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  • Garvey, Eleanor M.

    (Show Bio)

    Oral history interview with Eleanor M. Garvey, 1997 Feb. 28 - June 13

    3 sound cassettes (3 1/2 hr.) : analog.

    An interview of Eleanor M. Garvey conducted by Robert F. Brown for the Archives of American Art in Garvey's office, Houghton Library, Harvard University, 1997 Feb. 28, May 2, May 23, and June 13. FEB. 28, 1997 SESSION: Garvey discusses her childhood in Worcester, Mass.; majoring in art history at Wellesley College under Serape der Nersessian, Alexander Campbell, Agnes Abbott, and Kenneth Conant; study of education at Clark University, with drawing classes at the art school of the Worcester Art Museum; and the extremely useful experience working at the Museum under Charles Sawyer and Louisa Dresser. MAY 2, 1997 SESSION: Working as an art librarian and museum curator at Wellesley College (1947-1952), and art history professors John McAndrew, Sidney Freedberg, James O'Gorman; moving on to the Newark Museum (1952-1953) and its collections and administration under Katherine Coffey. MAY 23, 1997 SESSION: Joining the Dept. of Printing and Graphic Arts of the Houghton Library in 1953 beginning as secretary to curator Philip Hofer; Hofer's work on illustrated books; the development of the Houghton Library from the so-called "Treasure Room" of the main Harvard Library under the direction of George Parker Winship; Garvey's close relationship with William Bentinck-Smith, a Houghton patron and an authority on type design; the status of women professionals at Harvard. JUNE 13, 1997 SESSION: Continued discussion of Houghton patron William Bentinck-Smith; publications and exhibitions while at Houghton, including: "The Artist and the Book, 1860-1960" (1961), "The Turn of a Century, 1885-1970" (1970), "Henry Hobson Richardson and His Office: Selected Drawings" (1974), and "Artists of the Book in Boston, 1890-1910" (1988), as well as her current project producing a catalog of 18th century Venetian illustrated books and her involvement in seminars on artists' books.

    This interview is part of the Archives of American Art Oral History Program, started in 1958 to document the history of the visual arts in the United States, primarily through interviews with artists, historians, dealers, critics and administrators.

    How to Use this Interview



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