Jamie Lausch Vander Broek
Posts tagged with events
Showing 11 - 20 of 155 items

Join the library's Book Arts Studio on the Diag (or in the Shapiro Gallery if it rains!) next Thursday, 12 September at 5p to print your own copy of the first page of Virginia Woolf's Mrs. Dalloway!

Join curators Sigrid Anderson and Juli McLoone this Thursday 5 September 10-11 for an informal conversation about the newly-installed exhibit Mrs. Dalloway and WWI: Home Front and War Front!

Join us next Thursday, 18 April between 4-6p for our next Third Thursdays at the Library event!

Join us next Thursday, 21 March between 4-6p for our next Third Thursdays at the Library event!

Join us next Thursday, 15 February between 4-6p for our next Third Thursdays at the Library event!

Join us for our next Third Thursdays at the Library open house, exploring early printed books!

Join us next week for another Third Thursdays at the Library open house, exploring material from the Ardis Press Records!

Join us next week for our first Third Thursdays at the Library open house, exploring material from the Labadie Collection!

The Clements Bookworm: A Library Looks at Audubon, Both His Birds and His Background, Gregory Nobles, October 20, 2023, 10-11am
Moderated by Marieka Kaye and Caitlin Pollock of the U-M Library, Gregory Nobles will discuss the legacy of John James Audubon (1785-1851) as both a brilliant artist/naturalist and unrepentant slaveholder, inviting us to explore the connection between the personal background of this flawed figure and the continuing impact of his remarkable art.
Moderated by Marieka Kaye and Caitlin Pollock of the U-M Library, Gregory Nobles will discuss the legacy of John James Audubon (1785-1851) as both a brilliant artist/naturalist and unrepentant slaveholder, inviting us to explore the connection between the personal background of this flawed figure and the continuing impact of his remarkable art.

You are all cordially invited to the upcoming exhibit of a selection of manuscripts and early printed books from the 15th to the 17th centuries that were illustrated with illuminations and woodcuts. The display will open in the Hatcher Gallery Exhibit Room (Hatcher Library North) on September 6, 2023.