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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250319T183000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20250319T200000
DTSTAMP:20260416T081707
CREATED:20250126T175924Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250126T175924Z
UID:10000141-1742409000-1742414400@vicsocny.org
SUMMARY:Amelia Bloomer: So Much More than Bloomers
DESCRIPTION:Scholar Sara Catterall will discuss her new biography of the oft-misinterpreted activist Amelia Bloomer.\nAmelia Bloomer (1818–1894) is best known now for the garments that bear her name. But rational dress was “but an incident” in her life and career\, and the last thing she wanted to be remembered for. From a village childhood and minimal education in Central New York\, Bloomer became a key figure in the temperance and women’s rights movements. She was publisher and editor of The Lily\, the U.S.’s first newspaper by and for women\, which became a vital information hub and source of community for progressive women. She introduced her friends and collaborators Susan B. Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton\, held a groundbreaking position as deputy postmaster of Seneca Falls\, and\, despite scandal and chronic illness\, she continued to speak\, organize\, write\, and travel East to participate in national meetings after her move to the frontier town of Council Bluffs\, Iowa. \nSara Catterall’s new book\, Amelia Bloomer: Journalist\, Suffragist\, Anti-Fashion Icon (Belt Publishing)\, is the first fully researched biography of Bloomer since one published in 1895 by her widower Dexter Bloomer. At this illustrated talk\, Catterall’s book will be available for purchase and signing. A starred review in Booklist called it “A timely and exhaustively researched biography . . . that resonate[s]\, given our current political climate.” \nThe Center at West Park\n165 West 86th Street\nNew York\, NY 10024 \nPurchase tickets\n \nCatterall is a writer with a Drama degree from NYU and an MLIS from Syracuse University. She was born in Ankara and grew up in South Minneapolis. She has worked as a librarian at Cornell University\, a reviewer and interviewer for Shelf Awareness\, and a book indexer. Her work has been published in the NEH’s Humanities magazine and The Sun magazine\, and she co-authored Ottoman Dress and Design in the West: A Visual History of Cultural Exchange. She lives with her family near Ithaca\, NY. \n📷 “The Bloomer Costume\,” N. Currier (New York)\, 1851; The Library of Congress \n📷 Courtesy of the author
URL:https://vicsocny.org/calendar/amelia-bloomer-so-much-more-than-bloomers/
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250205T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20250205T200000
DTSTAMP:20260416T081707
CREATED:20250116T035333Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250116T040544Z
UID:10000140-1738778400-1738785600@vicsocny.org
SUMMARY:Newport and Stained Glass: La Farge\, Tiffany and More
DESCRIPTION:A presentation by Richard Guy Wilson\, Ph.D.\, Professor Emeritus of Architectural History at University of Virginia and Director of the Newport Summer School\nA major American design creation in the later 19th century was the stained glass window. The work of John La Farge and Louis Comfort Tiffany pioneered opalescent stained glass but there were other types that appeared in houses\, churches and public buildings. This talk will examine some of these windows in Newport and elsewhere\, some of which is seen in the Victorian Society Summer School. \nThe event will include remarks about the Victorian Society Summer Schools in Newport\, Chicago\, and London\, which first started back in 1974\, and include brief presentations by recent program graduates. There will be a reception following the presentations. \nDraesel Hall of the Church of the Holy Trinity\n316 E 88th Street\nNew York\, NY 10128 \nRegister here\n \nThe event is cosponsored by the Alumni Association of the Victorian Society Summer Schools\, the Victorian Society in America\, the Victorian Society New York\, the Friends of the Upper East Side Historic Districts\, and the New York Landmarks Conservancy. \n📷 John La Farge\, “Trompe L’Oeil” window 1882–84; Photo courtesy of Richard Guy Wilson \n📷 Richard Guy Wilson; Photo courtesy of Richard Guy Wilson
URL:https://vicsocny.org/calendar/newport-and-stained-glass-la-farge-tiffany-and-more/
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20241112T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20241112T190000
DTSTAMP:20260416T081707
CREATED:20241008T110029Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240927T164224Z
UID:10000139-1731438000-1731438000@vicsocny.org
SUMMARY:Fall Benefit with Bob Shaw\, Production Designer of "The Gilded Age"
