May 2012 Archives
After commencement and beyond into summer sessions, operating hours at James
Branch Cabell Library will be reduced compared to the busy spring
semester. Please refer to this chart for summer hours. Also, note that Cabell Starbucks will be closed May 21-28 for remodeling.
In addition, the building will be closed on these days:
In addition, the building will be closed on these days:
- Sunday, May 13 (day after commencement)
- Saturday, May 19
- Monday, May 28 (Memorial Day holiday)
- Wednesday, July 4 (Independence Day holiday)
- Saturday and Sunday, August 11-12
- Saturday and Sunday, August 18-19
- Just in time for summer, when faculty and staff are on the go, VCU Libraries has
upgraded its subscription to The Chronicle of
Higher Education. Readers can now access The Chronicle using an iPad,
smart phone, tablet or any computer located anywhere in the world. - Simply create a free account using your "@vcu.edu" e-mail address at
http://www.chronicle.com/.
- Account holders may download The Chronicle's iPad editions at no cost, view the new mobile interface using a web browser on a smart phone or tablet and access the publication via computer from any location.
- The Index of Christian Art catalogs art found
within a
broadly defined Christian context. In its digital form, the index contains some 80,000 full-text records and more than 100,000
images dating from 30 CE to 1550 CE. Founded in 1917 and continuously
updated, this resource is maintained by Princeton University.
The day after commencement, May 13, James Branch Cabell Library will be closed.
To mark May as Military Appreciation Month, two display cases on the fourth floor
of James Branch Cabell Library pay tribute to the work of two-time Pulitzer Prize-winning editorial cartoonist William Henry "Bill" Maudlin. His World War II cartoons were published abroad and in the United States. (Image at right: cover of "This Damn Tree Leaks, A Collection of War Cartoons," by Bill Mauldin, 1945.)
Maudlin (1921-2003) first gained a following drawing cartoons for the 45th Infantry Division newspaper. His reputation grew at the global military newspaper Stars and Stripes. Willie and Joe, his best known creations, typified common soldiers and gave voice to their experiences.
After winning the Pulitzer Prize for his wartime work in 1945, Maudlin received a second Pulitzer for a Cold War cartoon. At the Chicago Sun-Times, he created what many observers consider among the greatest editorial cartoons ever penned. In response to the assassination of President John F. Kennedy Jr. in 1963, Maudlin drew Abraham Lincoln of the Lincoln Memorial bowed in shock and grief.
Maudlin (1921-2003) first gained a following drawing cartoons for the 45th Infantry Division newspaper. His reputation grew at the global military newspaper Stars and Stripes. Willie and Joe, his best known creations, typified common soldiers and gave voice to their experiences.
After winning the Pulitzer Prize for his wartime work in 1945, Maudlin received a second Pulitzer for a Cold War cartoon. At the Chicago Sun-Times, he created what many observers consider among the greatest editorial cartoons ever penned. In response to the assassination of President John F. Kennedy Jr. in 1963, Maudlin drew Abraham Lincoln of the Lincoln Memorial bowed in shock and grief.
- More about the Military Month display
- More on his work from a comics arts blogger and from his official site
- About VCU's new Military Veterans Alumni Council: Take the survey.
* * *
The Military Appreciation Month exhibition includes items from VCU Libraries' Comic Arts Collection, housed
in Special Collections and Archives at James Branch Cabell Library. It consists of some 100,000 items,
including more than 40,000 comic books, graphic novels, editorial
cartoons, comic strips, memorabilia, comic journals, fanzines and
an array of reference materials. In addition to the growing,
comprehensive collections for the study of comic arts, VCU Libraries
is the repository for the Will
Eisner Comic Industry Awards Archives.
Student work from a spring semester topics course, "The Photobook," is on view in the Fourth Floor Gallery at James Branch Cabell Library.
The Department of Photography and Film and VCU Libraries collaborated to develop and teach the 400-level course. The exhibit includes work by Christine Addison, Stephanie Fry, Anna Hendrick, Emily Jones, Melissa Rabin, Stephen Turner and Diego Valdez.
"The Photobook" course coupled studio instruction in bookmaking with a critical examination of artists' books and photobooks in the Cabell Library collection. Throughout the semester, students learned bookmaking techniques and structures ranging in difficulty from concertinas to case bindings. Students also met in Special Collections and Archives each week to explore the history and ideas represented by rare and important examples of artists' books and photobooks. Combining technical skills with their knowledge of the genre, students designed and produced their own photobooks.
A photobook is an autonomous art form in which images are sequenced to tell a story or convey specific concepts. Unlike other photography books, the images in a photobook are less significant as stand-alone photographs but are meaningful as parts of a comprehensive whole.
The course was taught by Helen Cassidy, a professional bookbinder, and Yuki Hibben, assistant professor and assistant head of Special Collections and Archives.
