asset on Chicago's South Side. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center April 1 — July 31, 2013 |
Subjects
University of Chicago |
|
Sir Nicholas Bacon Collection, The: Sources on English Society, 1250-1700
The Bacon collection allows one to view the development of English rural and agricultural society in considerable detail. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center April 1 — June 30, 1972 |
Subjects
European History |
|
So Big: Manuscripts on the Move
A selection of manuscripts, chosen according to the serendipitous principle that they were too large to fit into the upright wall cases, is on display throughout the year. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center Sept. 1 — Aug. 1, 1999 |
Subjects
Library Science |
|
Sol Tax: The Making of an Anthropologist
Drawing upon unpublished correspondence, photographs, anthropological fieldnotes, manuscripts and other documentary materials, the exhibition sketches the major phases of Sol Tax's fifty year career in anthropology. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center Oct. 1 — Jan. 1, 1988 |
Subjects
Anthropology |
|
South Asia at Chicago: Fifty Years of Scholarship
This exhibition appears in conjunction with global events marking the 50th anniversary of Indian and Pakistani independence on August 15, 1947. Rare older publications, recent imprints linked to current faculty, student research projects, and archival and manuscript materials from the formative years of the University's focus on languages and civilizations of the region are exhibited. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center Sept. 1 — Jan. 31, 1998 |
Subjects
Southern Asia South Asia |
|
Souvenirs! Get Your Souvenirs!
Souvenirs can come in all shapes and sizes; they can be simple or complex, tasteful or tacky. This exhibition presents various souvenirs created for the 1893 World's Columbian Exposition, the 1933 Century of Progress International Exposition, and the City of Chicago. It draws on collections throughout the Special Collections Research Center, catalyzed by the Ian Mueller Collection of Chicago Memorabilia. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center July 22 — Oct. 4, 2013 View web exhibit >> |
Subjects
Special Collections American History Chicago and Illinois |
|
Specialized Encyclopedias
This related to the major exhibition on encyclopedism. Focusing on "Specialized Encyclopedias fro which there was no room in the major exhibition cases, this smaller selection from the literature included such titles as Buffon's Des oiseaux and encyclopedias addressing aspecialized audiences such as women or children. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center Jan. 1 — Dec. 1, 1990 |
Subjects
History |
|
Speculum Romanae Magnificentiae
With over 900 engravings of views and monuments of Classical and early modern Rome, the selections in this exhibition reveal the nature and variety of the University of Chicago's Speculum Romanae Magnificentiae collection, and the rarity and quality of individual prints. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center Jan. 1 — Dec. 31, 1966 |
Subjects
European History Art Architecture |
|
Splendid Encounters: The Thought and Conduct of Diplomacy
This exhibit-and the book produced in association with it-offer a fresh look at aspects of diplomacy that are usually ignored but which give the activity its distinctive style. Iconography, the role of ceremony, and the demands of honor, are all considered along with cryptology, protocol, and the clash of cultural norms. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center May 1 — Sept. 1, 1984 |
Subjects
Political Science |
|
Stephen A. Douglas and the American Union
The life and career of Senator Stephen A. Douglas (1813-1861), a divisive leader in political struggles over slavery, settlement of the Western territories, and the dissolution of the Federal union, is the subject of this exhibition. Drawn from the Douglas papers and other printed, manuscript and archival holdings, the exhibition marks the Douglas family's recent gift of significant additional materials. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center Feb. 1 — June 1, 1994 |
Subjects
American History |
|
Swiss Treasures: From Biblical Papyrus and Parchment to Erasmus, Zwingli, Calvin, and Barth
This exhibition explores the importance of Swiss religious influences across a range of traditions and historical personalities, among them Erasmus, Zwingli, John Calvin, and Karl Barth. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center Sept. 21 — Dec. 14, 2012 |
Subjects
Religion |
|
Teaching Western Civ At Chicago
Drawing on the rich holding of the University of Chicago Archives, this exhibition examines the complex series of events which led to the inception of the Western Civ course offerings at the University of Chicago. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center June 1 — Oct. 1, 1987 |
Subjects
History |
|
Tensions in Renaissance Cities