DESCRIPTION:Keeping It Real:\nHow Bob Shaw\, Production Designer of “The Gilded Age\,” Resurrects Nineteenth-Century New York\n  \nPark Avenue Armory \n643 Park Avenue \nNew York\, NY 10065 \n$50.00 members (plus fees)* \n$70.00 general public (plus fees) \n$30 live stream (plus fees) \nTickets Here!!\nFrom the opulent mansions of Fifth Avenue to the original interiors of Brooklyn’s brownstones\, HBO’s “The Gilded Age” has brought to life a New York City lost to the demands of progress\, changing tastes\, and the march of time. Join us for a special evening with Bob Shaw\, the show’s Emmy-winning production designer\, to learn how he balances historical accuracy against creative license\, the penchants of a modern audience\, and the realities on the ground to resurrect nineteenth-century Gilded Age New York City. \nThe talk will take place in the Veterans Room and Library of the Park Avenue Armory. Designed by Louis Comfort Tiffany and Stanford White and completed in 1881\, these historic interiors are among the few remaining American Aesthetic Movement spaces and the only fully extant interiors created by Tiffany’s cooperative design firm\, Associated Artists. \nReception to follow. \nAll proceeds benefit the preservation efforts of the New York Metropolitan Chapter of the Victorian Society in America. \nBob Shaw’s work as a production designer includes Martin’s Scorsese’s film “The Irishman\,” for which he was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Production Design\, and the television shows “The Sopranos\,” “Mad Men\,” and “Boardwalk Empire\,” for which he received Emmy nominations\, winning for the latter two. \n*Members must use the presale code sent via e-mail to access the members discount. \n \n \n📷 Alison Cohen Rosa/HBO \n📷 Alison Cohen Rosa/HBO \n📷 Barbara Nitke/HBO
URL:https://vicsocny.org/calendar/fall-benefit-with-bob-shaw-production-designer-of-the-gilded-age/
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20241016T183000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20241016T200000
DTSTAMP:20260416T081707
CREATED:20240915T220800Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240915T220800Z
UID:10000138-1729103400-1729108800@vicsocny.org
SUMMARY:Rediscovering Architect-Trailblazer E. G. W. Dietrich
DESCRIPTION:Rediscovering Architect-Trailblazer E. G. W. Dietrich\n  \nThe Center at West Park \n165 West 86th Street \nNew York\, NY 10024 \n$7.18 members / $12.51 general public \nTickets Here!!\nErnest George Washington Dietrich\, AIA (1857–1924) is one of the most prolific yet least studied architects of his generation. A native of Pittsburgh\, Pennsylvania\, Dietrich first attracted attention in the 1880s for his eye-catching designs of Shingle Style country residences. Finding success on the East Coast\, he relocated to New York\, New York\, where he practiced for nearly 40 years. He was an early proponent of the Colonial Revival and Arts and Crafts styles. Through his collaboration with tastemaker Gustav Stickley\, Dietrich is recognized as designing the first Craftsman house published in Stickley’s magazine The Craftsman in May 1903. \nIndependent scholar Christopher Jend will give a lavishly illustrated talk about Dietrich’s career with a focus on projects in and around New York City. Jend discovered Dietrich while researching and writing the successful National Register nomination of the c. 1893 John Mollenhauer House in Bay Shore\, New York. For the last twelve years\, Jend’s rigorous and enthusiastic research of the architect has resulted in the documentation of more than 450 of Dietrich’s designs and visits to his built projects in six states. Jend has presented his research on Dietrich to communities in New York\, Connecticut\, and Pennsylvania. \n \n📷 Flyer\, courtesy of Christopher Jend \n📷 Author photograph by Lori Savaree \n📷 Louise E. Wisner House in Warwick\, New York\, designed by architect E. G. W. Dietrich and built circa 1884
URL:https://vicsocny.org/calendar/rediscovering-architect-trailblazer-e-g-w-dietrich/
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20240918T183000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20240918T200000
DTSTAMP:20260416T081707
CREATED:20240803T145448Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240803T145616Z
UID:10000137-1726684200-1726689600@vicsocny.org
SUMMARY:Women\, Egyptology\, and Gilded Age New York
DESCRIPTION:Women\, Egyptology\, and Gilded Age New York\n  \nThe Center at West Park \n165 West 86th Street \nNew York\, NY 10024 \nTickets Here!!\nWomen built American Egyptology. When Britons Amelia Edwards and Kate Bradbury arrived in New York in November of 1889\, the first thing they saw was a still-copper-hued Statue of Liberty. They had arrived for a five-month whirlwind lecture tour\, hoping to fan America’s spark of Egyptological interest into flames. Their plan worked. The women toured Egyptology collections\, including at the New-York Historical Society and the Metropolitan Museum of Art. Over the next 25 years\, American women took up the mantle\, building and curating these collections in New York. \nOn September 18\, from 6:30 to 8:00 pm\, Dr. Kathleen Sheppard (@kathleensheppardwrites)\, author of the new book Women in the Valley of the Kings: The Untold Story of Women Egyptologists in the Gilded Age (St. Martin’s Press)\, will take attendees on a tour of New York between 1889 and 1916\, shedding light on some of the city’s oldest Egyptological sights. Dr. Sheppard will be signing copies of the new book. Dr. Sheppard\, a Professor in the History and Political Science department at Missouri S&T in Rolla\, Missouri\, has dedicated her career to telling the stories of women in Egyptology. She earned her MA in Egyptian Archaeology at University College London in 2002\, and her PhD in History of Science from the University of Oklahoma in 2010. Her 2013 book was a scientific biography of the archaeologist and Egyptologist Margaret Alice Murray (2013). Her 2022 book\, Tea on the Terrace: Hotels and Egyptologists’ Social Networks\, 1885–1925\, investigated how Egyptologists traveled and worked their ways through Egypt. \n📷 Sphinx – Boston Public Library / William Vaughn Tupper \n📷 Author and Book cover – Courtesy of Dr. Kathleen Sheppard and St. Martin’s Publishing Group \n📷 Egyptologist Amelia B. Edwards – Heath Trust Digital Library / University of Wisconsin – Madison;
