The New York Public Library for the Performing Arts

Past Exhibitions

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Divas! The Fabulous Photography of Kenn Duncan
Plaza Lobby and Steinberg Room Gallery
From Monday, October 27, 2008 to Saturday, January 3, 2009

To celebrate the publication of Divas! The Fabulous Photography of Kenn Duncan, the Library presents a selection of Kenn Duncan’s photographs of celebrated women performers from the worlds of theater, ballet, and music, including Bette Midler, Angela Lansbury, Gelsey Kirkland, Suzanne Farrell, and Bernadette Peters. To purchase the publication of Divas! The Fabulous Photography of Kenn Duncan please click here


"Take Me Out to the Ball Game": 100 Years of Music, Musicians, and the National Pastime
Vincent Astor Gallery
From Friday, July 11, 2008 to Friday, October 31, 2008

Take Me Out to the Ball Game

An exhibition for the whole family! To celebrate the 100th anniversary of baseball theme songs, The New York Public Library for the Performing Arts presents a tribute to the sport and the musicians who love it, organized around the lyrics -- beginning with a history of the song and its creators. "Take me out with the crowd" focuses on composers who were fans and wrote about the game, among them Charles Ives and William Schuman. "Buy me some peanuts and Cracker Jack" looks at baseball and promotion via vaudeville and the musical stage, as well as trading cards. "Root for the Home Team" features baseball musicians, among them Jane Jarvis, long-time organist for the New York Mets, and vocalists of the national anthem. The exhibition is based on New York Public Library collections, but includes unique items from the private collection of Andy Strasberg.

Image: Sheet music for "Take Me Out to the Ball Game," as published in 1908. The featured performer is Nora Bayes. Music Division, The New York Public Library for the Performing Arts


Focus on the '70s: The Fabulous Photography of Kenn Duncan
Donald and Mary Oenslager Gallery
From Wednesday, July 30, 2008 to Saturday, October 25, 2008

In the 1970s and early 1980s world of photography, Kenn Duncan was a name to be reckoned with. Duncan was a principal photographer for the entertainment magazine After Dark and for Dance Magazine, which chronicled the world of dance and choreography. Photographs by Kenn Duncan also appeared in Vogue,Harper’s Bazaar,Life,Time, and Newsweek. In addition, he photographed a dozen Broadway shows, including Hair, Applause, The Elephant Man, and Sophisticated Ladies, and published three volumes of his own photographs: Red Shoes, Nudes, and More Nudes. This retrospective of his 20-year career includes his iconic images of Mikhail Baryshnikov, Angela Lansbury, Rudolf Nureyev, Bette Midler, and the cast of Hair, as well as selections from his nudes and his work with hundreds of celebrities. Duncan’s complete archive was acquired by the Library in 2003 and is part of the Billy Rose Theatre Division.


The Paper Bag Players: 50 Years of Theater Art
Plaza Lobby and Steinberg Room Gallery
From Monday, May 5, 2008 to Saturday, August 2, 2008

Paper Bag Players

This adventurous theater for children has been, from their earliest performances at The Living Theater in the sixties through their tours of the Middle East, Asia and the British Isles, to their current performances in New York City and across the United States, profoundly influential artistically and managerially—and has performed for more then five million children! Under the artistic direction of Judith Martin, the company creates a distinctly contemporary theater. Their shows vividly reflect the everyday lives of children. Their performance style is direct, humorous and friendly. Their sets, props and costumes made of brown paper bags, cardboard boxes and household objects. Their shows are a memorable, personal experience for their young audiences. The artistic endeavors of the company have been strongly supported by a dedicated administration. Under the guidance of Managing Director, Judith Liss, The Paper Bag Players have achieved a series of “firsts.” The Paper Bag Players were the first theatre for children to receive a grant from The National Endowment for Arts, to receive an OBIE, to perform at Lincoln Center and The John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts. This exhibit of photos, posters, historic documents, costumes and props, many drawn from the Paper Bag Players Archives, newly acquired by the Billy rose Theatre Division, the New York Public Library for the Performing Arts. It celebrates the 50th Anniversary of The Paper Bag Players. One of the longest running theaters for children in America, they are still as new, lively and imaginative as the youngest member of their audience.


New York Story: Jerome Robbins and His World
Donald and Mary Oenslager Gallery
From Tuesday, March 25, 2008 to Saturday, June 28, 2008

Jerome Robbins

The most celebrated American choreographer of his time, Jerome Robbins belongs uniquely to New York. He was born in the city and died there, and his dances, both for Broadway and for the ballet stage, recounted its lore and the joys and travails of its ordinary folk. His dances touched a contemporary chord. They conveyed vernacular energies and communal pleasures, echoed the rhythms of jazz, and were set physically and psychologically in New York landscapes. New York Story: Jerome Robbins and His World explores Robbins's work in the context of the many, overlapping New York worlds that met in it. The exhibition draws principally on the very rich collections of Robbins material at the Library's Jerome Robbins Dance Division, as well as on material from other Library divisions, augmented by loans from the Museum of the City of New York, the Paley Center for Media, The Jerome Robbins Trust and Foundation, and private individuals. The exhibit has been curated by Lynn Garafola, professor of Dance at Barnard College.

Exhibition Brochure (PDF)

Image: Jerome Robbins. Photograph by Jesse Gerstein. Courtesy of the Jerome Robbins Foundation


Writing to Character: Songwriters & the Tony Awards
Vincent Astor Gallery
From Tuesday, February 26, 2008 to Saturday, June 14, 2008

songwriters

For Broadway's lyricists, composers, and orchestrators, the Tony Awards represent the highest honor that their colleagues can bestow. The New York Public Library for the Performing Arts delves into its peerless collections for this multi-media tribute to the creators of the Best Musicals, as well as winners of the occasional Best Score Tony. Working backwards from the award ceremony, the exhibition reveals the work of putting on a show -- from the opening night performance back through rehearsals, orchestrations and arrangements, demos and money raising, writing the songs, and plotting out the show to the original concept. Material is drawn from the archives of songwriters and their producer, designer, director, and performer colleagues in the Library’s four research divisions, including, among many others, Richard Rodgers, Betty Comden and Adolph Green, Frank Loesser, Harold Prince, Michael Stewart, Jerry Bock and Sheldon Harnick, Fred Ebb, Charles Small, Edward Kleban, and the New York Shakespeare Festival.

Image: The songwriters at the first rehearsal of Wonderful Town, 1953. (left to right) Betty Comden (lyricist), Rosalind Russell (star), Adolph Green (lyricist), George Abbott (director), Lehman Engel (musical director) and Leonard Bernstein (composer). Photograph by Vandamm. Billy Rose Theatre Collection, The New York Public Library for the Performing Arts


Benny Goodman: The Historic Carnegie Hall Concert
Music Division Reading Room and Rodgers & Hammerstein Archives of Recorded Sound
From Friday, January 25, 2008 to Tuesday, April 15, 2008

January 16, 2008 marked the 70th anniversary of the historic concert at Carnegie Hall given by Benny Goodman and his Swing Orchestra. As it stated in the original concert promotion brochure: "Benny Goodman and his orchestra will give, under the pioneering auspices of S. Hurok, the first concert of swing music in the history of Carnegie Hall." The original concert announcement, programs record jackets and photographs will be on display through April 15th in the third floor reading room.


In Their Company: Portraits of American Playwrights by Ken Collins
Plaza Lobby and Steinberg Room Gallery
From Tuesday, January 15, 2008 to Saturday, March 8, 2008

August Wilson

Plays tell stories, and photographs tell stories. The words of a play begin on the page and come alive in real time with real people. That relationship created between the people onstage and those in the audience is an intimate one. Photography, I feel, works the same way, though in the opposite direction—capturing real people in real time, the image on the page creates an intimate experience for the viewer. I am completely enchanted by the passion, intellect, and grace of the playwrights who welcomed me into their homes. As a photographer, I could not have asked for better subjects. They wear their lives and their choices on their faces. To become a playwright is a leap of faith, and while these artists have achieved so much, they maintain enormous humanity and humility. That’s what I wanted to capture, and why I chose to photograph them as people, not as “personalities.” I wanted to invite the viewer in, to recreate the sensation of close contact found in the theatre, and, as best I could, to tell each person’s story. – Ken Collins The 45 photographs on display are selected from In Their Company: Portraits of American Playwrights (Umbrage Editions, 2006). Quotations are excerpted from longer interviews, conducted by Victor Wishna, in that book. The playwrights represented here live in The New York Public Library for the Performing Arts through published scripts on the Circulating Drama Collection shelves (on the 2nd floor) and in archival materials in the research divisions on the 3rd floor.

Image: August Wilson. Photograph by Ken Collins.


Graziella Vigo captures Verdi on Stage
Donald and Mary Oenslager Gallery
From Monday, November 19, 2007 to Friday, February 29, 2008

La Traviata

This exhibition features 130 images by the famed Italian fashion, portrait, and performance photographer, Graziella Vigo. At the suggestion of maestro Riccardo Muti, Vigo photographed productions of Verdi operas at the Teatro alla Scala, in Milan, and the Teatro Regio, in Parma. Ms. Vigo also photographed productions touring at Bunka Kaikan in Tokyo. The over-sized photographs, hand-printed on canvas, comprise strikingly dramatic images of Verdi's most popular operas: Aida, La traviata, Il trovatore, Rigoletto, Un ballo in maschera, Macbeth, and two productions each of Falstaff and Otello.

Image: Photograph by Graziella Vigo of Andrea Rost in Verdi's La Traviata, Teatro alla Scala, 2001.