Rome, Florence, Geneva, London; Renaissance cities used art and literature to express their growing pains. After the Black Death, recovering cities developed in a geography of interdependence, connected by fluctuating kingdoms, mercantile networks, and the newborn printing press. This exhibit charts the tensions of capitals from Venice to Mexico City as they looked eastward, westward, backward toward antiquity, or upward to the celestial geographies offered by magic, science, and theology. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center March 27 — June 9, 2017 View web exhibit >> |
Subjects
European History |
|
Theodor Herzl and Vienna
Theodor Herzl (1860-1904), founder of the political Zionist movement in Vienna in 1895 and widely considered the father of modern Israel, is the subject of this exhibition prepared by Felix Tweraser. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center July 1 — April 1, 1994 |
Subjects
Religion |
|
This Library Will Contribute to the Liberation of the Mind, the Understanding of Civility, the Exaltation of the Spirit
This Library Will Contribute to the Liberation of the Mind, the Understanding of Civility, the Exaltation of the Spirit |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center Jan. 1 — Dec. 31, 1970 |
Subjects
University of Chicago Library |
|
Through the Lens: Stephen Lewellyn Photographs of the University of Chicago
The prints on display, works by photographer Stephen Lewellyn, document University events, personalities, and campus scenes from the mid-1940s to the late 1960s, and were made from more than 10,000 negatives Lewellyn presented as a gift to the University of Chicago Archives. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center Sept. 1 — Jan. 31, 2003 |
Subjects
Photography University of Chicago |
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Tradition of Aquinas and Bonaventure, The: Text and Commentary during Seven Centuries
This exhibition illustrates the influence of Aquinas and Bonaventure during the 700 years following their deaths, focusing on texts and commentary, with the history of the texts presented in manuscripts, incunabula, and more recent scholarly editions. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center Jan. 1 — Dec. 31, 1974 |
Subjects
Religion European History |
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Travels with Ida: Letters and Photographs from Abroad Selected from the Ida Noyes Papers in the University Archives
Beside the voluminous correspondence between Ida and La Verne Noyes, the exhibit presents Ida Noyes's diaries, and the hand-colored photographs she took and developed on the way. The exhibit not only sheds light on the life of one of the most influential women in the University's early history, it also presents a unique view on the world as it looked to one of the privileged travelers able to circle the globe before the beginning of the 20th century. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center May 1 — Sept. 1, 1982 |
Subjects
University of Chicago |
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Ucrainiana: An Exhibition of Ukranian Books and Books about Ukraine
This exhibition of Ukrainian books honors the formal introduction of Ukrainian studies at the University of Chicago. It offers a general view of the history and culture of Ukraine from a growing body of books which are not frequently found in American libraries. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center March 1 — May 31, 1971 |
Subjects
Slavic/Eastern Europe/Eurasia |
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The Un-German Spirit: The Nazi Assault on Arts and Letters
The exhibition documents the attempt by German National Socialists of the 1930s to eradicate German avant-garde art, music, literature, theater, and film. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center July 1 — Feb. 1, 1992 |
Subjects
Jewish Studies |
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The University of Chicago Centennial Catalogues
This online presentation reproduces the complete text and accompanying images from four University of Chicago Centennial Exhibition Catalogues, published in conjunction with a series of physical exhibitions organized by the Department of Special Collections to celebrate the 1991-92 Centennial of the University of Chicago. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center Jan. 1 — Feb. 1, 1993 View web exhibit >> |
Subjects
University of Chicago |
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The University of Chicago Faculty: A Centennial View
"The University of Chicago Faculty: A Centennial View" examines the careers of twenty-eight representative scholars from the institution's first century. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center Oct. 1 — Dec. 1, 1992 View web exhibit >> |
Subjects
University of Chicago |
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University of Chicago Press: A Century of Scholarly Publishing, 1891-1991
This exhibition, organized by the Library in conjunction with the University of Chicago Press, marks the Centennial of the University of Chicago Press by tracing its history from its beginnings as a small private corporation to its current status as America's largest university press. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center June 1 — Sept. 1, 1992 |