URL:https://vicsocny.org/calendar/women-egyptology-and-gilded-age-new-york/
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20240605T183000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20240605T200000
DTSTAMP:20260416T081707
CREATED:20240428T174002Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240510T142744Z
UID:10000135-1717612200-1717617600@vicsocny.org
SUMMARY:57th Annual Meeting
DESCRIPTION:The Metropolitan Chapter of the Victorian Society in America\n57th Annual Meeting\n  \nRutgers Presbyterian Church \n236 West 73rd Street \nNew York\, NY 10023 \nTickets Here!!\nAll are welcome at Our Annual Meeting\, Awards Showcase\, and Reception! \nCurrent members\, new members\, and guests are invited to join us at the historic Rutgers Presbyterian Church on the Upper West Side\, where we will vote in new board members\, showcase this year’s award winners\, and hear our Treasurer’s and President’s reports. \nCelebratory reception to follow with libations\, light bites\, and (of course) general merriment. \nWe so look forward to seeing you there! \nTickets: Free for members. Guest tickets include a 1-year VSNY membership. \n📷 Mulberry Street\, New York City. c. 1900. Library of Congress.
URL:https://vicsocny.org/calendar/58th-annual-meeting/
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20240522T183000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20240522T203000
DTSTAMP:20260416T081707
CREATED:20240402T164405Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240402T171525Z
UID:10000133-1716402600-1716409800@vicsocny.org
SUMMARY:Victorian Elegance on the Upper West Side
DESCRIPTION:Annual Margot Gayle Fundraiser:\nVictorian Elegance on the Upper West Side\n170 West 74th Street \nNew York\, NY 10023 \nTickets Here!!\nJoin the Metropolitan Chapter of the Victorian Society in America (Victorian Society New York) for its annual Margot Gayle Fundraiser! This year we will enjoy a private tour of an exquisite\, historic Upper West Side home. Located in a 1910 building originally built as a residence hotel for Broadway actors and Manhattan “bachelors\,” the spacious 2800-square-foot apartment covers the top two floors of the building and includes a 4000-square-foot private rooftop terrace. Five apartments were combined to create this large\, multilevel abode that features expansive cityscape and Central Park views. Furnished with nineteenth- and early twentieth-century antiques and historic wallpapers\, it is a rare glimpse into the genteel lifestyle of New York City’s late Victorian period. \nThe Margot Gayle Fundraiser enables the Metropolitan Chapter to contribute monetary grants in support of projects relating to the preservation\, conservation\, and scholarly exploration of Victorian material culture in the New York Metropolitan area. \nTickets: $50. Please register early as space will be limited. \n📷 Private collection.
URL:https://vicsocny.org/calendar/victorian-elegance-on-the-upper-west-side/
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20240520T183000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20240520T200000
DTSTAMP:20260416T081707
CREATED:20240501T220622Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240501T221133Z
UID:10000136-1716229800-1716235200@vicsocny.org
SUMMARY:The “Italian” Angel of Central Park
DESCRIPTION:The “Italian” Angel of Central Park\nThe Story Behind One of NYC’s Most Popular Icons\nCasa Italiana \n24 West 12th Street \nNew York\, NY 10011 \nTickets Here!!\nCental Park’s Bethesda Fountain\, topped by the “Angel of the Waters” sculpture\, is one of the most popular icons of New York City. Scenes from countless movies have been filmed at its feet. But very few people know that the artist who created the Angel was a woman\, New Yorker Emma Stebbins\, who is the first woman to receive a public art commission in New York City. Also\, very few people know that the “Angel of the Waters” was created in Rome\, Italy\, and that it is a symbol of love\, harmony\, healing\, and rebirth. \nEmma Stebbins (1815–1882) was a true pioneer as an artist and as a woman who\, together with her companion Charlotte Cushman\, defied prejudice and social conventions\, living openly as a “married” gay couple 150 years before it became legal in the United states. \nMaria Teresa Cometto\, author of Emma and the Angel of Central Park (Bordighera Press\, 2023)\, will be in conversation with VSNY’s own Eve M. Kahn\, independent scholar and our vice president\, moderated by Stefano Albertini (NYU). \n \n📷 “Angel of the Waters\,” Bethesda Fountain\, Central Park. Francisco Diez\, 2009. \n📷 Portrait of Emma Stebbins. Emma Stebbins scrapbook\, 1858–1882\, Archives of American Art\, Smithsonian Institution.
