Tag: Library of Congress

  • Thursday, December 9, 3:00 pm – 4:00 pm – OlmstedOnline Workshop: Olmsted Resources at the Library of Congress

    Join the National Association for Olmsted Parks & the Library of Congress on December 9th for the fourth and final session of the OlmstedOnline Workshop series, designed to explore the tools and methods available to access plans, documents, and images related to the Olmsted Firm. OlmstedOnline is an online map and digital database brought to you by the National Association for Olmsted Parks.

    Presented by Barbara Bair from the Library of Congress, the workshop titled “Olmsted Resources at the Library of Congress and the new By the People Olmsted Campaign” will provide a basic orientation to the Frederick Law Olmsted Papers and Olmsted Associates Records collections and related resources at the Library of Congress. It will also introduce the launch of the Library’s new “By Design: Frederick Law Olmsted and Olmsted Associates” By the People crowdsourcing transcription campaign, including information on how you can volunteer to transcribe Olmsted primary documents. Free on Zoom, but visit HERE to register.

  • Friday, September 17, 5:00 pm – 7:00 pm – Portraits of American Trees Gallery Reception

    Fine arts photographer Tom Zetterstrom will exhibit three-dozen gelatin silver prints from his Portraits of American Trees portfolio at the Berkshire Botanical Garden, Leonhardt Galleries, during September and October, with an opening reception scheduled for September 17, 5-7 p.m. 

    Zetterstrom’s photographs are represented in the collections of over 40 museums nationally, including the Museum of Modern Art, the Getty Museum of Art, Yale University Art Gallery, and in the Library of Congress “Changing American Landscape” holdings, as well as in numerous private and corporate collections. 

    In his forty-year quest across North America, Zetterstrom has gathered images of innumerable species from a wide range of topographies and ecosystems. As forests ecosystems decline, he continues to search for the most memorable trees, those “curious survivors slowly rising like giants through the centuries”. 

    “Zetterstrom’s portraits of trees partake in a tradition whose roots lie deep in nineteenth-century photography and painting,” wrote Charles S. Moffett, former director of the Phillips Collection in Washington, DC. “(His) images reflect moods and ideas that are at least indirectly related to British and American Romantic traditions. He has both built a bridge to the past and created a body of work that fully reflects a particular late-twentieth century sensibility.”

    Gallery hours: Daily, 10 a.m. – 4 p.m. The exhibit runs through October 31.