Staff- and student-led exhibition and collection tours on the occasion of UC Berkeley’s CalDay May 21, 12noon • Lewis-Latimer Room, The Faculty Club April 21, 5 –7pm • Morrison Library, Doe Library ROUNDTABLE ➤ “THE WORLD’S BEST WORKING CLIMATE”: MODELING INDUSTRIAL SUBURBS ON THE EDGE OF SAN FRANCISCO BAY April 18 • Magnes Collection EVENT ➤ FIFTEENTH ANNUAL CTP DISTINGUISHED LECTURER Professor Bernhard Palme, University of Vienna, Austrian National Library MAY May 6 • The Magnes Auditorium, 2121 Allston Way Wednesday Noon–1 pm (presentation begins promptly at 12:15 pm) ➤ POPUP EXHIBITION SERIES Peter Ekman, Bancroft Library Study Award recipient and doctoral candidate in Geography, UC Berkeley EXHIBITION ➤ HIGHLIGHTS FROM THE REVA AND DAVID LOGAN COLLECTION OF BOOKS ON PHOTOGRAPHY Date TBA (Early May, 2015) • Magnes Collection The gift from the Logan Foundation includes more than 2,000 titles comprising some of the most sought-after and historically significant books by American and European masters of photography. Among the highlights of the exhibition are examples from a complete set of Alfred Stieglitz’s Camera Work, the most important American art and photography journal of the early 20th century. Also on display are highly prized first editions of books by such photographers as Paul Strand, Man Ray, Robert Frank, Edward Steichen, Dorothea Lange, Margaret Bourke White, Cecil Beaton, Henri Cartier Bresson, and Brassai. The exhibition also features photographs from The Bancroft Library Pictorial Collection intended to complement the Logan books on photography and place CALENDAR & EXHIBITIONS Between 1880 and 1940, urban manufacturers, planners, and property developers configured a series of company towns and industrial suburbs just east of San Francisco Bay, stretching from Richmond to Antioch on the shores of the Carquinez Strait. Drawing on visual materials and numerous manuscript collections at Bancroft, Peter Ekman will discuss how this unfashionable, ostensibly unplanned, “middle landscape” came, over time, to serve as a kind of laboratory for new, imitable models of social and spatial order. He will place these experiments within a prehistory, intellectual and material-cultural, of the postwar suburb, and explore their afterlives amid decades of disinvestment. May 7–September 4 • The Bancroft Library Gallery 10am – 4pm • Monday – Friday Opening Reception, May 6, 5:30–7:30pm Th e B a n c r o f t L i b r a r y EVENTS EVENT ➤ THE SECRET LANGUAGE OF FLOWERS This public program, focused on the exhibition, The Secret Language of Flowers, celebrates the end of the Spring Semester. Presented in collaboration with the Berkeley Institute for Jewish Law and Israel Studies, the Berkeley Center for Jewish Studies, and the UC Botanical Garden, it will include lectures and a reception. EVENT ➤ THE FRIENDS OF THE BANCROFT LIBRARY ANNUAL MEETING TBA. COVER IMAGE: Henri Cartier-Bresson, The Decisive Moment, New York: Simon and Schuster, 1952. First American edition. Bound in color printed boards designed by Henri Matisse. From the Logan exhibit. Call number BANC f TR675 .C3513 1952 University of California, Berkeley Berkeley, California 94720-6000 ROUNDTABLE ➤ TO BE ANNOUNCED FIRST CLASS MAIL U.S. POSTAGE PAID BERKELEY, CA PERMIT NO. 559 CAL DAY them within the context of Bancroft’s photography holdings. The Logan gift brings Berkeley’s scholarly resources for the study of photojournalism, press photography, and documentary photography to the national forefront. The Bancroft Library April 16, 12noon • Lewis-Latimer Room, The Faculty Club SP R I N G 20 15 UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, BERKELEY F EBRUARY Through May 29 • Bancroft Corridor between The Bancroft Library and Doe Library EXHIBITION ➤ COMMEMORATING THE FREE SPEECH MOVEMENT 50TH ANNIVERSARY This exhibit revisits this pivotal student activist movement through University Archives and other Bancroft materials. February 4, 11, 18, 25 • The Magnes Auditorium, 2121 Allston Way Wednesdays 12noon–1 pm (presentation begins promptly at 12:15 pm) ➤ POPUP EXHIBITION SERIES Each week a notable guest presents a brief lecture on a treasure selected from the The Magnes Collection in a “flash” exhibition. Bring your lunch or enjoy complimentary refreshments as you join this exciting learning program. Free and open to the public. M A RCH American literature. This talk will discuss the history of this Bay Area literary activity by looking at some of its key figures and publishing efforts during the 1970s. March 4, 11, 18 • The Magnes Auditorium, 2121 Allston Way Wednesdays 12noon–1 pm (presentation begins promptly at 12:15 pm) Simon Abramowitsch, Bancroft Library Study Award recipient and doctoral candidate in English, UC Davis ➤ POPUP EXHIBITION SERIES March 9, 9am–1pm • Magnes Collection EVENT ➤ MODERN FOOD RITUALS: FROM THE COMMUNAL TABLE TO THE GLOBAL TASTING ROOM Through June 26 • Magnes Collection February 16–November 2 • Rowell Cases, 2nd floor corridor between The Bancroft Library and Doe Library EXHIBITION ➤ GOURMET GHETTOS: MODERN FOOD RITUALS EXHIBITION ➤ BERKELEY’S IVORY TOWER: THE CAMPANILE AT 100 This exhibit explores the broader linkages among food, ritual, identity, and activism that inform Jewish life. bit.ly/gourmetghettos Sather Tower, also known as “The Campanile,” looms large both as a physical structure and as the most widely recognized symbol of the Berkeley campus. This exhibition celebrates the centennial of the landmark through holdings from the University Archives and The Bancroft