courtauld institute illustration archives
TRANSCRIPT
COURTAULD INSTITUTE ILLUSTRATION ARCHIVESSource: ARLIS/NA Newsletter, Vol. 4, No. 3 (APRIL 1976), p. 89Published by: The University of Chicago Press on behalf of the Art Libraries Society of NorthAmericaStable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/27945612 .
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has been asked by the Executive Board to prepare position papers on the proposals described in the questionnaire and
plans to have the papers ready for review at the Executive Board meeting in July.
NEWS FROM CISSIG
The Descriptive Cataloging and Classification Round Robins are well off the ground and circulating. We hope to see the
Subject Heading mailings soon. Send your name to Bethany Mendenhall (Descriptive), Sherman Clarke (Classification), and Donya Schimansky (Subject) if you want to get in on the act. And please drop Karen Muller a line if you or your local chapter are planning any CISSIG related activities.
NEWS FROM OUR CCRC REPRESENTATIVE
Nancy John reports that the Joint Steering Committee for Revision of AACR agreed in February that in the revised AACR an artist should not be considered the author of a work containing his or her reproductions unless the
originals were made for the purpose of reproduction. This welcome decision stems from an ARLIS position paper presented to the CCRC last year by Nancy John. Art libra
rians, you have been heard! We were not heard, however, in January 1975 when
Nancy presented to CCRC a request for the reinstatement of AACR 98 and 99. That proposal was thrown out as being too substantial of a change for consideration by the CCRC. Since then, CCRC seems to have expanded its horizons and another last ditch effort is underway to have LC or CCRC consider our request. For those of you who have asked where to send your complaints about the dropping of 98 and 99, Nancy suggests Benny Tucker, Principal Descriptive Cata
loger, LC, or John By rum at Princeton, the chairman of the CCRC.
NEWS FROM ART INDEX
Users of the Art Index are reminded that a new feature for book reviews appears beginning with the most recently pub lished cumulation, volume 22. Following the main body of the
index, there is now a listing of citations to all book reviews indexed.
A new journal to be published by the editors of Interiors is to be added to the indexing coverage of the Art Indexf.
Residential Interiors has been a quarterly section of Interiors and will become a separate publication beginning with an
April 1976 issue. It will now be added to the coverage of the Art Index, and users of the index will see the new
journal cited in entries using the abbreviation, "Res Int."
LC ENTRY CHANGE
Sherman Clarke sent along notice of this LC entry change. LC has changed from: Joseph H.Hirshhorn Museum and
Sculpture Garden, Smithsonian Institution to Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden.
?Carol Mandel
320 Butler Library Columbia University
Nadelman, Elie, 1882-1946. The sculpture and drawings of Elie Nadelman, 1882-1946 :
[an exhibition / organized by the Whitney Museum of American Art ; text by John I. H. Baur].
? New York : Whitney Museum of American Art, cl975.
119 p. : ill. ; 28 cm.
Exhibition held at the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, Sept. 23-Nov. 30, 1975 and the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Smith sonian Institution, Washington, D.C., Dec. 18, 1975-Feb. 15, 1976.
1. Nadelman, Elie, 1882-1946. I. Baur, John Ireland Howe, 1909 II. Whitney Museum of American Art, New York. III. Hirshhorn Mu
seum and Sculpture Garden. IV. Title.
NB237.N23B38 730'.92'4 75-14617 MARC
Library of Congress 76
COURTAULD INSTITUTE ILLUSTRATION ARCHIVES
A new tool for teaching, study and research is being pub lished by Harvey Miller Publishers in London. Delving into the Witt and Conway Libraries of the Courtauld Institute, these Archives will consist for the first year of Cathedrals and Monastic Buildings in the British Isles, 15th and 16th
Century Sculpture in Italy, Medieval Architecture and
Sculpture in Europe and Late 18th and 19th Century Sculpture in the British Isles.
Each Archive will be published in a continuing series of
quarterly parts. In each year these will contain up to 800 individual illustrations, many of them not available from
any other source. These illustrations will be allowed to be made into slides for teaching purposes only. Each Archive will have 80 pages of illustrations in each Part, thus containing about 150-200 illustrations with cap tions. The bound edition, with reference index on the
spine like a periodical, can be stored in sequence. The loose-leaf edition is printed on one side of the sheet
(160 pages) so that they can be arranged in different
groups if desired. The Archives are obtainable only on subscription.
For more information, please write to Harvey Miller
Publishers, 20 Marryat Road, London SW19 5BD England.
The organizers of the "Japonisme: Japanese Influence on
French Art, 1854-1910" exhibition, which opened at the Cleveland Museum of Art and continued in 1975-76 at the Rutgers University Art Gallery in New Brunswick, NJ and the Walters Art Gallery in Baltimore, have prepared a slide packet with a selection of works from the show. The 20 slides in each package include examples from the prints, decorative arts, and paintings in the exhibition which demonstrate the influence of Japan as all-pervasive in the latter part of the 19th century. These slides are carefully labelled and accompanied by a short text on Japonisme, available for $15.00 plus postage by contacting Stanley
W. Hess in care of the Slide Library, Cleveland Museum of Art, or by contacting Dr. Gabriel P. Weisberg, Curator of the Department of Art History and Education.
An announcement concerning future tours abroad
of the exhibition will be forthcoming during the next few months.
89
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