Free Library of Philadelphia
Take our survey and enter to win $250

Recent Posts
Tags
Free Library Blog
Home > Blog > June 2012
You are viewing all posts for June 2012

Due to the Excessive Heat Warning this weekend, the following Free Library locations will serve as official Cooling Centers and operate under these extended hours:

Friday, June 29, 2012
Andorra: 10:00 a.m.- 8:00 p.m. 
Eastwick: 10:00 a.m. – 8:00 p.m. 
Falls of Schuylkill: 10:00 a.m. – 8:00 p.m. 
Frankford: 10:00 a.m. – 7:00 p.m.
Haddington: 10:00 a.m. – 7:00 p.m.
Independence: 10:00 a.m. – 8:00 p.m. 
Katharine Drexel: 10:00 a.m. – 8:00 p.m. 
Logan: 10:00 a.m. – 8:00 p.m. 
Lucien E. Blackwell West Philadelphia Regional: 10:00 a.m. – 8:00 p.m. 
McPherson Square: 10:00 a.m. – 7:00 p.m.
South Philadelphia: 10:00 a.m. – 8:00 p.m. 
Welsh Road: 10:00 a.m. – 8:00 p.m. 
Wynnefield: 10:00 a.m. – 8:00 p.m. 
Wyoming: 10:00 a.m. – 8:00 p.m. 

Saturday, June 30, 2012
Lucien E. Blackwell West Philadelphia Regional: 10:00 a.m. – 8:00 p.m.

We could write a billion posts about Philadelphia musicians who’ve taken their instruments to new heights. Grover Washington with his sax. Lee Morgan on trumpet. But, as far as playing the bass goes, no one can pluck, pop, slap, and really innovate on the low end quite like Stanley Clarke -- born on this day in North Philadelphia, 1951.

While he was still a student at Roxborough High, Stan joined the All-Philadelphia Senior High School Orchestra, first on violin, then cello, and finally settled on bass. In those early years, Stan loved jamming around Philly with his friends. But at that point he didn’t even own an amp. So he was able to get his friends to lend him theirs… but that led to a very peculiar status around the city, as he told Guitar Player magazine in 1980:

“I used to have this reputation in Philadelphia for being the loudest bass player in the world. Every time I’d borrow an amp from somebody, I’d blow it up.  And to this day, there are guys that still talk about it in Philly.”

After three-and-a-half years studying string bass and composition at the Academy of Music, Clark joined Chick Corea in the fusion band Return to Forever. He released his debut solo album a year later. And the rest is history!

 

 

If you’re interested in learning more about Stanley Clarke, we’ve got tons of cd and vinyl including his solo works and collaborations with other artists. We even have a lot of the films he’s scored on DVD. And it’s all free with your library card! 

Here’s just two of our favorite resources here at the Parkway Central Library’s Music Department. You can click the links to view the catalog record or place a hold.

Jazz Greats Speak : interviews with master musicians

Contains essays on Stan Clarke – which touch on his time in Philadelphia in the 1970’s – and other jazz greats. Also a great resource for learning about other jazz musicians!

The Stanley Clarke Collection 

Now you can play like Stanley Clarke! Includes how to play the slap-and-double stop chug of School Days. And it’s got a cd and notation for 15 of his other bass lines. What’s your favorite Stan Clarke line?

Stan the man flying his Eagles pride
Stan the man flying his Eagles pride
Just a few of our favorites
Just a few of our favorites

Katherine Milhous (1894-1977) and Frances Lichten (1889-1961) were life partners and artistic collaborators who shared several passions: creating vibrant artwork for children and adults, entertaining in their homey studio on Pine Street, and corresponding with treasured longtime friends. They also shared a love of Philadelphia and respect for the history and cultural traditions of the region.

The Katherine Milhous and Frances Lichten papers, an impressive 40 linear feet of personal and professional correspondence, fan mail, published and unpublished artwork, research notes, photographs, journals, and scrapbooks, is now available at the Free Library of Philadelphia’s Children’s Literature Research Collection (CLRC). In 1967, Milhous donated the majority of her manuscripts, illustrations, and papers as well as several boxes of Lichten’s papers to the library, and researchers will benefit from the artist’s handwritten comments, labeled research files, and extensive notes on her own work. 

Katherine Milhous was born in Philadelphia and grew up in Pitman, New Jersey. The activities, culture, and opportunities of her birthplace beckoned, and she returned to the city to study at the Philadelphia Museum School of Industrial Art and the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts, where she met Frances Lichten, an artist specializing in Pennsylvania folk art.  Influenced by Pennsylvania Dutch designs and crafts, Milhous is primarily known for writing and illustrating children’s books such as The Egg Tree, for which she won the Caldecott medal in 1951, and Through These Arches: The Story of Independence Hall (1964), a thorough and reverent history of the Native American settlers through the building’s restoration to its original design in 1950. The positive impact she had on audiences of all ages is reflected by the folders of fan mail, including photos of her young readers decorating their own egg trees, notes from appreciative librarians, a letter from Pat Nixon praising Through These Arches, and a letter from Philadelphia mayor Bernard Samuel referencing Patrick and the Golden Slippers (1951), her book about the Mummer’s Parade.