Lincoln Kirstein: Alchemist
Vincent Astor Gallery
From Wednesday, October 31, 2007 to Wednesday, January 30, 2008

Lincoln Kirstein

At his centennial, cultural institutions around New York City are celebrating writer, poet, and arts patron Lincoln Kirstein and his impact on American culture. Lincoln Kirstein: Alchemist focuses on the five dance companies he founded – the American Ballet, Ballet Caravan, American Ballet Caravan, Ballet Society, and the New York City Ballet. Each was, in its own way, experimental and pushed the edges of American culture and society. He brought choreographers together with young artists and composers, leading to masterpieces as different as Billy the Kid, Concerto Barocco, The Seasons, and Orpheus. Among the designers whose art is featured are Cecil Beaton, Aline Bernstein, Isamu Noguchi, Tchelitchew, and Ben Shahn, whose designs for the unproduced Tom are on display. The exhibition also recognizes Kirstein's role in the founding of the Library's Dance Collection, now the Jerome Robbins Dance Division.

Exhibition Brochure (PDF)

Image: Lincoln Kirstein. Portrait photograph by George Platt Lynes Gift of Marie-Jeanne, Jerome Robbins Dance Division, The New York Public Library for the Performing Arts Copyright Estate of George Platt Lynes


Men at Dance -- from Noh to Butoh
Plaza Lobby and Steinberg Room Gallery
From Monday, October 15, 2007 to Tuesday, January 8, 2008

Men at Dance

Men at Dance–from Noh to Butoh", a photography exhibition by Miro Ito, is a visual representation of the dichotomy that characterizes Japanese performing arts of the past and present. Ito’s 50 photographs focus on two distinct forms of Japanese dance – Noh and Butoh – capturing the intrinsic qualities of each form, establishing a unique relationship between them. Noh, a traditional dance form, began in the 14th Century, whereas Butoh is a modern form, characterized by a subversion of conventional notions of dance.

Miro Ito searches for a way to express the synergy that exists within the dichotomy of two forms that are separated by 600 years of history and development. Despite obvious aesthetic differences, both Noh and Butoh share certain common features, and the photographer seeks to use each dancer’s body as a bridge between the visible and the invisible, the tangible and the intangible, movement and meaning. The exhibition will display fifty images, each a portrayal of one of Japan’s most distinguished Noh or Butoh performers. Using specialized techniques of studio photography, Miro Ito seeks to portray each performer as if his/her body itself is the performance. read more...

Image: Fumiyuki TAKEDA (of the Kanze school)as Arsumori in the Noh play Atsumori. Photograph by Miro Ito.


Invention: Merce Cunningham & Collaborators
Donald and Mary Oenslager Gallery
From Tuesday, June 19, 2007 to Saturday, October 13, 2007

Antic Meet

A collaborative project of The New York Public Library for the Performing Arts, the Cunningham Dance Foundation, and the John Cage Trust.

The New York Public Library for the Performing Arts is the repository of the John Cage Music Manuscript Collection and the Merce Cunningham Dance Foundation Collection. Additional artifacts will be pulled from the Merce Cunningham Archives, the John Cage Trust, and the Library’s Jerome Robbins Dance Division, Music Division, and Rodgers & Hammerstein Archives of Recorded Sound.

The exhibit will illustrate the four key discoveries that Cunningham pursued through decades of creativity, often in collaboration with John Cage: the separation of music and dance; the use of chance operations and indeterminacy in composition and choreography; the possibilities of film and video; and experimentation with computer technology.

Visitors can re-trace the artists’ investigations through such primary sources as Cage’s manuscript scores, and more unusual equipment, such as charts, instructions, and tools of chance operations. Cunningham’s choreographic documents range from drawings, charts, and diverse materials generated by the computer software DanceForms®. Cunningham's collaborative efforts for the stage feature sets, costumes, media, sound scores, and other elements by many of the most innovative artists of his time. Invention: Cunningham & Collaborators features photographs, multi-media materials, and interactives that document performances from the 1940s to the present. Performances: Tuesday, August 7, September 4, and October 2 at noon: the Cunningham Repertory Group will perform an Event created for the Plaza lobby. Tuesday, September 11, at 4: Nurit Tilles will play excerpts from John Cage's Sonatas and Interludes on the prepared piano. Tuesday, October 2, at 4: Nurit Tilles will play the complete Sonatas and Interludes

Image: Merce Cunningham in his Antic Meet, 1958. Photograph by Richard Rutledge. Courtesy Archives of the Cunningham Dance Foundation.


Cloud Gate in Photographs
Plaza Lobby and Steinberg Room Gallery
From Friday, August 17, 2007 to Wednesday, October 10, 2007

Cloud Gate Dance Theatre

This photographic exhibition honors the Taiwanese experimental dance company on its fifth appearance at the Brooklyn Academy of Music's Next Wave Festival. The images focus on major works by the innovative choreographer LIN Hwai-Min: Nine Songs, Songs of the Wanderers, Moon Water, and the trilogy Cursive. This program is presented in association with Asia Society and the Brooklyn Academy of Music.

Image: Dancer CHOU Chang-ning in LIN Hwai-Min's Cursive, presented by Cloud Gate Dance Theatre. Photograph by LIU Chen-hsiang.


Molly Picon: Yiddish Star, American Star
Vincent Astor Gallery
From Tuesday, June 26, 2007 to Saturday, September 22, 2007

Molly Picon

For years she was the "sweetheart" of New York’s Lower East Side Yiddish-speaking community. Her shows, her sheet music, her records, her films, her radio programs, won her a special place in their hearts. Then, as she increasingly began appearing in more English language shows, television programs, and films, an even larger audience fell in love with her: the American public. Picon's changing career reflects the contributions immigrant cultures have made to our entertainment industry, our city, and our nation.

This exhibition, in cooperation with the Museum of the City of New York, includes more than two hundred photos, programs, posters, sheet music, records, radio scripts, set renderings, costumes and more. Just a sampling of some of the items on view: photos from Molly Picon’s 1923 New York Yiddish Theatre debut in the Jacob Kalich/Joseph Rumshinsky production Yankele; Picon’s costume from Yankele; photos and selected sheet music by Abraham Ellstein for the Joseph Green 1936 Yiddish film Yidl mitn fidl (Yidl with a Fiddle)and the 1938 Yiddish film Mamele; radio scripts from her 1941 series Nancy from Delancey; memorabilia from the Jerry Herman/Don Appell 1961 production of Milk and Honey, her 1960s appearances on the television show Car 54, Where are You? and the Norman Jewison film Fiddler on the Roof.

The exhibition is curated by Dr. Diane Cypkin, Professor of Media and Communication Arts at Pace University and herself a performer who has appeared in many Yiddish and English language productions. The institutions' look at Yiddish culture in New York continues at the Museum of the City of New York with The Jewish Daily Forward: Embracing an Immigrant Community, April 22, 2007 - September 17, 2007

Exhibition Brochure (PDF)

Image: This photograph of Molly Picon was distributed by the William Morris Agency, ca. 1963. Billy Rose Theatre Division, The New York Public Library for the Performing Arts


The Performance of Self in Everyday Life: Photography by Dona Ann McAdams
Steinberg Room Gallery
From Tuesday, March 6, 2007 to Saturday, July 28, 2007

Meredith Monk

The Performance of Self in Everyday Life: Photography by Dona Ann McAdams
Dona Ann McAdams has photographed dance and performance for over twenty-five years, winning both Obie and Bessie Awards for her work. Yet long before she ever stepped foot into a theater, she was already making art from the performances of everyday life. Early in her artistic career she intuited that people in public places were unwitting performers, and the way their bodies moved through a city street or plaza or suburban park could be as expressive and beautiful as a dancer’s on a stage.

McAdams’ street work goes back to 1970s San Francisco and continues to this day. On the street, as in the theater, McAdams becomes part of the live performance: she anticipates and reacts to the movements of the “performers” around her. She has an uncanny ability to capture the public pageantry, to frame her figures in the perfect moment, and reveal the irony--and wit --of accidental performances. In the theater McAdams uses a proscenium. On the street she creates her own stage with the lens of her 35 mm. Leica. Her photographs are stunning moments of light and movement and time.

McAdams’ photography draws on the work of Henri Cartier-Bresson and Diane Arbus, but also on that of sociologist, Erving Goffman. Goffman used the language of theater in his study of everyday social interaction, The Presentation of Self in Everyday Life. He believed people in public were actors on a stage. The photographs in this exhibit make Goffman’s words explicit. In McAdams’ work, all the world is indeed a stage. The performances are breathtaking.

Image: Meredith Monk in her Volcano Songs at PS122, 1994. Photograph by Dona Ann McAdams.


Arturo Toscanini: Homage to the Maestro
Vincent Astor Gallery
From Wednesday, February 21, 2007 to Friday, May 25, 2007

Toscanini in 1933

A 50TH ANNIVERSARY RETROSPECTIVE

The year 2007 marks the fiftieth anniversary of the death of one of the most influential musical figures of the twentieth century. Arturo Toscanini (1867-1957), whose career began in 1886 and continued until 1954, was a major figure in establishing standards for modern orchestral and operatic performance.

This exhibit will illustrate the multi-faceted personality of Toscanini as conductor and collaborator with composers, instrumentalists and singers, such as Giacomo Puccini, Samuel Barber, Claude Debussy, and Guido Cantelli, and will shed light on his personal relationships as mentor, colleague, friend, father and grandfather.