URL:https://vicsocny.org/calendar/the-italian-angel-of-central-park/
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20240507T183000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20240507T200000
DTSTAMP:20260416T081707
CREATED:20240327T215214Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240403T201801Z
UID:10000132-1715106600-1715112000@vicsocny.org
SUMMARY:Emerging Victorian Scholars Night
DESCRIPTION:Emerging Scholars:\nGilded Age Escalators\, Windows\, and Women on the Rise\nThe Center at West Park \n165 West 86th Street \nNew York\, NY 10024 \nTickets Here!!\nThe Victorian Society New York’s 2024 Emerging Scholars winners will shed light on little-known yet influential aspects of Gilded Age culture\, activism\, and architecture. Sophia Kamps\, recent graduate of Queen’s University in Ontario\, will report on surveying 1\,200 Gilded Age stained-glass windows at Woodlawn Cemetery in the Bronx. Diane Dias De Fazio\, a graduate student at Kent State University\, will lecture on how the forgotten c. 1900 inventors of the ubiquitous\, oft-unheralded escalator changed the way people experienced and used department stores and other public spaces. Deena Ecker\, a student at the CUNY Graduate Center\, will look at late Victorian streetscapes and culture (popular\, consumer\, and sexual) through the lens of prostitution. How did these maligned women maintain some agency? Amanda Westbrook Brennan\, a CUNY Graduate Center student\, will analyze Black women activists\, writers\, and club women who elevated communities while defying stereotypes. \n  \n \n📷 “Inclined Elevator” at Coney Island\, Street Railway Review\, 1896. \n📷 Gordon Ross\, “The Dance of Death\,” Puck\, v. 71\, no. 1822 (1912 January 31)\, centerfold. 1912. N.Y.: Published by Keppler & Schwarzmann. Library of Congress\, Prints and Photographs Division. \n📷 C.M. Bell\, Mrs. A.J. Cooper\, 1901. Photograph from a glass plate negative. Library of Congress\, C.M. Bell Studio Collection\, Prints and Photographs Division. \n📷 Elizabeth Hunter. Sophia Kamps with a Mausoleum’s Religious Window\, 2023.
URL:https://vicsocny.org/calendar/emerging-victorian-scholars-night/
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20240505T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20240505T130000
DTSTAMP:20260416T081707
CREATED:20240413T190748Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240413T190748Z
UID:10000134-1714906800-1714914000@vicsocny.org
SUMMARY:Finding Prospect Park
DESCRIPTION:Finding Prospect Park: A Historic Walking Tour\nProspect Park \nBrooklyn\, New York \nTickets Here ($20/$15)\nJoin the Victorian Society of New York and Historic Districts Council for a tour through the northern half of Prospect Park\, Olmsted and Vaux’s masterpiece. A brief introduction to the park’s history and design will be provided while will investigate lost rustic and picturesque shelters and bridges\, the marvelous “electric fountain\,” the mysterious “Culvert Arch\,” the park’s “Dairy\,” the “braiding of the ways\,” the still present but deteriorating Litchfield Villa\, the circular yacht\, and other sites and features of the original park. The main focus of the tour will be discovering lost features and why their loss matters. Some of these features are gone without a trace; others remain only as archaeological remnants. Some are largely intact but have been “lost” to the public for other reasons. \nYour tour guide is VSNY’s own Jeremy Woodoff\, who chairs our Preservation Committee. Jeremy is a city planner and historic preservationist currently serving on the Advisory Board of the Historic Districts Council as well as the VSNY Board\, both of which are sponsoring this tour. During his 20-year employment at the city’s Landmarks Preservation Commission\, Jeremy was responsible for setting up the Commission’s review procedures for work in scenic landmarks like Prospect Park and for reviewing all work proposed for the park by the Parks Department and the Prospect Park Alliance. \nFor those who register\, a QR code will be available that will allow you to download a series of historic images to use on your cell phone or tablet during the tour. The tour leader will have a set of images that can be viewed as well. \n \n \n📷 Prospect Park. Photo by Elizabeth Keegin Colley. Courtesy of Prospect Park Alliance. \n📷 Rustic Bench and Drinking Fountain\, the Midwood near the Dairy\, Prospect Park Concerts Programme Brochure\, 1897 season. Center for Brooklyn History. \n📷 Jeremy Woodoff. Courtesy of Jeremy Woodoff.
