Item from a collection of University of Oregon faculty, students, buildings, organizations, and events. Two women are walking down the front steps of the new Library (The Library, now known as the Knight Library, first opened in 1937). The women are wearing calf-length skirts, with blouses, and jackets. This photograph was shot on Agfa Nitrate Film, an unstable (and flammable) film that was common in the early 20th Century.
Item from a collection of University of Oregon faculty, students, buildings, organizations, and events. The University of Oregon Library and grounds on a snowy day.
Item from a collection of University of Oregon faculty, students, buildings, organizations, and events. Two students are holding books and sitting on the front steps of the Knight Library. One student holds a copy of Writer's Guide and Index to English: Fourth Edition, by Porter Perrin.
This print depicts interaction between a fish form and a bird form, rendered in print with the appearance of scratchings through deep black space., Frank Boyden was born 1942, in Portland, OR. He attended Yale University, School of Art, achieving a M.F.A. and B.F.A., in Painting, 1968. In 1965, he attended Colorado College, where he received a B.A. in Art., http://www.laurarusso.com/artists/boyden.html, The Oregon Arts Commission has ten Regional Arts Councils that provide delivery of art services and information. The Council for this location is Lane Arts. You may view their website at http://www.lanearts.org/
A large, black-and-white photograph of young kids running down a hillside., Barbara Gilson; Untitled #12/15; 3 x 3 feet, (1991) Barbara Gilson received a BA in French Literature and in Film Studies from Dartmouth College in Hanover, New Hampshire. She has studied photography at the Visual Studies Workshop in Rochester, New York, where she coordinated the film program. During the tenure of her MFA Program in Photography at Arizona State University, she was a graduate research assistant to Mark Klett for the Photography Collaborative Facility, Visual Arts Research Institute. She also organized Editions and Additions: International Bookworks at Northlight Gallery. Awarded a Graduate Student Research Development Program Grant, Barbara and two colleagues have been involved in a collaborative project with the Navajo to document their sacred land and sites in northwestern New Mexico. The Arizona Commission on the Arts awarded this project, Hajiinei Dine'tah, a Visual Arts Travelling Exhibitions Grant. In addition to being selected as a recipient of the Contemporary Forum Artist's Material Fund, Phoenix Art Museum; a finalist in the Ferguson Grant Award, Friends of Photography; and awarded First place in the Tucson Weekly Annual Fiction and Photography Competition, Barbara has shown her work nationally in one person and in group exhibitions, and is represented in many public and private collections. She has also been a co-director of Blue Sky Gallery, Portland, Oregon, and is an Artist-in-Education in the greater Portland area., The Oregon Arts Commission has ten Regional Arts Councils that provide delivery of art services and information. The Council for this location is Lane Arts. You may view their website at http://www.lanearts.org/
This naturalistic landscape painting depicts a view of a small pond amongst green trees., Antoinette Dewit; Bothy's Pasturelands; 14 x 18 inches; watercolor, The Oregon Arts Commission has ten Regional Arts Councils that provide delivery of art services and information. The Council for this location is Lane Arts. You may view their website at http://www.lanearts.org/
Decorative step lights were envisioned for the circular staircase which serves as a focal point for the south end of the library. In 1990, three glass artists -- John Rose, Linda Ethier, and Liz Capelli -- were invited to make a proposal for the design and fabrication of cast glass sculptures to decorate (and illuminate) these stairs. In 1991, Ethier, of Portland, Oregon, was selected for the project, and in response to the selection committee’s suggestions, she used collections unique to Knight Library as the inspiration for her final designs. Ethier’s completed work, entitled Luminated Manuscripts, consists of 15 glass panels installed on the guardrails of the three flights of stairs that comprise what is now called the Solari Staircase. This staircase is named for Mary Corrigan Solari, a 1946 UO graduate, and her husband, Richard Solari, who contributed to the Knight Library expansion project. Initially installed in November, 1992, the glass sculptures were adjusted with filters in August 1993 to enhance their appearance. The panels depict a variety of figures and objects associated with library collections, and several images are based on recommendations from library staff. Thus these illuminated panels represent a unique collaboration resulting in art about the library: its environment, collections, and the people it serves. (information provided by Ed Teague, Head of the University of Oregon's Architecture & Allied Arts Library. For more detail on Ethier's Luminated Manuscripts, please view http://darkwing.uoregon.edu/~ehteague/staircase/ ) For an overview on the process behind the creation of this work, please view this page created by Ed Teague: http://darkwing.uoregon.edu/~ehteague/staircase/ethier.html, Linda Ethier; glass; 1995; U of O Knight Library, info@lindaethier.com, http://www.lindaethier.com/, The Oregon Arts Commission has ten Regional Arts Councils that provide delivery of art services and information. The Council for this location is Lane Arts. You may view their website at http://www.lanearts.org/
This view depicts a detail of the right panel in the triptych, Constructing Layers of Time. It presents a group of stick figures on the top of a triangular form that bisects the rest of the picture plane in sections of red and yellow. Thin, black lines comprise several other peripheral forms., http://www.uoregon.edu/~prentice/, The Oregon Arts Commission has ten Regional Arts Councils that provide delivery of art services and information. The Council for this location is Lane Arts. You may view their website at http://www.lanearts.org/
This landscape scene depicts a meandering body of water amongst tall grasses and trees., Allan Stephenson; Estuary-Gearhart; 10 x 18 inches, Allan Stephenson is an artist who draws his inspiration from the natural landscape particularly that of his native British Isles and also that of the Pacific Northwest where he now makes his home. *I am always looking for and attempting to communicate with the viewer that special sense of place that infuses some areas of the natural world with meaning, wonder and beauty. I hope my work can provide some escape from the sometimes frenetic world we all live in. I am a traditionalist. I don't see the art I produce as breaking any kind of new ground but rather I apply myself to existing forms and attempt to inject perhaps fresh content. I am currently enjoying the medium of pastel for it's direct hands-on quality that allows me to blend and sculpt the pigment using my fingers and hands rather than the intermediary of a brush.* (excerpt from artist's exhibition list), http://www.allanstephenson.com/index.php, The Oregon Arts Commission has ten Regional Arts Councils that provide delivery of art services and information. The Council for this location is Lane Arts. You may view their website at http://www.lanearts.org/
This image is included in Building Oregon: Architecture of Oregon and the Pacific Northwest, a digital collection which provides documentation about the architectural heritage of the Pacific Northwest.