On display will be photographs, scores, letters and documents, many of which are unpublished and are rarely seen on display, such as the stage director’s copy of a music score to Richard Strauss’s Salome, interleaved with stage directions, and a proof copy of the score for Puccini’s La Fanciulla del West, annotated by both Puccini and Toscanini. These unique documents are from the research divisions of The New York Public Library for the Performing Arts as well as the conductor’s personal archive amassed by his son Walter and donated by the Toscanini family to The Library’s Music Division and Rodgers & Hammerstein Archives of Recorded Sound in 1986. Visitors can hear intriguing and rare highlights from the vast sound recording archive of this collection which contains all the known NBC Symphony Orchestra broadcasts and over 400 hours of rehearsals among other performances. Recorded excerpts highlighted in the exhibit will include 1926 rehearsal excerpts with the La Scala Orchestra, and Toscanini’s last performance of the Bruckner 7th Symphony with the New York Philharmonic from 1935.

Image: Arturo Toscanini aboard the U.S.S. Rex, December 28, 1933. Toscanini Legacy Collection, Music Division.


Stars and Treasures: 75 Years of Collecting Theatre
Donald and Mary Oenslager Gallery
From Tuesday, November 21, 2006 to Saturday, May 5, 2007

Stars and Treasures

Since its founding in 1931, the Billy Rose Theatre Collection, a division of The New York Public Library for the Performing Arts, has amassed more than nine million items, which together constitute the world's preeminent record of live theater in all its manifestations. The collection's holdings are of such repute that researchers from every continent have availed themselves of its treasures and resources. This year marks the 75th anniversary of this world-renowned collection and The New York Public Library will commemorate the occasion with celebratory events throughout the year. The centerpiece of this anniversary celebration will be a major exhibition featuring hundreds of rare or unique treasures from the collection. The exhibition will consist of artifacts that, in most cases, have been viewed by only a few researchers on-site and, in many cases, have never before been seen by the public. Among the items featured in the exhibition will be costume jewelry worn by Edwin Booth in Hamlet, costume designs by Cecil Beaton for the original production of My Fair Lady, a bejeweled belt worn by Sarah Bernhardt in Cleopatra, letters written by Harry Houdini, heartbreaking letters from American playwright Tennessee Williams describing the burden of alcoholism and its effect upon his writing, and a color caricature by Al Hirschfeld portraying George Bernard Shaw as a red-faced, horned devil. Many contemporary actors have loaned their personal treasures for this exhibition. One among many is a silver smelling-salts vial once owned by actress Ellen Terry and now a prized possession of actress Jane Alexander.

Exhibition Brochure (PDF - 4.5 MB)

Image: Costume design by Gladys Monkhouse for a musical revue, probably Cheer Up (1917), presented at New York's Hippodrome Theatre. R. H. Burnside Collection, Billy Rose Theatre Division.


In Character: Actors Acting
Plaza Lobby and Steinberg Room Gallery
From Tuesday, November 7, 2006 to Saturday, February 3, 2007

Edie Falco

Each actor was given a direction, a character to play, a scene, and, at times, even dialogue. Photographs were made as each actor creatively developed the part. The results of these improvisations are revealed on the walls of The New York Public Library for the Performing Arts in Howard Schatz's enthralling close-up photographs. Based on the 2006 book by Howard Schatz and Beverly J. Ornstein, this landmark project provides a fascinating new vision of actors acting and the power of creative imagination.

Image: Edie Falco as photographed by Howard Schatz. © 2006 by Howard Schatz and Beverly J. Ornstein


500 Years of Italian Dance: Treasures from the Cia Fornaroli Collection
Vincent Astor Gallery
From Tuesday, October 17, 2006 to Saturday, January 20, 2007
See related: Online Exhibition

The Tarantella

500 Years of Italian Dance: Treasures from the Cia Fornaroli Collection pays tribute both to the rich history of Italian dance and to the remarkable Cia Fornaroli Collection, a jewel of the Library's Jerome Robbins Dance Division. Assembled by Walter Toscanini, son of the famed Italian conductor, and his wife the La Scala ballerina Cia Fornaroli, the Collection documents the full sweep of Italian dance history from the Renaissance to the early twentieth century. The Collection is huge and multifaceted. It encompasses some of the earliest writings on dance, including one of the very first Renaissance dance manuals, scores of books, letters, programs, and libretti, and literally hundreds of designs, photographs, lithographs, and ephemera. It also includes Toscanini's personal research materials and manuscripts, as well as an important collection of memorabilia documenting the career of his ballerina-wife.

Five Hundred Years of Italian Dance: Treasures from the Cia Fornaroli Collection is curated by writer and Barnard College dance historian Lynn Garafola, with Italian dance scholar Patrizia Veroli, after a project conceived by Jose Sasportes and Patrizia Veroli.

Image: Sofia Fuoco dancing the Tarantella, [185-]. Engraving from Cia Fornaroli Collection, Jerome Robbins Dance Division, The New York Public Library for the Performing Arts.


Dance in Cuba
Plaza Lobby and Steinberg Room Gallery
From Wednesday, September 13, 2006 to Saturday, October 28, 2006

Contemporary Dance in Cuba

In 2001 Gil Garcetti traveled to Cuba for the first of what would be several visits. Captivated by the essential role of dance in everyday life, he photographed dancers ranging from professional ballerinas to street performers. This, the first museum exhibition of Garcetti’s Cuban images, features fifty-nine photographs, most of which are drawn from his acclaimed new book, Dance in Cuba (2005).

Because the arts are supported by the Cuban government, free or very affordable schools specializing in virtually every style of dance can be found throughout the country’s fourteen provinces. Thirty-eight professional dance companies employ roughly seven hundred dancers.

Garcetti’s photographs demonstrate the extent to which dance is embedded in the culture and spirit of Cuba. Styles as varied as Afro-Cuban dance, classical ballet, contemporary, flamenco, and street performance coexist and manage to include everyone. As the images clearly reveal, dancing takes place on the street, in private homes, at clubs, in restaurants and pavilions, in school, on television, and on the stage. Collaborating with Alicia Alonso (director), Miguel Cabrera (official historian), and Viengsay Valdés (prima ballerina), all of the famed Ballet Nacional de Cuba—as well as with Miguel Ferrer, director of Danza Contemporánea de Cuba, and others—Garcetti has had unprecedented access to professional dance studios. He has masterfully used his camera to capture highly dramatic moments and to chronicle the flourishing dance traditions of Cuba.

Image: Danza Contemporánea de Cuba, January 2004. Photograph by Gil Garcetti.


From Color to Light: Beni Montresor
Vincent Astor Gallery
From Tuesday, June 20, 2006 to Saturday, September 16, 2006

Beni Montresor

This multi-media exhibit on the international opera, ballet and theater career of designer Beni Montresor is a co-production of The New York Public Library for the Performing Arts, the Istituto Italiano di Cultura in New York, Fondazione Aida, and Titivillus Mostre Editoria. Montresor designed for scenery, costumes and lighting for an international array of the major opera houses, ballet troupes, and summer festivals, as well as Broadway and Off-Broadway theaters. The exhibit will feature photographs and original designs, costumes from Turandot, loaned by the New York City Opera, and the set model for the musical comedy Rags. From Color to Light is presented in conjunction with House of Flowers House of Stars,a concurrent exhibit on his career as an author and illustrator of children's books at the Istituto Italiano di Cultura.

Image: Beni Montresor arriving in New York City. Fondazione Aida


60 Years of Tony Award® Excellence
Plaza Lobby and Steinberg Room Gallery
From Monday, April 17, 2006 to Saturday, June 17, 2006

Tony Awards

The American Theatre Wing, The League of American Theatres and Producers, and The New York Public Library for the Performing Arts are proud to present the 60 Years of Tony Award Excellence exhibition at The New York Public Library for the Performing Arts. The exhibition, which features the window cards from each one of the Tony Award Winning Best Plays and Musicals from the past 60 years, will officially kick-off the 2006 Tony Award® season.

The display features the original window cards from each one of the Tony Award® Winning Plays including everything from 1947's All My Sons to last year's Doubt; as well as from each one of the Tony Award® Winning Musicals ranging from 1949's Kiss Me Kate to 2005's Monty Python's Spamalot.


Show Business: Irving Berlin's Broadway
Vincent Astor Gallery
From Tuesday, February 14, 2006 to Friday, May 26, 2006

Berlin at Follies rehearsal

From interpolations to the integrated musical, Irving Berlin's story tells the evolution of the Broadway musical as an art form. through photographs, drawings, set and costume designs, programs, and related ephemera, we present moments from every part of his Broadway career, as he and his audience first saw it. The exhibition is a project of the New York Public Library for the Performing Arts that will also travel to the San Francisco Performing Arts Library & Museum (July - December 2005) and the Marion McNay Art Museum, San Antonio (July - October 2006). read more...

Image: Irving Berlin (at piano), with (from left) Eddie Cantor, Florenz Ziegfeld, Jr., dance director Sammy Lee, and members of the chorus of the 1927 edition of the Follies. Billy Rose Theatre Collection


Opera on the Air: The Metropolitan Opera Radio Broadcasts Turn 75
Music Division Reading Room
From Saturday, December 10, 2005 to Saturday, May 6, 2006

Performing Arts Library

This multi-media exhibit documents the 75 years of live radio broadcasts of the Metropolitan Opera. It includes scores, correspondence, photographs and artifacts from the Music Division and Rodgers & Hammerstein Archives of Recorded Sound, as well as costume pieces on loan from Metropolitan Opera's Archives. Available with the exhibit is an audio station featuring selections from the broadcasts' performances and intermission features.