Researchers can explore the relationship of author and publisher through the professional and personal letters written to Milhous by Alice Dalgliesh, children’s book editor at Charles Scribner’s Sons in New York City.  Dalgliesh, also an author, saw Milhous’s Works Progress Administration posters featuring rural life; she promptly invited Milhous to create the illustrations for her children’s books and then encouraged her to write her own, sparking a twenty-seven-year friendship.  Lichten and Milhous worked together on the artwork for Dalgliesh’s They Live in South America (1942).

Milhous kept many files of clippings, notes, poems, and greeting cards from which she drew inspiration for her work. In addition, those interested in physical representations of the mid-twentieth century publishing process can examine outlines, galleys, preliminary and final artwork, as well as a complete dummy for Through These Arches, which Milhous considered her most important book.

Like Katherine Milhous, Frances Lichten left a tremendous impact on her chosen field. She was born in Bellafonte, Pennsylvania (near State College), and studied art in Philadelphia. She worked as a commercial artist, served as the State Supervisor for the Index of American Design, a WPA initiative, and was the Research Associate in the Decorative Arts department at the Philadelphia Museum of Art, home of the Frances Lichten Research Collection. She wrote several books on decorative and folk art as well as two featuring her own illustrations. The collection features smaller publications in which Lichten published scholarly articles, artwork including bookplates and drawings from her childhood, and several research and subject files pertaining to her research interests.

Sadly, Lichten suffered from amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, or ALS (Lou Gehrig’s disease), which eventually took her life. The debilitating disease robbed her of muscle movement, a particularly cruel fate for an artist. The collection holds several folders of correspondence documenting her condition, condolence letters from friends and family to Milhous upon Lichten’s death in 1961, and her personal effects collected by Milhous from the nursing home where her beloved Frances, her partner of 40 years, spent her final months.

For additional biographical information as well as a complete inventory of the collection, please see the finding aid for the Katherine Milhous and Frances Lichten Papers.

For more on all of the CLRC collections visit our Facebook page or follow us on Twitter for more updates from the Children’s Literature Research Collection.

- Jennifer Schnabel

 

Tags: CLIR Grant, Children's Literature Research Collection, archives

Milhous signing her books
Milhous signing her books
WPA Poster by Milhous
WPA Poster by Milhous
Cover of dummy for Through These Arches
Cover of dummy for Through These Arches

What better thing to do on a scorching Philadelphia night than go to the ballpark?  Open air, green grass, that summer sound of cracking bats...  Who are we kidding, it was still pretty hot!  Well, the bats weren't so hot for the Free Library of Philadelphia's Staff Association night at Citizen's Bank Park.  The Phillies support the Library in our Summer Reading Game so the least we can do is root, root, root for the home team.  It started out great when our lead-off man, Jimmy Rollins, homered in the first to give us a one-run lead. Vance Worley was on the mound for the Phils and held off the Colorado Rockies for seven innings. Alas, he surrendered a two-run homer and the Phils never recovered.  We lost 4-1, but did manage to take two of the three-game series.  We wish our boys of summer better luck next time! 

June 21, 2012 at the ballpark
June 21, 2012 at the ballpark
Interested in the circus arts? Meet acclaimed aerialist Kendra Greaves!
Interested in the circus arts? Meet acclaimed aerialist Kendra Greaves!
Discuss the art of ballet with Roy Kaiser, Artistic Director of the Pennsylvania Ballet!
Discuss the art of ballet with Roy Kaiser, Artistic Director of the Pennsylvania Ballet!

And so the countdown begins for the Free Library's Living Library event, to take place on Wednesday, June 20, from 7:00 to 8:30 p.m. in Room 108 of Parkway Central! To whet your appetites for what is sure to be an amazing evening, we would like to introduce you to two more of our lovely participants: Kendra Greaves and Roy Kaiser, both of whom are very active participants in Philadelphia's vibrant performing arts scene!

Kendra is an internationally renowned aerialist and circus artist who specializes in corde lisse (vertical rope), tissu, and doubles trapeze. She became involved in circus and aerial work in 2003 but began her athletic and performance career at the age of four, when she started to compete on a synchronized swim team. Her efforts in the swimming pool led her to attain a high national ranking for four years and also gave rise to her subsequent participation in speed swimming, horseback riding, and fencing. Since entering the aerial and circus arenas in 2003, Kendra has performed on five continents and taught and trained all over the world. She most recently performed as a triple-trapeze aerialist in Cirque du Soleil's Varekai

Roy Kaiser joined the Pennsylvania Ballet in 1979 and was later promoted to Soloist and Principal Dancer, performing nearly all of the principal male roles in the Company's classical repertoire. In 1987, he was appointed Assistant Ballet Master and was named Ballet Master when he retired from performing in 1992. In October of 1993, he was named Associate Artistic Director of the Company and was ultimately named its Artistic Director in February of 1995. During his tenure as Artistic Director, the company has performed at the Kennedy Center in Washington, DC on several occasions, including as part of the Center's Ballet Across America program in June 2008, which focused on the depth and history of American ballet via performances by nine companies from across the country. He also oversaw the Company's international debut at the Edinburgh International Festival in August 2005, where it performed the 40th anniversary commission of Christopher Wheeldon's Swan Lake

Interested in hearing more from Kendra or Roy? Stop by our Living Library and check out their stories for yourself! See bios of all of our participants in our Flickr set and see previous sneak previews at freelibrary.org/livinglibrary!

Tags: Living Library