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World's Fairs collection, 1850-1893.

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Kislak Center for Special Collections - Manuscripts Print Collection 65
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Format:
Other
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Centennial International Exhibition (1876 : Philadelphia, Pa.).
Centennial International Exhibition.
New York Exhibition of the Industry of All Nations (1853-1854 : New York, N.Y.).
New York Exhibition of the Industry of All Nations.
Exposition universelle de Paris en 1855 (Paris, France).
Exposition universelle de Paris en 1855.
Great Exhibition (1851 : London, England).
Great Exhibition.
Exhibition of Art and Art-Industry (1853 : Dublin, Ireland).
Exhibition of Art and Art-Industry.
International Exhibition (1862 : London, England).
International Exhibition.
Vienna International Exhibition (1873).
Vienna International Exhibition.
World's Columbian Exposition (1893 : Chicago, Ill.).
World's Columbian Exposition.
Exhibitions.
Fairs.
Genre:
Articles.
Color prints.
Newspapers.
Paintings (visual works)
Penn Provenance:
Gift of Library Company of Philadelphia
Physical Description:
1 box (.2 linear foot)
Place of Publication:
1850-1893.
Biography/History:
While national expositions had taken place in France since the end of the eighteenth century, the modern institution of what would come to be known primarily in the United States as the "world's fair" and, in most other regions, the "world exposition" properly began with the 1851 London Great Exhibition of the Works and Industry of All Nations. The Great Exhibition, as it would come to be known, took place in the famous Crystal Palace in Hyde Park and prominently featured the industrial achievements of the United Kingdom specifically and the western world generally. From then, world's fairs, expositions, and other internationally-oriented festivals became a veritable craze that lasted well into the twentieth century and continue to this day. In the nineteenth century, world's fairs/expositions generally followed the rubric established at London's Great Exhibition in 1851 whereby both national committees and private companies sought to showcase new technologies and industrial progress in general. Many world's fairs/expositions also centered around specifically nationalistic and, at times, generally western-imperial themes, such as the 1893 World's Columbian Exposition in Chicago, the 1899 First Greater America Colonial Exposition in Omaha, the 1922 Exposition nationale coloniale in Marseille, and the 1925 Empire Exposition in Johannesburg. Through the latter half of the nineteenth century and into the twentieth, these events would serve as popular tourist destinations, sources of national pride, spectacles of imperial conquest, and sites of innovation in industry and architecture.
Summary:
This collection comprises a limited number of newspapers, prints, and newspaper clippings, as well as one photograph reproduction and one original painting related to world's fairs held in London (1851and 1862), Dublin (1853), New York (1853), Paris (1855), Amsterdam (1861), Vienna (1873), Philadelphia (1876), and Chicago (1893). Box 1 Folder 1 contains two copies each of The illustrated London news and Frank Leslie's illustrated newspaper, with several additional clippings from The illustrated London news, two unidentified color prints (one mounted), and one clipping from the Historical register of the Centennial Exposition. Box 1 Folder 2 contains a brochure detailing the general regulations for exhibitors at the Philadelphia Centennial International Exhibition of 1876, as well as a list of states represented at the exhibition and their commissioners. Box 1 Folder 3 contains a reproduction of a photograph of the completed New York Crystal Palace. Box 1 Folder 4 contains two facsimiles of paintings related to the Chicago World's Columbian Exposition of 1893 with accompanying broadsides featuring details about each painting. The prints included reproduce: Administration Building and Macmonnies Fountain by Hugh Ditzler, Figures from "Modern Woman" by Mary Cassatt, and The Court of Honor, Illuminated by André Castaigne, all of which are copyrighted and printed by George Barrie. Also included in this folder is what appears to be the original Administration Building and Macmonnies Fountain by Hugh Ditzler.
OCLC:
1137378088

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