URL:https://vicsocny.org/calendar/finding-prospect-park/
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20240417T183000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20240417T200000
DTSTAMP:20260416T081707
CREATED:20240209T171828Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240211T203444Z
UID:10000130-1713378600-1713384000@vicsocny.org
SUMMARY:Titanic Discoveries: A Niece's Journey
DESCRIPTION:In-Person Talk! The Brothers Peracchio Aboard the RMS Titanic\n  \nJefferson Market Library \n425 6th Avenue \nNew York\, NY 10011 \nFree Tickets Here!!\nOn April 14\, 1912\, the RMS Titanic hit an iceberg at 11:35 pm; within a few hours\, it sank in the Atlantic Ocean off Newfoundland\, taking 1\,496 lives. Two of the victims were author Angelica Harris’ uncles-in-law\, Alberto and Sebastiano Peracchio\, who were waiters in one of the ship’s restaurants. Harris will lecture on her recent book\, Titanic: The Brothers Peracchio–Two Boys and a Dream\, the result of 40 years of research and a labor of love. She will discuss her archival discoveries and far-flung travels and will report on a recently uncovered secret: a twin of the Titanic’s Steinway piano\, which traveled on a sister ship\, the Olympic. Long believed lost after the Olympic’s retirement in 1935\, the Steinway surfaced last year at a piano store in Britain. Lecturing with Ms. Harris will be Christopher Mulholland\, an expert on the Olympic and Titanic who is a cofounder of the RMS Olympic Steinway Association\, which plans to save the piano. \nAngela-Filomena LoCascio\, aka Angelica Harris\, is a recent honors graduate of Fordham University\, with a bachelor’s degree in social justice\, feminist theory\, and writing for publication and journalism. In addition to writing Titanic: The Brothers Peracchio: Two Boys and a Dream\, she serves on the boards of three organizations dedicated to the legacy of the Titanic\, including the Friends of the Titanic Memorial Lighthouse. Scholar Christopher Mulholland has researched his family’s service on ocean liners and created hand-drawn blueprints for the Olympic and Titanic. \n  \n📷 Alberto and Sebastiano Peracchio\, c. 1912. Angelica Harris. \n📷 The Titanic\, 1911. Library of Congress. \n📷 The Veranda Cafe and Palm Court of the Titanic\, 1912. Library of Congress. \n 
URL:https://vicsocny.org/calendar/titanic-discoveries-a-nieces-journey/
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20240311
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20240312
DTSTAMP:20260416T081707
CREATED:20231217T195959Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240305T154614Z
UID:10000040-1710115200-1710201599@vicsocny.org
SUMMARY:Call for Proposals: Emerging Scholars 2024 Program
DESCRIPTION:Submissions Deadline EXTENDED: March 11th\, 2024 \nProgram Takes Place May 7th\, 2024 in NYC\, 6:00–7:30 pm \nThe Metropolitan (New York) Chapter of the Victorian Society invites university student historians and recent graduates to submit proposals by Monday\, March 11\, 2024\, for its annual Emerging Scholars evening program on May 7\, 2024. The nonprofit VSNY (vicsocny.org)\, founded in 1966\, supports scholarship about every aspect of 19th-century and early 20th-century culture\, including architecture\, literature\, theater\, fine and decorative art\, immigration\, economics\, politics\, education\, gender roles\, reform movements\, music\, fashion\, and food. Topics for recent event winners have included panoramic battlefield paintings\, servants’ uniforms\, and Black newspaperwomen. \nFor the May 7 program (6–7:30 pm)\, VSNY will invite three current students or recent grads to present their work at Greenwich Village’s Jefferson Market Library\, in a 20-minute presentation and then field questions. Send 200-word proposals (preference given to American/New York topics) and CVs by March 8 to info@vicsocny.org. Speakers will receive a free 1-year VSNY membership ($40 value). \n📷 – Past Victorian Society New York Emerging Scholar topics have included Gilded Age servants’ uniforms. (My Lady and My Lady’s Maid\, 1871. Library of Congress.)
URL:https://vicsocny.org/calendar/call-for-proposals-emerging-scholars-2024-program/
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20240307T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20240307T193000
DTSTAMP:20260416T081707
CREATED:20240223T191014Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240223T191014Z
UID:10000131-1709834400-1709839800@vicsocny.org
SUMMARY:The Peculiar Story of Doesticks and the Fortunetellers
DESCRIPTION:In-Person Talk!\nThe Peculiar Story of Doesticks and the Fortunetellers \n  \nRockwell Gallery at The Salmagundi Club \n47 Fifth Avenue (at 12th Street) \nNew York\, NY 10003 \nFree Tickets Here!!\nWho knows what the future holds? Well\, on March 7\, we’re co-sponsoring a talk about 19th-century NYC fortune tellers with The Greenwich Village Society for Historic Preservation\, the Salmagundi Club Library Committee\, and Merchant’s House Museum! Author Marie Carter will introduce us to Q. K. Philander Doesticks\, P.B. (real name\, Mortimer Thomson)\, a reporter for The New-York Tribune who in 1857 investigated the fortune tellers of the Lower East Side and eventually wrote a book about them\, The Witches of New York. When his articles were published in book form in 1858\, they catalyzed a series of arrests that both scandalized and delighted the public. But Mortimer was guarding some secrets of his own\, and in many ways\, his own life paralleled the lives of the women he visited and vilified. This talk\, in celebration of the release of Carter’s book Mortimer & the Witches: A Nineteenth-Century History of Fortune Telling (Fordham University Press)\, leads us into the world of Doesticks\, who hobnobbed with literary luminaries of his time like Mark Twain\, Walt Whitman\, the wildly popular columnist Fanny Fern\, and biographer James Parton. The talk will also examine some of the stories of those supposedly “evil” fortune tellers who showed up in the press in surprising ways. \nMarie Carter is an New York City-based writer and tour guide who hails from Scotland. She works with Boroughs of the Dead\, an NYC walking tour company that specializes in macabre\, strange\, and ghostly histories. Her most recent book\, Mortimer and the Witches\, will be published by Fordham University Press in March 2024. She is also the author of The Trapeze Diaries and Holly’s Hurricane\, a historical novel set in the future. \n \n📷 Madame Morrow’s Fortune Telling Cards\, 1886\, New-York Historical Society\, The Liman Collection. \n📷 Courtesy of Marie Carter and Fordham University Press.