Harlem is...Music
Plaza Lobby and Steinberg Room Gallery
From Monday, February 6, 2006 to Thursday, April 13, 2006

Thelonius Monk, 1947

Harlem is...Music is a component of Community Works' signature multilayered public art exhibition developed with NYC public schools and after school programs. The exhibit explores Harlem's unrivaled musical tradition through archival and contemporary photographs, commentary by contributing writers and poetry and prose by Harlem public school students. It examines the development of 8 musical genres: Jazz, blues, R&B, hip-hop and rap, gospel, classical, Latin, and fusion.

Image: The Minton's Playhouse PHOTO CREDIT: Copywright William P. Goittlieb, Library of Congress Collection PICTURED FROM LEFT TO RIGHT: Portrait of Thelonious Monk, Howard McGhee, Roy Eldridge, and Teddy Hill, Minton's Playhouse, New York, N.Y., ca. Sept. 1947


Vaudeville Nation
Donald and Mary Oenslager Gallery
From Tuesday, November 15, 2005 to Saturday, April 1, 2006
See related: Online Exhibition

Dainty June

Vaudeville has been called the most influential entertainment genre in the nation's history. Vaudeville, and the related forms such as burlesque and prologs, provided freedom for self-expression of social and political commentary. It supported the development of America's two native art forms -- jazz and tap dance -- and served a model for radio, early sound film, and television. Unlike those media, it served the full diversity of the American public -- as performers and as audience. The research divisions of LPA, the Billy Rose Theatre Collection, Jerome Robbins Dance Division, Music Division and Rodgers & Hammerstein Archives of Recorded Sound, are the major source for vaudeville research. They document thousands of performers, promoters, tour managers, theater buildings, and the critics, composers, writers, dance directors, and designers who worked with them. The collections include the primary documents of vaudeville -- joke books, scripts, designs, and songs -- as well as promotional materials, such as photographs, illustrated letterheads, flyers, and calling cards, sent to turn-of-the-century critics.


From Every Stage: Images of America's Roots Music
Plaza Lobby and Steinberg Room Gallery
From Tuesday, December 13, 2005 to Sunday, January 29, 2006

Steve Riley

Bluegrass, folk, blues, zydeco, and cowboy country -- these genres are both America's roots and America's present. From Every Stage is a selection of photographs by noted journalist Stephanie P. Ledgin, revealing performances, practice and jam sessions. Among the performers are John Hartford, Odetta, Pete Seeger, Queen Ida, and Minnie Pearl in venues from the Grand Ole Opry to the Lincoln Center Out-of-Doors Festival.

Image: Cajun band leader Steve Riley at the 1999 Crawfish Fest, Waterloo Village, Stanhope NJ. Photo by Stephanie P. Ledgin.


The Juilliard School, 1905-2005: Celebrating 100 Years
Vincent Astor Gallery
From Friday, September 16, 2005 to Saturday, January 14, 2006

Juilliard

A collaboration with The Juilliard School to celebrate the 100th birthday of the esteemed conservatory of dance, music, and theater.

Exhibition Brochure (PDF)


A Community of Artists: 50 Years of the Public Theater
Donald and Mary Oenslager Gallery
From Tuesday, June 21, 2005 to Saturday, October 15, 2005

Public Theater celebration

In conjunction with the 50th Anniversary of the founding of the New York Shakespeare Festival and Public Theater
Joseph Papp founded the The Public Theater, originally known as The New York Shakespeare Festival, in 1954, as an actors' workshop presenting free Shakespeare in an East Village church basement. This small beginning eventually grew to include The Mobile Theater (1957- 1962), which toured Shakespeare to the boroughs on the back of a flatbed truck, Shakespeare in Central Park at the Delacorte Theatre (1962 - ), five downtown stages, which are housed in The Public Theater’s historic landmark building on Astor Place (1965-), and Joe’s Pub (1998- ), one of NYC’s most celebrated showcase venues for live music and performance. In addition to producing groundbreaking performances of Shakespeare, The Public Theater has been integral in developing five generations of American playwrights, composers, directors, designers, and performers. The exhibit will feature intimate correspondence, poster art, never-before-seen photographs, original production designs, and audio and video clips from the Joseph Papp Archives and New York Shakespeare Festival Records, which were donated to the Billy Rose Theatre Collection in 1993, as well as collections of Public Theater collaborators, such as director A. J. Antoon and A Chorus Line lyricist Edward Kleban.


I LA GALIGO: From the Sulawesi Epic to the Stage
Plaza Lobby
From Tuesday, June 28, 2005 to Thursday, September 1, 2005

I LA GALIGO

An exhibition of photographs and texts documenting the Indonesian island cultural epic and Robert Wilson's production of I LA GALIGO at the Lincoln Center Festival, July 13 - 17, 2005.


America's Irreplaceable Dance Treasures: The First 100
Vincent Astor Gallery
From Tuesday, June 7, 2005 to Saturday, August 20, 2005

Ruth St. Denis in her solo Tagore Poem, 1929.

An exhibit developed by the Dance Heritage Coalition representing the first 100 American Dance Treasures, among them, The New York Public Library for the Performing Arts read more...

Image: Ruth St. Denis in her solo Tagore Poem, 1929. Photo by Soichi Sunami. The New York Public Library for the Performing Arts, Dance Division.


Beyond the Rainbow: Music of Harold Arlen
Vincent Astor Gallery
From Tuesday, February 15, 2005 to Saturday, May 21, 2005

Harold Arlen

A multi-media tribute to composer and songwriter Harold Arlen on the 100th anniversary of his birth. read more...

Image: Harold Arlen singing. Courtesy of S. A. Music.


DISCO: A Decade of Saturday Nights
Donald and Mary Oenslager Gallery
From Tuesday, February 1, 2005 to Saturday, May 14, 2005

Disco logo

interactive exhibit from Experience Music Project, Seattle, on the culture and music of the influential social dance genre read more...

Image: Disco: A Decade of Saturday Nights. Experience Music Project


Bedlam Days: The Early Plays of Charles Ludlam and The Ridiculous Theatrical Company
Plaza Lobby and Steinberg Room Gallery
From Tuesday, January 11, 2005 to Saturday, April 2, 2005

Ludlam

Photographs by Argentian filmmaker and artist Leandro Katz documenting seven early productions of Charles Ludlam and the Ridiculous Theatrical Company, 1968 - 1975. read more...

Image: Charles Ludlam, photographed by Leandro Katz, 1971.


World Music in Focus: An Exhibition Celebrating the 20th Anniversary of World Music Institute
Donald and Mary Oenslager Gallery
From Friday, September 10, 2004 to Saturday, January 15, 2005

Ravi Shankar

In this multi-media exhibition, The World Music Institute (WMI) and The New York Public Library for the Performing Arts have collaborated to showcase WMI's 20-year history as this nation's leading presenter of traditional music and dance from around the world. Featured will be the images of Jack Vartoogian, Linda Vartoogian, and Ira Landgarten, three prominent photographers who have documented WMI concerts for many years. The exhibit will also introduce new audiences to a wide range of music from many cultures and regions through concert videos from the WMI archive; traditional instruments from around the world, on loan from the Metropolitan Museum of Art and The Newark Museum; and interactive kiosks with music samples. read more...

Image: Ravi Shankar performing on a sitar at the Alice Tully 70th Birthday celebration, May 16, 1990. Photograph by Ira Landgarten. Copyright Ira Landgarten.


Mirrors to the Past: Ancient Greece and Avant-garde America
Vincent Astor Gallery
From Friday, October 15, 2004 to Saturday, January 8, 2005
See related: Online Exhibition

Isadora Duncan

American artists have long been moved by the august cultures of ancient Greece. Motivated by the enlightened minds that produced works of incomparable beauty and emotional resonance, they in turn forged new directions, discarded rules, and redefined their art forms. This multimedia exhibition, which draws on rare material housed in all four research divisions of The New York Public Library for the Performing Arts, focuses on the liberating force of archaic and classical Greece and the countless 20th-century American choreographers, theater artists, composers, visual artists, and designers it inspired. read more...

Image: Isadora Duncan at the Parthenon theater, 1904. Jerome Robbins Dance Division, The New York Public Library for the Performing Arts. Image ID: WWM9916/ISADORA/0058VA


Mexico Now: Contemporary Dance Posters and Mexico Now: Sounds of Mexico
Plaza Lobby and Steinberg Room Gallery
From Monday, November 1, 2004 to Friday, December 31, 2004

Mexico Now

At the end of the 1970s and during the 1980s, a new wave of Mexican choreographers and dancers could be seen in parks, plazas, streets, fountains, church atriums, and other public sites, finding new audiences and alternative performance spaces. The independent groups of contemporary dance, as they call themselves, include, among others, Antares, Asaltodiario, Barro Rojo, Cebra, and Contradanza. Their work is characterized by a search for new styles, forms, techniques, and themes to reflect the social, political, and economic climate of change in Mexico. Posters and photographs were donated by the companies to Americas Exchange Program for Dance for the Jerome Robbins Dance Division, The New York Public Library for the Performing Arts, as part of a continuing collaborative effort. Posters will be mounted in the Plaza corridor gallery; additional archival and multi-media artifacts will be on display in the Dance Division, on the third floor. In addition, Sounds of Mexico, an exhibition of artifacts and audio material, is on display in the Rodgers & Hammerstein Archives of Recorded Sound, on the third floor. These exhibitions are part of the city-wide Mexico Now Festival, a project of Arts International.