The Department of Photography and Film and VCU Libraries collaborated to develop and teach the 400-level course. The exhibit includes work by Christine Addison, Stephanie Fry, Anna Hendrick, Emily Jones, Melissa Rabin, Stephen Turner and Diego Valdez.
"The Photobook" course coupled studio instruction in bookmaking with a critical examination of artists' books and photobooks in the Cabell Library collection. Throughout the semester, students learned bookmaking techniques and structures ranging in difficulty from concertinas to case bindings. Students also met in Special Collections and Archives each week to explore the history and ideas represented by rare and important examples of artists' books and photobooks. Combining technical skills with their knowledge of the genre, students designed and produced their own photobooks.
A photobook is an autonomous art form in which images are sequenced to tell a story or convey specific concepts. Unlike other photography books, the images in a photobook are less significant as stand-alone photographs but are meaningful as parts of a comprehensive whole.
The course was taught by Helen Cassidy, a professional bookbinder, and Yuki Hibben, assistant professor and assistant head of Special Collections and Archives.
A limited number of Working Dead posters will be given to library patrons
Sunday-Thursday, May 6-10--the last week of long hours in the spring semester. The posters were developed by artist Dave Morrison and VCU Libraries to mark expanded hours.
Want a poster?
Share or comment on the Cabell Facebook page or tweet about #libraryzombies or retweet something from #VCUCabell and come to the main circulation desk to pick up a poster...until supplies are gone.
Want a poster?
Share or comment on the Cabell Facebook page or tweet about #libraryzombies or retweet something from #VCUCabell and come to the main circulation desk to pick up a poster...until supplies are gone.
The web-based Worth Global Style Network (WGSN) and its archive are now
available through VCU Libraries.
This news and culture site tracks trends worldwide with a focus on retail, fashion and design industries--all the style-related industries. It publishes in real time and posts updates daily.
WGSN brings a global view to trends in fashion and design, with a specific focus on areas where style and commerce intersect. The network and its 12-year archive contain more than 5 million images from runways, trade shows, retail outlets, exhibitions and streets around the world. Visual searching allows the user to find similar items according to shape, color, and pattern. WGSN also gives patrons access to 16,000 downloadable copyright-free graphics from a unique library of sector-specific conceptual collections. (At right, a lighting display by Tom Dixon at Milan Design Week in 2012.)
According to its website, WGSN is "the leading online trend-analysis and research service providing creative and business intelligence for the apparel, style, design and retail industries." It was founded in 1998 and has regional offices and freelancers throughout Europe, Asia, South America and in the United States, where it has offices in New York and Los Angeles.
To access the database: http://library,vcu.edu/search/1168
This news and culture site tracks trends worldwide with a focus on retail, fashion and design industries--all the style-related industries. It publishes in real time and posts updates daily.
WGSN brings a global view to trends in fashion and design, with a specific focus on areas where style and commerce intersect. The network and its 12-year archive contain more than 5 million images from runways, trade shows, retail outlets, exhibitions and streets around the world. Visual searching allows the user to find similar items according to shape, color, and pattern. WGSN also gives patrons access to 16,000 downloadable copyright-free graphics from a unique library of sector-specific conceptual collections. (At right, a lighting display by Tom Dixon at Milan Design Week in 2012.)
According to its website, WGSN is "the leading online trend-analysis and research service providing creative and business intelligence for the apparel, style, design and retail industries." It was founded in 1998 and has regional offices and freelancers throughout Europe, Asia, South America and in the United States, where it has offices in New York and Los Angeles.
To access the database: http://library,vcu.edu/search/1168
The Index to 19th-Century American Art Periodicals is now available
through VCU Libraries.
This resource is the sole online index to 42 periodicals published in the United States during the 19th century.
Each issue is indexed for its entire contents--articles, art notes, illustrations, stories, poems and advertisements. This is a valuable resource on American art, artists, and collecting, as well as popular culture and industry.
To access the database: http://library.vcu.edu/search/1167
This resource is the sole online index to 42 periodicals published in the United States during the 19th century.
Each issue is indexed for its entire contents--articles, art notes, illustrations, stories, poems and advertisements. This is a valuable resource on American art, artists, and collecting, as well as popular culture and industry.
To access the database: http://library.vcu.edu/search/1167
Colloquium Digital Library of Life Sciences published by Morgan & Claypool is now available through VCU Libraries. The content is organized into series and each consists of e-books. Each e-book includes lecture-type information written by experts in the particular topic covered.
These e-books are intended to be of value to students, scientists and clinicians in the biomedical sciences.
To access the database from off-campus: http://library.vcu.edu/search/1159
These e-books are intended to be of value to students, scientists and clinicians in the biomedical sciences.
To access the database from off-campus: http://library.vcu.edu/search/1159
This video captures some of the energy of academic life on campus. James Branch Cabell Library is featured in this one-minute production for VCU admissions.