Subjects
University of Chicago |
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Uses of Gothic
The University of Chicago's remarkable adherence to Gothic design and quadrangular planning through four decades of rapid social change and shifting architectural fashion form the theme of this exhibit. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center May 1 — Sept. 1, 1983 |
Subjects
University of Chicago |
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The Virtual Tourist in Renaissance Rome: Printing and Collecting the Speculum Romanae Magnificentiae
This exhibition examines the publishing history of Antonio Lafreri's Speculum Romanae Magnificentiae through several generations of printmakers and print publishers, showcasing the Library's Speculum Romanae Magnificantiae Digital Collection. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center Sept. 1 — Feb. 29, 2008 |
Subjects
European History Art |
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A Voice for Justice: The Life and Legacy of Ida B. Wells
This web exhibit showcases the achievements of civil rights activist Ida B. Wells (1862-1931) and documents her lifelong campaign for the rights and lives of African Americans in the nineteenth and twentieth-century United States of America. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center View web exhibit >> |
Subjects
Chicago and Illinois American History African-American Studies |
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War, Trauma, Memory
It seems an understatement to note that war is traumatic to those who experience it in any way, shape or form. The pieces in this exhibit reflect their creators’ experiences in wars from the 16th century through the present day. Each of these pieces was published or made public by their creators; by that action the creator invites us into the captured moment. We see, not a moment of trauma itself but a time after that moment, whether that be seconds or years. In this exhibit, the trauma of war is represented by that very absence of trauma, through the experience creators share with viewers, listeners or readers. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center April 30 — Aug. 31, 2018 |
Subjects
History |
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We Are Chicago:Student Life in the Collections of the University of Chicago Archives
Drawn from the historical collections of the University Archives, We Are Chicago highlights student experiences over a span of 120 years. This exhibition features recent donations to the collections along with rarely seen materials. Costumes, photographs, T-shirts, letters, posters, publications, and memorabilia will combine to make this the largest and most inclusive exhibition in the ongoing Special Collections archival series, Discover Hidden Archives Treasures. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center Jan. 2 — March 31, 2012 View web exhibit >> |
Subjects
University of Chicago |
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Why War? Freud and Einstein in Dialogue
Drawn from the Ludwig Rosenberger Collection of Judaica, this display presents correspondence between Sigmund Freud and Albert Einstein on the subject of peace and war. This exchange was commissioned by the League of Nations in 1931. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center April 1 — July 1, 1990 |
Subjects
Jewish Studies Public Policy |
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Will Cuppy: The Natural History of a Modern Humorist
As a columnist for The New Yorker and other publications, Will Cuppy (Ph.B. '07, A.M. '14) satirized evolutionary theory and commented on the ironies of human history. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center Nov. 1 — Jan. 1, 1994 |
Subjects
University of Chicago |
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William Benton: A Public Life
This exhibition examines the range and substance of Benton's contributions within a number of distinct but interlocking spheres: founder of Benton and Bowles, vice-president and trustee of the University of Chicago, pioneer in educational films and radio, owner and publisher of the Encyclopaedia Britannica, Muzak entrepreneur, unofficial advisor to the isolationist America First Committee, charter member and vice-chairman of the Committee for Economic Development, Assistant Secretary of State for Public Affairs, founding delegate to UNESCO, liberal Senator from Connecticut, opponent of Joseph McCarthy, and creator of the Benton Foundation for philanthropy in education and communications. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center Jan. 1 — May 1, 1987 |
Subjects
University of Chicago |
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World Views: Maps and Atlases from Home to Research Library
This exhibition of maps and atlases, spanning the period from the late fifteenth through the early twentieth century, illustrates the uses of maps for recording, disseminating, and studying worldviews. |
Locations
The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center Sept. 1 — Dec. 1, 1999 |
Subjects
Geography |