Library’s manuscript and pictorial collections. Inspired by the exhibition, Gourmet Ghettos: Modern Food Rituals, UC Berkeley scholars and Bay Area authors, artists, and food activists join in a roundtable discussion of religious and secular food rituals; increasing public interest in ecology, food security, and social justice; and the role of museums and galleries in facilitating collaboration between academic research and social engagement. Presented in conjunction with the Annual Conference of the Council of American Jewish Museums. February 18, 5–8 pm • Magnes Collection March 13–14, 2015 Through June 26 • Magnes Collection EXHIBITION ➤ THE JEWISH WORLD • A BOOK INSTALLATION The Jewish World: 100 Treasures of Art and Culture, published by SkiràRizzoli in Fall 2014, is the first comprehensive catalog of The Magnes Collection of Jewish Art and Life. Selected pages from the volume illuminate the walls of The Magnes Auditorium. Through June 26 • Magnes Collection EXHIBITION ➤ THE FUTURE OF MEMORY: JEWISH CULTURE IN THE DIGITAL AGE In this innovative project an installation, a museum exhibition, and a digital research lab are combined to allow researchers of all kinds to discuss memory, digital history, and the use of the Internet to enhance the understanding of Jewish cultural heritage. bit.ly/futureofmemory Through June 26 • Magnes Collection EVENT ➤ THE FUTURE OF MEMORY: EXHIBITION OPENING AND LAUNCH OF DIGITAL HUMANITIES AT BERKELEY Digital Humanities at Berkeley is a partnership between the Office of the Dean of Arts and Humanities and Research IT, supported by a generous grant from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, with additional support from the Office of the Vice Chancellor for Research. February 19, 12noon • Lewis-Latimer Room, The Faculty Club ROUNDTABLE ➤ TO BE ANNOUNCED February 20, 2–10 pm • Magnes Collection EXHIBITION ➤ THE SECRET LANGUAGE OF FLOWERS: BOTANICAL DRAWINGS FROM ISRAEL, 1949–1950 EVENT ➤ THE NILE PROJECT • CALPERFORMANCES SYMPOSIUM, FOOD TASTING, AND COMMUNITY MUSIC EVENT The botanical drawings of Ukrainian-born artist Shmuel Lerner provide a unique window into the landscape, history, and languages of Israel in the period immediately following its establishment as a state. The 26 drawings from 1949-50 include the author’s annotations about plants, places, and language. bit.ly/secretlanguageofflowers Magnes Galleries are open Tu-Fr, 11am-4pm, January 27-June 26, 2015 Join CalPerformances at The Magnes for a symposium, food tasting, and community music event following the performance of The Nile Project (Thursday, February 19, Zellerbach Hall). More than a dozen performers from Sudan, Egypt, Eritrea, Ethiopia, and Uganda have collaborated in using music to raise awareness of the cultural and environmental challenges along the world’s longest river. EVENT ➤ ORAL HISTORY CENTER SPRING WORKSHOP The Oral History Center is launching a new two-day Spring Workshop designed for the person interested in learning the practice of oral history from the ground up. Our experienced oral historians will focus on the basics— interviewing, project planning, interviewing techniques, transcription, recording equipment, and preservation. Though space is limited, everyone is welcome to attend the workshop, which will be held on the UC Berkeley campus. The cost is $225 and includes a take-home oral history manual. To register see: http://bancroft.berkeley.edu/ ROHO/education/workshop.html. For more information, contact Martin Meeker at mmeeker@library.berkeley.edu. March 19, 12noon Lewis-Latimer Room, The Faculty Club ROUNDTABLE ➤ “COUNTER-INSTITUTIONS ARE THE ANSWER, MAN!” MULTI-ETHNIC PUBLISHING IN THE SAN FRANCISCO BAY AREA IN THE 1970S In the 1970s, independent publishing in the San Francisco Bay Area was central to the development of multi-ethnic American literature. Multi-ethnic literary venues in the Bay Area not only presented work by and for single-ethnic groups, but they also argued for a properly multi-cultural March 19, 7–9 pm • Magnes Collection EVENT ➤ JEWISH SONGLINES: JUDEO-SPANISH AND YIDDISH MUSIC AND DANCE WITH ESTI KENAN-OFRI (ISRAEL) AND MICHAEL ALPERT (UNITED STATES) A unique encounter between two world-class interpreters of Jewish musical traditions from Eastern Europe, North Africa, and the Middle East. Esti Kenan-Ofri is a composer and a performer of Sephardic and Arabic music and dance, and a vocalist sought after by some of the leading contemporary composers of new music, including Luciano Berio. Currently a Schusterman Visiting Artist at UCLA, she teaches in the Department of Music at Bar Ilan University. Michael Alpert, a leader in the world Jewish music scene, has been instrumental in the revival of Yiddish song and the rise of Klezmer music since the 1970s. He has taught and lectured at universities around the world and has performed with Kapelye, David Krakauer, and Brave Old World. APR I L . April 1, 15, 22, 29 • The Magnes Auditorium, 2121 Allston Way Wednesdays 12noon–1 pm (presentation begins promptly at 12:15 pm) ➤ POPUP EXHIBITION SERIES April 2, Time TBA • Magnes Collection EVENT ➤ DARIUS MILHAUD: THE BERKELEY YEARS A very special musical event featuring the 14th and 15th String Quartets of Darius Milhaud, one of many artists and intellectuals who came to the East Bay seeking refuge from European fascism. Co-sponsored by the UC Berkeley Department of History. Performed by the Left Coast Chamber Ensemble and students in the UC Berkeley Department of Music.
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