Image: Mexico Now, a citywide festival of contemporary Mexican arts and culture, will present the work of over 100 Mexican filmmakers, architects, writers, dance, theater, music, and visual artists at 28 of New York City's leading arts venues in November 2004 . Mexico Now is a project of Arts International, the nation's only nonprofit organization solely devoted to international arts exchange. More information is available at www.mexiconowfestival.org.


The City and The Theatre
Steinberg Room Gallery
From Saturday, June 19, 2004 to Saturday, October 2, 2004

Performing Arts Library

In tribute to Mary Henderson’s recently re-issued definitive history of theater in New York City, The City and the Theatre, this exhibit of photographs and architectural renderings follows The Great White Way from 41st Street up to 52nd Street in a fascinating look at the evolution of Broadway’s theater buildings from their beginnings to the present day. Among the many legendary buildings highlighted are the old Metropolitan Opera, the Belasco, the Empire, and the Alwin. On display are original architectural drawings by Anthony Dumas (1910s to 1930s) juxtaposed, in the cases of surviving theaters, with nighttime photographs by Christopher Frith of their current incarnations. Also on view are contemporary drawings by Stanley Stark of old theaters that have been integrated into new buildings, including the Gershwin, the Marquis, and the new Broadway theaters.


Ademola Olugebefola at Lincoln Center Out-of-Doors
Plaza Lobby
From Friday, June 25, 2004 to Saturday, October 2, 2004

Ibrahim Abdullah by Olugebefola

New York artist Ademola Olugebefola spends his Augusts at the free performances of the Lincoln Center Out-of-Doors Festival. This exhibit focuses on recent art inspired by his sketching at modern dance presentations by Donald Byrd/The Group (of their In a Different Light: Duke Ellington, August 16, 2000) and Monte/Brown Dance (August 17, 2001); and at jazz concerts by Abdullah Ibrahim and Mary Stallings (August 24, 2001) and The Mingus Big Band (August 23, 2002).

Image: Ademola Olugebefola's impressions of the piano improvisations of Ibrahim Abdullah, August 24, 2001.


Margot Fonteyn in America: A Celebration
Vincent Astor Gallery
From Tuesday, May 18, 2004 to Friday, September 3, 2004

Margot Fonteyn

Margot Fonteyn was probably the most famous, most successful, and most beloved ballerina in the second half of the 20th century. Her introduction to America came on October 9, 1949, when Sol Hurok presented the Sadler's Wells Ballet (later the Royal Ballet) at the Metropolitan Opera House, featuring Fonteyn in the role of Aurora in The Sleeping Beauty. This exhibition, which includes costumes, haute couture, photographs, and film, takes the audience from the pointe shoes Fonteyn wore on that opening night to a stage heaped with flowers at the curtain call for her final Aurora in the United States -- and beyond. read more...

Exhibition Brochure (PDF - 3.1 MB)

Image: Margot Fonteyn and Rudolf Nureyev in The Sleeping Beauty. Photograph by Mira.


... to illuminate the scene: Ellen Terry, Edith Craig, Edward Gordon Craig and John Gielgud
Donald and Mary Oenslager Gallery
From Friday, June 25, 2004 to Friday, August 20, 2004

Ellen Terry

Four members of a British family redefined Anglo-American theater for the audience and profession. Ellen Terry, starring in the plays of Shakespeare and Shaw, epitomized the international appeal of English theater in the late 19th century. Her son, Edward Gordon Craig, was a revolutionary theorist, designer, and director of theater who also found the time to edit, design, and print books and magazines. Edith Craig, her daughter, first known as a designer and costumer, ran a theater company that produced suffragist and feminist plays, primarily by women. Terry’s great-nephew, Sir John Gielgud, presented and starred in both classics and innovative new plays of the British theater, and he created memorable characters in over fifty years of film.

This exhibition, presented in conjunction with public programming celebrating the centennial of Gielgud’s birth (April 14, 2004), is based on rare artifacts, photographs, designs, and correspondence from the research divisions of The New York Public Library for the Performing Arts.


EKANBAN: Kabuki Billboards by Torii Kiyomitsu
Donald and Mary Oenslager Gallery West
From Friday, June 25, 2004 to Friday, August 20, 2004

Ekanban

This summer, the Lincoln Center Festival will present the Heisei Nakamura-za Kabuki Theater, Tokyo, led by Nakamura Kankuro V. Like Kabuki, Ekanban, the colorful billboards that advertise Kabuki plays, are also produced by a family dynasty. Torii Kiyomitsu is the ninth master of the Torii school, and the first woman in this traditional of tratrical painting. 30 large rice paper billboards depict the characters, costumes and repertory of Kabuki, including Natsumatsuri Naniwa Kagami, the work presented in the Festival.

Image: Billboard by Torii Kiyomitsu for Natsumatsuri Naniwa Kagami


The Enduring Legacy of George Balanchine
Donald and Mary Oenslager Gallery
From Wednesday, December 3, 2003 to Saturday, April 24, 2004

Balanchine

Active at every level of instruction and performance, George Balanchine nourished the performers, teachers, and students who shaped the future of ballet in New York and across the United States. In celebration of the centennial of Balanchine's birth and in recognition of his profound impact on New York City, The New York Public Library for the Performing Arts will present this multimedia exhibition of photographs, designs, manuscript music and correspondence, costumes, set pieces, and models. Visitors will gain new insights from excerpts from oral histories of Balanchine dancers and from videotaped performances and rehearsals.

Exhibition Brochure (PDF)


Prokofiev and His Contemporaries: The Impact of Soviet Culture
Vincent Astor Gallery
From Wednesday, October 15, 2003 to Saturday, March 27, 2004

Prokofiev

This exhibition commemorates the 50th anniversary of Sergei Prokofiev's death by focusing on Soviet culture of the 1920s through 1940s and its impact on American performing arts. It is a project of The New York Public Library for the Performing Arts and the MusicaRussia Foundation and features artifacts from the Library for the Performing Arts, the Glinka Archives and State Central Museum of Music, the Bolshoi Theater Museum, and the Stanislavsky and Nemerovich-Danchenko Theater of Moscow.

A series of related recitals and lectures will take place in the Bruno Walter Auditorium. read more...

Exhibition Brochure (PDF)

Image: Photograph of Sergei Prokofiev, inscribed to Carl Lachmund, New York, 1920. Lachmund, a pianist, teacher and founder of the Women’s String Orchestra, had been a student of Franz Liszt. Carl Lachmund Collection, Music Division, The New York Public Library for the Performing Arts


Puppetry of Shadow and Light
Donald and Mary Oenslager Gallery
From Wednesday, June 18, 2003 to Saturday, November 8, 2003

thai puppet

The international art of shadow puppetry transcends time and geography. This exhibition presents artifacts and film honoring the ancient, traditional, and avant-garde forms of this vivid art. The exhibition features examples of traditional and modern puppets and screens from India, Indonesia, Cambodia, Thailand, Greece, Turkey, and Western Europe. It also includes figures, designs, and performance videos representing contemporary innovators Stephen Kaplin, Julie Taymor, Mabou Mines, Mireya Cueto, Larry Reed, Janie Geiser, and Theodora Skipitares, who have been influenced by shadow puppetry’s traditions.

Image: Thai puppet figure from The Ramayana. Traditional Nang Yi Theater Style. Jo Humphrey Collection.


Photographs by Sherif Sonbol
Plaza Lobby
From Tuesday, September 9, 2003 to Saturday, October 11, 2003

Performing Arts Library

An exhibit of images of contemporary Egyptian performance by photographer Sherif Sonbol. The photographs of ballet, modern dance, musicians, and street performance are intensively colorful and range from precise documentation to abstractions. The artist is the resident photographer for the National Cultural Center, the New Cairo Opera House, as well as El Ahram Weekly and Kalam el-Nas magazines.


Original Cast Recordings
Vincent Astor Gallery
From Thursday, March 6, 2003 to Saturday, September 6, 2003

Album cover

The exhibition documents the history of original cast recordings, the manner in which they are produced, and their role in preserving musical theater and spreading awareness of productions. Recordings from the Rodgers & Hammerstein Archives of Recorded Sound and circulating recorded sound collections are augmented by photographs, posters, and archival materials such as letters and recording contracts from the Billy Rose Theatre Collection and the Music Division. The exhibition features touch-screens that enable the audience to access over three hours of music recordings, as well as a gallery soundtrack of favorite overtures.

Image: Oklahoma! cast album, 1943. Courtesy Decca Broadway.


Centennial Salute to Al Hirschfeld
Plaza Lobby
From Friday, June 20, 2003 to Friday, August 29, 2003

Performing Arts Library

The New York Public Library for the Performing Arts pays tribute to Al Hirschfeld and marks the 100th anniversary of his birth with Centennial Salute to Al Hirschfeld, a display of ten of the artist’s specially-commissioned works. Hirschfeld, whose singular drawings captured American theater for the greater part of a century, died in January of this year. In the early 1970s, he was given a commission to commemorate a series of Pulitzer Prize-winning plays. For each play, he drew a scene from the show and also created a collage with a portrait of the playwright and the cast pages from the original Playbill. All of the drawings included in the show are signed, and the scenes from the plays incorporate Hirschfeld’s signature Ninas.


Vaslav Nijinsky: Creating a New Artistic Era
Donald and Mary Oenslager Gallery
From Wednesday, February 12, 2003 to Saturday, May 3, 2003
See related: Online Exhibition

Vaslav Nijinsky

Vaslav Nijinsky (1890-1950) was one of the 20th century's preeminent artists. The exhibition focuses on his career as a dancer and choreographer in a time marked by international disruptions of war as well as avant-garde collaborations and artistic energy. read more...