URL:https://vicsocny.org/calendar/doesticks-and-the-fortunetellers/
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://vicsocny.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/02/fortune-telling-cards3.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20240222T183000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20240222T200000
DTSTAMP:20260416T081707
CREATED:20240209T165900Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240209T203538Z
UID:10000129-1708626600-1708632000@vicsocny.org
SUMMARY:La Amistad Mutiny and Long Island
DESCRIPTION:In-Person Talk! Historian Mia Certic Discusses How America’s First Civil Rights Case Emerged in Montauk\nBloomingdale School of Music \n323 West 108th Street \nNew York\, NY 10025 \nTickets ($10/$5 Members) Here!!\n\n\nIn 1839\, eight weeks after their dramatic mutiny\, 49 trafficked African men aboard the schooner La Amistad dropped anchor off the coast of Montauk\, desperate for fresh water and food. Instead of being helped\, their ship was seized and they were transported to Connecticut as captives. These events would lead to an international diplomatic crisis and a series of momentous legal battles that brought into question basic tenets of American democracy and foreshadowed the Civil War. Mia Certic\, executive director of the Montauk Historical Society\, will talk about the Amistad case and how what happened on Long Island set the stage for what was to come. \n \n📷 La Amistad anchored off Culloden Point in Montauk. Unknown artist. 1840. Watercolor. New Haven Museum. \n📷 William H. Townsend. Amistad Survivors (l-r: Fuli\, Marqu\, and Pona). 1839. Library of Congress. \n\n\n 
URL:https://vicsocny.org/calendar/la-amistad-mutiny-and-long-island/
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://vicsocny.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/02/La_Amistad_ship_restored.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20240123T183000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20240123T193000
DTSTAMP:20260416T081707
CREATED:20231217T192104Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231218T184042Z
UID:10000127-1706034600-1706038200@vicsocny.org
SUMMARY:Pregnancy in the Victorian Novel
DESCRIPTION:Online Talk! Livia Arndal Woods Discusses Pregnancy in British Literature \nTickets ($10/$5 Members) Here\nLivia Arndal Woods will discuss her recent book\, Pregnancy in the Victorian Novel\, which argues that we need to be attuned to speculation and our own experiences of embodiment to read depictions of women’s reproductive capacity in nineteenth-century British literature as anything other than punishment. Victorian novels tend to avoid the direct representation of pregnancy except in cases of maternal immorality or immodesty. Without active resistance\, we inherit and repeat pregnancy plots in which reproductive bodies are always already guilty. \nDr. Livia Arndal Woods (she/her/hers) earned a PhD from the CUNY Graduate Center and is Associate Professor of English at the University of Illinois at Springfield. Her research focuses on British Victorian literature and culture\, women’s and gender studies\, and the medical humanities. \n \n📷 Illustration of a pregnant woman\, with her abdomen sectioned to show the foetus\, during the first (left)\, second (centre) and third (right) trimesters (top) and Illustration of a pregnant woman in repose (bottom). From An Improved System of Midwifery\, by Wooster Beach (1794-1868)\, published in 1851.
