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For Immediate Release: March
10, 2003
Media Contact: Suellen
Bilow (415) 557-4282
A Wild Exactitude: The New Yorker, 1925-1950
Selections from the
Schmulowitz Collection of Wit & Humor
New
Exhibition opens April 1
at the Main Library's Skylight Gallery
San
Francisco - The first 25 years of the national institution known as The New Yorker will
be highlighted in A Wild Exactitude: The New Yorker, 1925-1950, a new exhibition from the Schmulowitz Collection of Wit & Humor at the San Francisco Main Library's Skylight Gallery, 100 Larkin Street,
from Tuesday, April 1 through Sunday, May 25, 2003.
The
exhibition chronicles the chaotic days of The New Yorker in its infancy,
with its first appearance on newsstands, February 21, 1925, to the
period after World War II and the end of the Ross editorship. With
editor and co-founder Harold W. Ross at the helm, The New Yorker established
itself as one of the most important and sophisticated magazines of
the twentieth century. As Harold Ross wrote in his prospectus:
"The
New Yorker will be a reflection in word and picture of metropolitan
life. It will be human.
Its general tenor will be one of gaiety, wit and satire but it will
be more than a jester. It will not
be what is commonly called highbrow or radical. It will be what is
commonly called sophisticated,
in that it will assume a reasonable degree of enlightenment on the
part of its readers. It will hate bunk."
The
books of writers and artists known to readers for their New Yorker
style will be on view - from writers E. B. White and James Thurber,
Robert Benchley, Dorothy Parker, Alexander Woollcott, John O'Hara,
Wolcott Gibbs, Joseph Mitchell, A.J. Liebling, S.J. Perelman and Ogden
Nash - to artists Rea Irvin, Ralph Barton, Mary Petty, Charles Addams,
Peter Arno, Helen E. Hokinson, Gluyas Williams, William Steig, Saul
Steinberg, and many many more. Joseph Mitchell said it best when describing
the common element of style among all The New Yorker writers: "None of 'em could spell … and really none of us, including Ross, really knew
anything about grammar. But each one of them … each one had a kind
of wild exactitude of his own. "
Materials
on display are drawn from the Schmulowitz Collection of Wit & Humor (SCOWAH), which is located in the Library's Book Arts & Special Collections Center. SCOWAH is a rich resource of New Yorker stories,
novels, humorous pieces, cartoons, and biography. Nat Schmulowitz -
attorney, bibliophile, and Library trustee - presented the San Francisco
Public Library with a gift of 93 volumes of jest books in 1947. Since
then, the collection has grown to over 20,000 volumes in 35 languages
spanning 400 years of wit & humor. SCOWAH is the largest public collection of its kind in the United States.
An exhibition highlighting the collection is held every April Fool's
Day to celebrate Nat's extraordinary gift to the City of San Francisco.
The
exhibition will be on view in the Main Library's Skylight Gallery April
1 through May 25.
During the month of May, a companion program of New Yorker-themed films,
both feature and documentary, will be shown Thursdays at noon in the
Koret Auditorium at the Main Library.
All
programs and exhibitions at the San Francisco PublicLibrary are free
and open to the public.
Skylight Gallery hours are:
Sunday 12-5; Monday 10-6; Tuesday through Thursday 9-6;
Friday 12-6; and Saturday 10-6.
For
more information, please call 415.557.4400.
The Marjorie B. and Carl W. Stern Book Arts & Special
Collections Center is home to the Schmulowitz Collection of Wit & Humor as well as the Grabhorn Collection on the History of Printing & the Development of the Book, and the Harrison Collection of Calligraphy & Lettering.
For more information about these collections, please contact the Book
Arts & Special
Collections Center at 415.557.4560.
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