Image: Ballet Russes poster for a performance on April 19, 1911 in Monte Carlo. Colored lithograph by Jean Cocteau of Nijinsky in Fokine's Le Spectre de la Rose. The New York Public Library for the Performing Arts, Jerome Robbins Dance Division.


Best of Times: The Theatre of Charles Dickens
Vincent Astor Gallery
From Thursday, November 7, 2002 to Saturday, February 15, 2003
See related: Online Exhibition

A Tale of Two Cities

Dickens's passion for the theater began in his childhood; his influence upon the theater continues today. Best of Times: The Theatre of Charles Dickens is illustrated with rare 19th-century broadsides, prints, posters, photographs, programs, and the original, annotated promptbooks used by Dickens during his vastly popular public readings. read more...

Image: Poster depicting Martin Harvey as Syndey Carton in The Only Way, a stage adaptation of Charles Dickens's A Tale of Two Cities, 1899. Billy Rose Theatre Collection, NYPL.


Theater.Ink: the Art of Sam Norkin
Donald and Mary Oenslager Gallery
From Friday, November 22, 2002 to Saturday, January 18, 2003

Norkin

A retrospective of the art of Sam Norkin, cultural writer and caricaturist for the New York Herald-Tribune (1940 - 1956) and the NY daily News (1956 - 1980s), as well as many out-of-town papers and magazines. The exhibits includs Norkin's ink drawings of theater, dance, clasical music, opera, pop and jazz. A selection of his sketchbooks and preliminary sketches will also be shown

Image: Self portrait by Sam Norkin.


Children's Books in Performance
Donald and Mary Oenslager Gallery
From Friday, June 28, 2002 to Thursday, October 31, 2002

Puss in Boots

This family-friendly, multi-media exhibition focuses on children's and young adults' books that have been turned into theater, dance, opera, concert music, radio, film, and television. The section "Fairy Tales and Fables" highlights performances based on tales such as Hoffmann's The Nutcracker, Andersen's Little Mermaid, and the Grimm Brothers' Puss in Boots and Snow White, as well as several versions of Cinderella. read more...

Image: Poster for the pantomime Puss in Boots, as produced by Augustus Harris at the Drury Lane, London,1897. Billy Rose Theatre Collection.


Music by Richard Rodgers
Vincent Astor Gallery
From Friday, June 28, 2002 to Saturday, September 28, 2002

King & I

The New York Public Library for the Performing Arts presents a major exhibition celebrating the composer and songwriter Richard Rodgers. The multimedia exhibit focuses on Rodgers' music for 45 complete professional theater works, 11 original films, and numerous radio and television productions, as well as ballets and symphonic scores. Through ambient sound and touch-screen audiostations, visitors will be able to hear commercial and noncommercial recordings of the scores and songs as performed on stage and as jazz standards. The exhibition is based on the Richard Rodgers collections in the Billy Rose Theatre Collection, the Music Division, and the Rodgers & Hammerstein Archives of Recorded Sound, as well as the archival collections of his collaborators.


Capturing Nureyev: James Wyeth Paints the Dancer
Vincent Astor Gallery
From Friday, March 22, 2002 to Saturday, May 25, 2002

Don Quijote

Through paintings, photographs, and designs, Capturing Nureyev: James Wyeth Paints the Dancer provides a multifaceted view of Rudolf Nureyev, one of ballet's rare superstars. Over 35 paintings and drawings of Nureyev by his friend, American artist James Browning Wyeth, plus more than 61 photographs and designs from the Jerome Robbins Dance Division of The New York Public Library for the Performing Arts, and a sampling of Nureyev's costumes are on display.

Image: Nureyev--Don Quixote--Yellow Background, 2001. Combined mediums on cardboard. Collection of the Artist.


Making Music Theater: Kurt Weill and His Collaborators
Donald and Mary Oenslager Gallery and Vincent Astor Gallery
From Friday, February 8, 2002 to Saturday, May 4, 2002

Kurt Weill

No composer of the 20th century was committed more strongly to musical theater than Kurt Weill, and no composer worked in a wider variety of genres or with a wider variety of artists. The exhibition Making Music Theater: Kurt Weill and His Collaborators, at the renovated New York Public Library for the Performing Arts, opens a window onto the complex process of collaboration, the quintessence of musical theater. read more...


Transformations: A Celebration of the Creative Spirit in the Performing Arts
Donald and Mary Oenslager Gallery and Vincent Astor Gallery
From Monday, October 29, 2001 to Saturday, January 5, 2002
See related: Online Exhibition

Houdini

To celebrate the reopening of its Lincoln Center home, now named the Dorothy and Lewis B. Cullman Center, The New York Public Library for the Performing Arts presents Transformations, an exhibition on transformations inherent to the creative process. This first exhibition in the renovated Library will fill both redesigned galleries and features treasures drawn from the nine million objects in the Library's collections in music, dance, theater, and recorded sound. read more...

Image: Magic is reality transformed, as seen in the Houdini poster for The Double Fold Death Defying Water Mystery (Russell-Morgan Lithographers, 1911).


Touring West: 19th-century Performing Artists on the Overland Trails
Edna Barnes Salomon Room (Third Floor)
From Friday, April 6, 2001 to Saturday, July 7, 2001
See related: Online Exhibition

Monte Cristo

Touring West, featuring materials from the research collections of The New York Public Library for the Performing Arts and presented at the Library's flagship building on Fifth Avenue, focuses on the professional performances that toured the United States from the time of the Louisiana Purchase (1803) through the 19th century. read more...

Exhibition Brochure (PDF - 1.5 MB)

Image: Promotional brochure for James O'Neill's Monte Cristo tours. The Currier Lithography Co., Buffalo, [used 1882-85]. Players Collection, Billy Rose Theatre Collection The New York Public Library for the Performing Arts


Encore: More Music for the Cinema
Amsterdam Gallery
From Friday, February 13, 1998 to Friday, May 22, 1998

Performing Arts Library

An expanded version of the popular exhibition originally seen in the Music Division Reading Room, Encore: More Music for the Cinema uses a wide variety of materials from the Library's collections to give viewers a behind-the-scenes glimpse of how music is created for film. Contracts, correspondence, manuscript scores, and continuity drafts reveal the workaday world of the film composer, while posters, photo stills, and sheet music covers show the methods used to promote movies, their music, and the illusion of glamour.


With Pen in Hand: An Exhibition of Theatrical Correspondence
Billy Rose Theatre Collection
From Friday, February 20, 1998 to Friday, May 22, 1998

Performing Arts Library

Manuscript correspondence from such luminaries as Eugene O'Neill, John Barrymore, Groucho Marx, George Bernard Shaw, and Tennessee Williams reveals the personalities, humor, and heartbreak behind some of the theatre's greatest talents.


Ernesto Halffter: Life & Work of a Spanish Musician
Music Division Reading Room
From Friday, February 20, 1998 to Saturday, May 16, 1998

Performing Arts Library

Ernesto Halffter, one of Spain's leading 20th-century composers, is best known for his Sinfonietta, premiered in 1927, which successfully combines various influences on Spanish composers of the period. The exhibition of letters, scores, manuscripts, photographs, and other materials draws primarily on the private collections of Halffter's son Manuel and comes to the Library from Spain, where it was organized by Granada's Fundación Archivo Manuel de Falla and Madrid's Residencia de Estudiantes.


Runnin' Wild: The Collaborative Recordings of Benny Goodman and Teddy Wilson, 1935-1939
Rodgers & Hammerstein Archives of Recorded Sound
From Wednesday, January 21, 1998 to Saturday, May 2, 1998

Performing Arts Library

Clarinetist Benny Goodman and pianist Teddy Wilson were acclaimed for their mid-1930s collaborations in the Benny Goodman Trio and Quartet and the Teddy Wilson Orchestra. The exhibition features original recordings, photographs, press clippings, and record catalogs celebrating the artistic collaboration of two of the Swing Era's great performers.


Ralph Lee: Masks, Festival Figures & Theatre Designs

From Friday, February 6, 1998 to Saturday, May 2, 1998

Performing Arts Library

The monsters, animals, and other fanciful characters created by Ralph Lee have delighted audiences of his Mettawee Theatre Company and the annual Greenwich Village Halloween Parade, which the artist founded in 1974. The exhibition includes a wide range of Lee's figures, as well as masks, costumes, and props he has constructed for his works and those of others.


A Son Comes Home: Ademola Olugebefola Responding to Dance
Dance Collection Reading Room
From Wednesday, January 28, 1998 to Tuesday, April 28, 1998

Performing Arts Library

Ademola Olugebefola's dance illustrations, such as the one reproduced on the cover of this brochure, are deceptive in their simplicity. With delicate line and expressive form, his works capture the movement and emotion of the compelling performances that inspired his creations.


Who Are They?: Unknown Iconography in the Music Division
Music Division Reading Room
From Wednesday, October 15, 1997 to Saturday, January 17, 1998

quiz

Can you identify the spaghetti-eating saxophonist, the peppy pop singers, or the pouting Pagliacci? Amid the vast collections of photographs, prints, and drawings in the Library's Music Division are many that are unidentified. These images have stumped our staff. Can you tell us who they are?


Syvilla Fort: Through the Lens of Carmine Schiavone
Dance Collection Reading Room
From Monday, November 24, 1997 to Friday, January 16, 1998

Performing Arts Library

Syvilla Fort was an influential dancer, choreographer, and teacher. Carmine Schiavone's photographs of her document the Experimental Dance Group and her school. Four thematic groups--Ritual, Worship, Marriage, and Myth--show her explorations in what she termed Afro-Modern Dance.