URL:https://vicsocny.org/calendar/pregnancy-in-the-victorian-novel/
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://vicsocny.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/VictorianPregnancy01.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20240118T183000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20240118T193000
DTSTAMP:20260416T081707
CREATED:20231217T190439Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231217T230906Z
UID:10000126-1705602600-1705606200@vicsocny.org
SUMMARY:Walter Scott Lenox and American Belleek
DESCRIPTION:Online Talk! Curator Brian Gallagher Discusses the Exhibition Walter Scott Lenox and American Belleek at The Mint Museum \nTickets ($10/$5 for Members) Available Here\nBrian Gallagher\, Senior Curator of Decorative Arts at The Mint Museum\, Charlotte\, North Carolina\, will present noteworthy examples of art porcelain produced in late nineteenth-century Trenton\, New Jersey\, at the three factories—Ott & Brewer\, Willets Manufacturing Company\, and Ceramic Art Company—where Walter Scott Lenox (1859–1920) served sequentially as artistic director. Lenox was instrumental in developing a version of the eggshell-thin\, ivory-colored porcelain first manufactured in the village of Belleek in County Fermanagh\, Northern Ireland\, but that achieved new aesthetic heights in the United States thanks to his vision and artistic talent. This subject is the focus of Gallagher’s exhibition\, Walter Scott Lenox and American Belleek\, on view at the Mint Museum until January 21\, 2024. \nBrian Gallagher joined the Mint Museum’s curatorial staff in 2007\, and before then he was an assistant curator in the Department of European Art at the Detroit Institute of Arts. He has organized numerous exhibitions during his museum career on a variety of decorative arts topics. Recent projects include Classic Black: The Basalt Sculpture of Wedgwood and His Contemporaries (2020) and Portals to the Past: British Ceramics 1675–1825 (2016). He co-authored the catalogues associated with these two projects and was the sole author for Walter Scott Lenox and American Belleek (2023). Gallagher has an M.A. and an M.Phil. from the Bard Graduate Center\, New York\, and an M.S. in Library and Information Science from Drexel University\, Philadelphia. \n \n📷 Ceramic Art Company / Lenox\, Incorporated\, manufacturer; Depasse Manufacturing Company\, silver mounts and overlay; Decanter Set\, circa 1905-15\, Belleek porcelain\, glazed\, decanter 6 11/16 x 6 5/8 in. Collection of Bob Cunningham. \n📷 Ott and Brewer; Bowl\, 1882-90\, Belleek Porcelain with ivory glaze\, polychrome enamels\, and gilt decoration\, 7 ¾ x 8 ¼ x 6 ½ in. Collection of Bob Cunningham.
URL:https://vicsocny.org/calendar/walter-scott-lenox-and-american-belleek/
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://vicsocny.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/Cat.59-scaled.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20240110T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20240110T190000
DTSTAMP:20260416T081707
CREATED:20240101T190644Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240101T190644Z
UID:10000128-1704909600-1704913200@vicsocny.org
SUMMARY:Max Beerbohm: The Price of Celebrity at the New York Public Library
DESCRIPTION:Enjoy an Exclusive Curator-Led Tour of Max Beerbohm: The Price of Celebrity\nWachenheim Gallery\, New York Public Library \nStephen A. Schwarzman Building \n476 Fifth Avenue at 42nd Street \nNew York\, NY 10018 \nTickets ($25/$20 for Members) Here!\nToday we live in a world of celebrity culture\, but celebrity became an international industry in the late 19th century\, and the English artist and author Max Beerbohm (1872–1956) was at the center of it. From the 1890s through the 1920s\, to be a celebrity meant the hope—and fear—of turning up in a drawing or a parody by “Max\,” as he was known in England and the United States. His brilliant skewering of famous people in his visual caricatures and of their writing styles in his satirical works made him a celebrity himself. This was an identity he enjoyed at first\, but later shrank from. In essays and fiction\, he explored the price of achieving and maintaining celebrity status in human terms in ways that still resonate with us. \nThis exhibition\, the first on Beerbohm in New York for half a century and featuring rarely seen items from the New York Public Library’s own collection as well as loans from private and institutional collections\, maps the career of Beerbohm in relationship to the idea of celebrity\, following him from his early days in the decadent circles of Oscar Wilde and Aubrey Beardsley through his late career as a radio performer on BBC broadcasts during World War II. Along the way\, he knew\, drew\, and wrote about many other celebrities\, from Henry James to Virginia Woolf\, George Bernard Shaw\, and members of the British royal family. \n \n📷 Dante Gabriel Rossetti in His Back Garden\, illustration from The Poet’s Corner\, 1904\n📷 Self-caricature by Max Beerbohm\, c. 1893 \n  \n  \n 
URL:https://vicsocny.org/calendar/max-beerbohm-the-price-of-celebrity-at-the-new-york-public-library/
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://vicsocny.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/01/Rossetti.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20231206T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20231206T210000
DTSTAMP:20260416T081707
CREATED:20231112T165411Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231112T165411Z
UID:10000125-1701889200-1701896400@vicsocny.org
SUMMARY:Victorian Carol Sing-Along Holiday Concert & Reception