This triptych presents a series of human forms, rendered in black line and complimented with red, green, blue, and yellow., http://www.uoregon.edu/~prentice/, The Oregon Arts Commission has ten Regional Arts Councils that provide delivery of art services and information. The Council for this location is Lane Arts. You may view their website at http://www.lanearts.org/
This view details the wooden inlay on the front of the circulation desk in the Knight Library., Gerhard B. Pagenstecher; 7783 SW Capitol Hwy. Portland, OR 97219; 503-245-7002; Knight Library circulation desk detail; 1994; 34 x 196 inches, The Oregon Arts Commission has ten Regional Arts Councils that provide delivery of art services and information. The Council for this location is Lane Arts. You may view their website at http://www.lanearts.org/
This stone relief is one of four that depicts caricatures of the seasons. This one represents fall., http://www.4culture.org/publicart/registry/parts/parts_artist.asp?ArtistID=34, The Oregon Arts Commission has ten Regional Arts Councils that provide delivery of art services and information. The Council for this location is Lane Arts. You may view their website at http://www.lanearts.org/
The University of Oregon Adrenaline Film Project is an intensive narrative film production workshop in which university students and local filmmakers write, shoot and edit their films in just 72 hours. Hosted by the Cinema Pacific film festival, filmmakers are mentored and monitored throughout their three-day movie-making blitz by visiting industry professionals before screening their projects on the final evening of the festival.
The University of Oregon Adrenaline Film Project is an intensive narrative film production workshop in which university students and local filmmakers write, shoot and edit their films in just 72 hours. Hosted by the Cinema Pacific film festival, filmmakers are mentored and monitored throughout their three-day movie-making blitz by visiting industry professionals before screening their projects on the final evening of the festival.
Oregana is the University of Oregon yearbook. It was published roughly 1910-1980, with a few gap years. In 2011, UO Libraries digitized each year, creating a full electronic version of the publication.
Temporary Documents Librarian, Laura Wimberley, gives instruction to international students in the Map Library, located on the main floor of Knight Library. Xiaotong Wang, Chinese Language Copy Cataloger, translates.
A student employee working on the Oregon Digital Newsper Program. The Oregon Digital Newspaper Program (ODNP) is an initiative to digitize historic Oregon newspaper content and make it freely available to the public through a keyword-searchable online database.
Librarian and Director of Instruction and Campus Partnerships, Barbara Jenkins, gives instruction to international graduate students in classroom 267B, located on the second floor of Knight Library.
A student employee working on the Oregon Digital Newsper Program. The Oregon Digital Newspaper Program (ODNP) is an initiative to digitize historic Oregon newspaper content and make it freely available to the public through a keyword-searchable online database.
Reference Librarian, Kathleen Lenn, gives instruction to international graduate students in Proctor 42, a classroom located on the lower level of Knight Library.
Temporary Documents Librarian, Laura Wimberley, gives instruction to international students in the Map Library, located on the main floor of Knight Library. Xiaotong Wang, Chinese Language Copy Cataloger, translates.
Temporary Documents Librarian, Laura Wimberley, gives instruction to international students in the Map Library, located on the main floor of Knight Library. Xiaotong Wang, Chinese Language Copy Cataloger, translates.
Librarian and Director of Instruction and Campus Partnerships, Barbara Jenkins, gives instruction to international graduate students in classroom 267B, located on the second floor of Knight Library.
Librarian and Director of Instruction and Campus Partnerships, Barbara Jenkins, gives instruction to international graduate students in classroom 267B, located on the second floor of Knight Library.
The Creative Musicians Workstations in the Douglass Listening Room, located in the Knight Library. Each of the three stations is equipped with a powerful iMac computer with a large-format screen and a keyboard controller (music keyboard), as well as a very comprehensive array of the latest music technology software.
The University of Oregon Adrenaline Film Project is an intensive narrative film production workshop in which university students and local filmmakers write, shoot and edit their films in just 72 hours. Hosted by the Cinema Pacific film festival, filmmakers are mentored and monitored throughout their three-day movie-making blitz by visiting industry professionals before screening their projects on the final evening of the festival.