Pink Cadillacs and Yellow Submarines: Transportation in a Century of Popular Music Recordings
Rodgers & Hammerstein Archives of Recorded Sound
From Tuesday, September 16, 1997 to Saturday, January 3, 1998

Performing Arts Library

Take a bus, a subway, or a taxi (and then an elevator) to the Rodgers &Hammerstein Archives of Recorded Sound, where such recordings as "The Magic Bus," "Leaving on a Jet Plane," and "Take the A Train" illustrate transportation as reflected in a hundred years of popular recordings.


Risks & Rewards: Commissioned Works of American Ballet Theatre
Main Gallery
From Friday, October 24, 1997 to Saturday, December 27, 1997

ballet dancers

The Library's unique archives of choreographic notes, original manuscripts, scores, and stage designs will show the development of ballet masterpieces created for ABT, such as Jerome Robbins's Fancy Free, Agnes de Mille's Fall River Legend, Antony Tudor's Pillar of Fire, and George Balanchine's Theme and Variations. The exhibit also focuses on the Ballet Theatre Workshop, and more recent commissions by company members and modern dance choreographers.

Image: Hugh Laing and Nora Kaye in choreographer Antony Tudor's Pillar of Fire, 1942. The New York Public Library for the Performing Arts/Dance Collection.


Rouben Ter-Arutunian: A Working Collection
Amsterdam Gallery
From Friday, October 3, 1997 to Saturday, December 13, 1997

Performing Arts Library

The verdant forest that transforms into an art nouveau ballroom in George Balanchine's ballet Vienna Waltzes, and the vivid, magical settings for the choreographer's Nutcracker, are among the renderings and models on view in this selection of designs that redefines Ter-Arutunian's range. The exhibit showcases his pioneering work in television design in the 1950s and in open-air and televised opera, as well as his better-known designs for Broadway and the ballet stage.


Swing
Vincent Astor Gallery
From Friday, June 13, 1997 to Saturday, November 29, 1997

Per

The swinging sounds of big bands led by Glenn Miller, Benny Goodman, Tommy Dorsey, Duke Ellington, Woody Herman, and others defined popular culture in the 1940s. With such material as original arrangements used by Goodman and Dorsey; numerous commercial, off-air, and private recordings; programs and menus from popular nightclubs; and other memorabilia, the exhibition recalls the music that provided the soundtrack for a youthful generation as it asserted its independence and contended with war.


Carmine Schiavone and Dance
Dance Collection Reading Room
From Monday, September 22, 1997 to Saturday, November 15, 1997

Performing Arts Library

Carmine Schiavone's striking fashion photography graced the covers of such magazines as Cosmopolitan, Harper's Bazaar, and Seventeen. The exhibition showcases his photographs of such important dancers and choreographers as José Limón, Talley Beatty, Donald McKayle, and Katherine Dunham.


Music for the Cinema
Music Division Reading Room
From Wednesday, May 28, 1997 to Saturday, September 27, 1997

Performing Arts Library

With materials from the collections of the Library's Music Division, the exhibition explores the history of film music. Among the items included are manuscripts of scores by Louis Gruenberg, George Antheil, and Aaron Copland.


Lincoln Kirstein: Collector
Amsterdam Gallery
From Friday, June 27, 1997 to Saturday, September 13, 1997

Lincoln Kirstein's gifts to the world were the New York City Ballet and School of American Ballet, which he created with George Balanchine. Kirstein was also a great collector, and early in the history of the Dance Collection gave the Library a wealth of rare dance materials. Before his death in 1996, he donated all his papers, artworks, and other materials related to the history of dance and his life in the arts. This exhibition provides a first glimpse at the important treasures in the Kirstein collection that will be available to inform future generations pursuing knowledge of dance.


Cotillion to Cakewalk: Social Dance Prints
Dance Collection Reading Room
From Monday, May 19, 1997 to Saturday, September 13, 1997

Performing Arts Library

The manners, personalities, and dance steps of the private ballroom and public club are illustrated in a series of vivid prints spanning the past 50 years. A recent gift of prints from the estate of Josephine Butler, a noted teacher of social dances, joins other examples from the Dance Collection.


Musica Popular/Misique Popilè/Popular Music of the Caribbean
Rodgers & Hammerstein Archives of Recorded Sound
From Friday, June 13, 1997 to Friday, August 29, 1997

Performing Arts Library

Rumba, Meringue, Reggae, Ska! Throughout this century, New Yorkers have performed, listened, and danced to the beats of Puerto Rican, Dominican, Cuban, Jamaican, Haitian, and other Caribbean musical forms. The exhibition looks at the development and continuing influence of Afro-Caribbean and indigenous rhythms, instruments, and vocal styles.


New York in Sound: Recordings Celebrating the City's Last Century
Rodgers & Hammerstein Archives of Recorded Sound
From Monday, March 3, 1997 to Saturday, May 31, 1997

Performing Arts Library

This exhibit features recordings of music about New York City or made in New York City, sounds of the city, and public personalities reflecting life and culture in the Big Apple. Included are such songs as "The Sheikh of Avenue B," "He's a Latin from Staten Island," and "Harlem on My Mind," as well as recordings like The Sound of New York: A Music-Sound Portrait, and Nueva New York: A Tape Documentary of Puerto Rican New Yorkers.


Alternative Rocks
Amsterdam Gallery
From Friday, February 14, 1997 to Friday, May 23, 1997

Performing Arts Library

David Bowie, Lou Reed, The Sex Pistols, Bob Marley, Tribe 8, Joan Jett, The Talking Heads, and Nirvana are just a few of the bands and artists that took rock and roll in a multitude of innovative directions from its early rhythm and blues-based incarnations. The exhibition uses materials from the Library's collections to explore the "alternative" artists who, even today, push rock toward new horizons.


Henry Cowell: A Centennial Celebration
Vincent Astor Gallery
From Friday, March 14, 1997 to Saturday, May 17, 1997

Performing Arts Library

The exhibition focuses on the extraordinary life of Henry Cowell, visionary composer, teacher, and theorist. Archival material from the Music Division's Henry Cowell Collection of manuscripts, photographs, and personal memorabilia illuminate his seminal contributions to the shaping of 20th-century American music.


The New Baroque: Early Dance Re-creations and Inspirations
Dance Collection Reading Room
From Monday, January 13, 1997 to Saturday, May 10, 1997

costume

Twentieth-century encounters with Baroque dance and music have been made possible by gifted historians who show the results of their research in performance. This exhibition features prints and illustrations of 17th- and 18th-century dance, as well as documentation of contemporary works by such groups as the New York Baroque Dance Company, which is celebrating its 20th anniversary.

Image: Costume design for Reine des Sylphes in Le Balet des Elémens, 1763, by Jean-Baptiste Martin. From The New York Public Library for the Performing Arts, Dance Collection.


Jo Mielziner: Scenic Poet of the Theatre

From Wednesday, November 20, 1996 to Saturday, April 26, 1997

Performing Arts Library

Stage designer Mielziner brought a striking, stylized realism to Broadway, creating the settings for such productions as Tennessee Williams's Cat on a Hot Tin Roof and Arthur Miller's Death of a Salesman. In aesthetics and technical accomplishment, his influence on stage design is still greatly felt. The exhibition will feature original sketches, renderings, and plans, as well as correspondence with his many renowned collaborators.


The Necessity of Rainbows: Lyrics by Yip Harburg

From Wednesday, November 20, 1996 to Saturday, April 26, 1997

Performing Arts Library

From soulful ballads to biting satire, Yip Harburg wrote the lyrics for many of America's most haunting popular and theatrical songs. His contributions to American culture include lyrics for such standards as "Brother Can You Spare a Dime," "It's Only a Paper Moon," and "April in Paris," as well as the classic songs from the film The Wizard of Oz and the Broadway musical Finian's Rainbow. The exhibition traces Harburg's rise from the Lower East Side to Broadway and Hollywood, and his career-long commitment to the expression of social concerns in his art.


The Hiram Stead Collection
Billy Rose Theatre Collection
From Tuesday, January 21, 1997 to Saturday, April 19, 1997

An avid theatregoer and devoted traveler, Hiram Stead trekked across Europe in search of theatre and theatre memorabilia. In the early 1930s, the Library acquired Stead's collection, which includes materials dating from the early 18th century to the early 20th century. The exhibit features highlights from the enormous variety of items in the collection, including broadsides, correspondence, iconography, toy theatres, and rarities such as an invitation to the coronation of George IV.


Gimme a Pigfoot (and a Bottle of Beer): Gustation and Libation in Recorded Popular Song
Rodgers & Hammerstein Archives of Recorded Sound
From Monday, November 4, 1996 to Saturday, February 22, 1997

Performing Arts Library

The exhibition features recordings and visuals, both singing the praises of glorious consumption and lamenting the woes of gluttony. The audio portion includes works by artists such as Bessie Smith, Johnny Paycheck, Louis Prima, and Tom Waits, to name a few. This is a serious and silly examination of the prevalence of these subjects in our popular culture.


The Dance Heroes of José Limón
Vincent Astor Gallery
From Friday, November 1, 1996 to Saturday, February 1, 1997

Performing Arts Library

José Limón carried forward and expanded the American modern dance tradition. With his own company he created such masterpieces as The Moor's Pavane and also kept alive in repertory the works of his mentor Doris Humphrey and other influential choreographers. Coinciding with the 50th anniversary of the José Limón Dance Company, the exhibition features correspondence between Limón and his collaborators, films and videos of his dances, posters, choreographic notebooks, and original costumes.


