Friday, March 18, 2011

"Technology Versus Art"

Join us on Wednesday, March 23 at 6:00 p.m. for “Technology Versus Art: The Early Daguerreotype’s Confounding Status in Philadelphia, 1839-1845"

Sarah Gillespie, current William H. Helfand American Visual Culture Fellow at the Library Company, will discuss the initial reception of the daguerreotype in Philadelphia. The Library Company holds over 200 daguerreotypes, primarily produced in Philadelphia between 1840 and 1860. Many of these early photographs were recently on display in our “Catching a Shadow: Daguerreotypes in Philadelphia, 1839-1860” and can now be seen in the online exhibition. Please email lpropst@librarycompany.org or call 215.546.3181 to RSVP for this event.

Monday, March 14, 2011

“Revisiting Rural Cemeteries”

Join us on Wednesday, March 16th, 1:00 - 5:45 p.m. for a Symposium Sponsored by Library Company of Philadelphia, the Laurel Hill Cemetery Company, and the Program in Historic Preservation, University of Pennsylvania

In the three decades prior to the Civil War, Americans flocked to “rural” cemeteries being built outside cities and towns. They came to mourn, to tour, and buy land; to hear speeches, view monuments, and visit family lots; to study the art of landscape gardening; and to engage in a kind of solitude that was both social and civic in nature. Philadelphia’s Laurel Hill Cemetery, an early example of the type, is now celebrating its 175th anniversary. In conjunction with the exhibition “Building a City of the Dead: The Creation and Expansion of Laurel Hill Cemetery” (on view at the Library Company through April 29), this conference will explore the “rural” cemetery movement and antebellum attitudes toward death. The event is free and open to the public but pre-registration is required. Please register here.


Click here to see the event brochure.