The League/International Society for Contemporary Music--Then and Now
Music Division Reading Room
From Thursday, October 24, 1996 to Saturday, January 25, 1997

Performing Arts Library

The League of Composers and the U.S. Section of the International Society for Contemporary Music, both founded in 1923, have been vital forces in the promotion of contemporary music in America. With documents from the Library's Music Division, this exhibit traces the history of the League/ISCM (the groups combined in 1954) and showcases the work of George Perle, the composer honored by the society this year.


Inside and Out: The Costumes of Barbara Matera, Ltd.
Amsterdam Gallery
From Monday, October 21, 1996 to Saturday, January 18, 1997

Performing Arts Library

As New York's leading costume shop, Barbara Matera, Ltd. has constructed wardrobe for everything from La Cage aux Folles (Broadway) to Les Petits Riens (New York City Ballet). The exhibition demonstrates the transformation from concept to costume by showing the various stages of construction of an elaborate Norma Desmond outfit from Broadway's Sunset Boulevard. Also featured are a wide range of other costumes, original designs, working drawings, catalogues, and swatch books, as well as industrial sewing machines and other equipment from the Matera shop.


Léonide Massine: Symphonic Choreographer
Dance Collection Reading Room
From Monday, September 16, 1996 to Saturday, January 4, 1997

Performing Arts Library

As chief choreographer and star dancer of Ballets Russes, Léonide Massine is remembered for his astute comedy and burning intensity in such ballets as Gaîté Parisienne and The Three-Cornered Hat. With companies now regularly reviving his works, Massine is being recognized as a major force in 20th-century modernism. The exhibition includes photographs and designs representing landmarks of his career.


Play It Again Sam: Popular Songs on the Silver Screen
Rodgers & Hammerstein Archives of Recorded Sound
From Wednesday, July 24, 1996 to Saturday, October 19, 1996

Performing Arts Library

This exhibition explores original and re-recorded popular songs that were used in films. It illustrates how popular songs can have several different lives as a result of their placement in various media. On display are record jackets, books, periodicals, and a selection of audio materials to aid visitors in comparing different versions.


Puppets & Performing Objects
Main Gallery
From Wednesday, June 12, 1996 to Saturday, September 28, 1996

Throughout the 20th century, artists from many disciplines and backgrounds have explored the use of objects in performance. While puppetry and mask performances are at the center of the form, this exhibition also focuses on techniques that might seem beyond the traditions of puppetry. Included in Puppets & Performing Objects are works by Alexandra Exter, Bil Baird, Bread and Puppet Theatre, Mabou Mines, Pablo Picasso, and others. Presented in conjunction with the Jim Henson Foundation as part of the Third International Festival of Puppet Theater.


Meredith Monk: Archeology of an Artist
Vincent Astor Gallery
From Tuesday, May 21, 1996 to Saturday, September 14, 1996

Performing Arts Library

As a composer, choreographer, singer, director, and filmmaker, Meredith Monk has built a body of work that cuts across many genres, and has established herself as a major creative force in the performing arts. The Library's exhibition explored the full evolution of Monk's pioneering performance works, from her earliest pieces to her latest stagings. In addition to photographs, posters, programs, films, recordings, and designs documenting such performances as 16mm Earrings, Juice, Education of the Girlchild, and Quarry, the exhibition featured scores of artifacts from Monk's productions, including the headdresses worn in Education of the Girlchild, X-ray boxes from Quarry, costumes and storyboards from Atlas, and a wall of shoes from various productions.


Viva Verdi
Music Division Reading Room
From Saturday, June 22, 1996 to Saturday, September 7, 1996

The life and work of composer Giuseppe Verdi were examined in this exhibition, which coincided with the continuing Viva Verdi Festival in Central Park, a series of 28 Verdi operas presented over seven summers by Vincent La Selva's New York Grand Opera Company. Curated by Mary Jane Phillips Matz, author of a highly acclaimed biography of the composer, the exhibition focused on the four operas presented in the 1996 festival, Alzira, Attila, Macbeth, and I Masnadieri. Included were original scores, librettos, engravings, and programs from the Library's collections, as well as materials from the personal collection of the curator.


Drawn to the Theatre
Amsterdam Gallery
From Friday, May 3, 1996 to Friday, August 30, 1996

Theatrical caricatures and illustrations are usually created to help promote a production or accompany a published article. Yet, throughout the last century, such works have provided unique documentation of theatrical productions, and often convey the life and movement of the theatre more effectively than other media. In addition to original drawings, rare posters, handbills, photographs, scrapbooks, and letters, this exhibition showed the process of creating an illustration from the earliest concept sketches to the finished piece as it was published. On view in Drawn to the Theatre were the well-known creations of artists from the turn of the century to the present: Nell Brinkley, Paul Davis, Al Frueh, Alex Gard, Al Hirschfeld, James McMullan, Ben Solowey, and many others.


Poetry and Dance
Dance Collection Reading Room
From Monday, May 6, 1996 to Friday, August 30, 1996

Vaslav Nijinsky

In collaboration with the Poetry Society of America, the Library's Dance Collection presented this exhibition focusing on choreography inspired by poetry, and works of verse which reflect images of dance and particular dancers. Among the dances highlighted were Vaslav Nijinsky's Afternoon of a Faun and Jerome Robbins's Afternoon of a Faun, both based on the poem by Stéphane Mallarmé, Doris Humphrey's Lament for Ignacio Sanchez Mejías, inspired by Federico García Lorca's poem, and Martha Graham's Letter to the World, based on the poem by Emily Dickinson. These productions were documented with photographs and other materials from the Dance Collection. The exhibition, presented in tribute to Lincoln Kirstein, was part of the Library's Poetry and Dance Festival.

Image: Baron Adolf de Meyer. Photograph of Nijinsky as the Faun in L’Après-midi d’un Faune, Paris, 1911. Roger Pryor Dodge Collection, Jerome Robbins Dance Division, The New York Public Library for the Performing Arts


Voices of Spain
Rodgers & Hammerstein Archives of Recorded Sound
From Monday, April 15, 1996 to Saturday, July 13, 1996

Performing Arts Library

Presented in conjunction with the Library's Music and Dance of Spain performance series, the exhibition featured recorded Spanish music, plays, and poetry from the collections of the Rodgers & Hammerstein Archives, with particular focus on the works of composer Manuel de Falla in recognition of the 50th anniversary of his death. In addition to displays of record jackets, books, and periodicals, the exhibit featured a selection of audio materials which visitors could enjoy on headphones.


Joseph Schillinger's World of Tomorrow
Music Division Reading Room
From Friday, March 1, 1996 to Saturday, June 15, 1996

Performing Arts Library

Joseph Schillinger's System of Music Composition combined the principles of science, mathematics, and the arts into a unique method of writing music. The exhibit contained examples of his own compositions, charts based on his system, as well as original correspondence with students, colleagues, and collaborators.


Metal Earth Wood Styrofoam = Music
Vincent Astor Gallery
From Wednesday, January 17, 1996 to Saturday, May 4, 1996

Performing Arts Library

Beyond traditional instruments lies the realm of music-making devices designed and built by composers and musicians themselves. Whether constructed from beautifully crafted ceramics or from styrofoam and string, these instruments open up new possibilities for the creation of sound. Metal Earth Wood Styrofoam = Music featured instruments used in the innovative ensembles of composers Skip LaPlante/Music for Handmade Instruments, Raphael Mostel/Tibetan Singing Bowl Ensemble, and Tan Dun/Earthsounds Ceramic Orchestra designed by Ragner Naess, as well as instruments of the late Harry Partch used by Dean Drummond/New Band. Manuscript scores, performance photographs, and audio-visual materials were also on display.


Roll Over Beethoven
Amsterdam Gallery
From Friday, February 2, 1996 to Saturday, April 20, 1996

Performing Arts Library

First edition sheet music by The Beatles and Bob Dylan, and original lead sheets to such rhythm and blues hits as "Stand by Me" and "The Twist," were among the objects on view in this exhibition, which explored the origins of rock and roll in blues and boogie woogie, the instruments used to create its unique sound, the performers who defined the genre, and the means by which the music is promoted and disseminated.


1995 Centennial Exhibition: Ten Decades

From Thursday, November 30, 1995 to Saturday, April 20, 1996

Annabelle Whitford

In celebration of the Library's Centennial and the 30th anniversary of the move of the Library for the Performing Arts to Lincoln Center, this multimedia exhibition documented the significant developments in the performing arts in each of the decades between 1895 and 1995. The exhibition considered mainstream art forms such as vaudeville and movie musicals, alternative art forms such as modern dance and performance art, and forms of dissemination such as sheet music, radio, and LPs. Treasures from the Library's collections on view included an 1897 film clip of dancer Annabelle Whitford, produced by Thomas Edison's company; designs by Jo Mielziner for the original production of Death of a Salesman; Agnes de Mille's notes on transferring the dream ballet in Oklahoma! from stage to screen; photos and posters of modern dance giants Doris Humphrey, Charles Weidman, and Martha Graham; music by John Cage; and a teenaged fan's scrapbook of Beatles clippings.

Image: Annabelle Whitford


Touring Exhibitions:

Please contact bcohenstratyner@nypl.org for information on the availability of Classic Black, Balanchine at Work, and Swing.


The New York Public Library for the Performing Arts gratefully acknowledges the leadership support of Dorothy and Lewis B. Cullman. Additional support for programs and exhibitions has been provided by Judy R. and Alfred A. Rosenberg and the Miriam and Harold Steinberg Foundation.