DESCRIPTION:In Partnership with Friends of the Erben Organ at the Basilica of St. Patrick’s Old Cathedral \n261 Mott Street\, New York\, NY \nWednesday\, December 6th \n7:00 pm–9:00 pm \nWe are pleased to join the Friends of the Erben Organ for a merry evening of Victorian-era carols\, seasonal music\, and readings. Afterward\, enjoy festive treats and the chance to see and hear the cathedral’s two historic pipe organs—including the 1868 Erben pipe organ—up close with Jared Lamenzo\, Director of Music. \nTickets Available Here\nVSNY Members: use code VICTORIAN for 50% off. All donations on top of ticket price will be matched with the Friends of the Erben Organ’s $25K Fall Matching Grant. \nNineteenth-century attire is encouraged! \n(Image: “Christmas Eve” painting by J. Hoover & Son\, 1878) \n 
URL:https://vicsocny.org/calendar/victorian-carol-sing-along-holiday-concert-reception/
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://vicsocny.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/11/unnamed.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20231108T183000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20231108T200000
DTSTAMP:20260416T081707
CREATED:20230910T184159Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230910T184159Z
UID:10000124-1699468200-1699473600@vicsocny.org
SUMMARY:Brooklyn Arcadia: A Conversation with Author Andrew Garn
DESCRIPTION:Join Photographer and Author Andrew Garn for a Discussion of Brooklyn Arcadia\, a New Book Highlighting Brooklyn’s Majestic Green-Wood Cemetery\nGreen-Wood Cemetery \n500 25th Street \nBrooklyn\, New York 11232 \n(Enter at the Modern Chapel near the Main Entrance at Fifth Avenue and 25th Street) \nFree Tickets Available Here\nGreen-Wood Cemetery draws nearly half a million visitors every year who marvel at its unique combination of art\, history\, and nature. Photographer and author Andrew Garn is one such visitor. Discovering a love for the cemetery—its stately monuments\, complex history\, and fascinating flora and fauna—during his almost daily walks\, Garn began taking thousands of photographs documenting his explorations and discoveries. \nBrooklyn Arcadia: Art\, History\, and Nature at Majestic Green-Wood\, just published by Rizzoli\, beautifully chronicles Garn’s observations in hundreds of stunning images taken primarily between 2020 and 2023. At once a celebration and an invitation\, the book ranges from a consideration of Green-Wood’s natural landscape to a close look at its architecture\, statuary\, symbols\, flora\, fauna\, and typography. \n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nJoin Garn in the Modern Chapel for a discussion of Brooklyn Arcadia. You’ll hear about his artistic process and how the book came to be\, followed by an opportunity to ask questions. \nThis program is presented in partnership with The Green-Wood Historic Fund.
URL:https://vicsocny.org/calendar/brooklyn-arcadia-a-conversation-with-author-andrew-garn/
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://vicsocny.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/09/BrooklynArcadia.jpeg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20231026T183000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20231026T200000
DTSTAMP:20260416T081707
CREATED:20230910T182656Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230910T182656Z
UID:10000123-1698345000-1698350400@vicsocny.org
SUMMARY:Unsung Victorian Women's Work
DESCRIPTION:Hear from the Curators of Women’s Work\, a New Exhibition at the New-York Historical Society\nJefferson Market Library \n425 Sixth Avenue \nNew York\, New York 10011 \nFree Tickets Available Here\nAllison Robinson and Jeanne Gutierrez\, curators of Women’s Work\, a new exhibition at the New-York Historical Society’s Center for Women’s History\, will speak on how they chose 45 objects representing how “women’s work” defies categorization. The show’s highlights range from an 18th-century merchant’s collection of fabric swatches to a brown paper delivery bag used during the COVID-19 pandemic. This talk will focus on the exhibition’s 19th-century contingent\, including a mahogany cradle\, a birth certificate and indenture\, a beaded pincushion\, a medical kit\, a lady’s work table\, portraits\, and more. These objects demonstrate that women’s work has always been essential to American society and is inherently political: women’s work is everywhere. \nAllison Robinson\, an associate curator at the New-York Historical Society\, earned her bachelor’s degree at Yale and her PhD from the University of Chicago. Jeanne Gutierrez\, a curatorial scholar in women’s history at the New-York Historical Society\, holds a MA from the Bard Graduate Center and is a doctoral candidate in History at the CUNY Graduate Center. \n \nAbove: Lewis W. Hine\, Group of women in sweatshop of Mr. Sentrei\, 87 Ridge Street\, second inner court. Small girl is Mamie Gerhino\, 202 Elizabeth Street. She might have been 14 years old. Photo 5 P.M.\, February 21\, 1908. Witness Mrs. Lillian Hosford. Courtesy of the Library of Congress. \nTop Image: Sweatshop of Mr. Goldstein 30 Suffolk St. Witness Mrs. L. Hosford. February 1908. Courtesy of the Library of Congress.
URL:https://vicsocny.org/calendar/unsung-victorian-womens-work/
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://vicsocny.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/09/GoldsteinSweatshop.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20230920T183000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20230920T200000
DTSTAMP:20260416T081707
CREATED:20230910T181408Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230910T181638Z
UID:10000122-1695234600-1695240000@vicsocny.org
SUMMARY:Newport Cottages 1835-1890: The Summer Villas Before the Vanderbilt Era
DESCRIPTION:Step Back in Time and Explore the Newport Cottages from 1835 through 1890\, before the Vanderbilt Era\nIn-Person Event & Book Signing\nMontauk Club \n25 Eighth Avenue \nBrooklyn\, New York 11217 \nFree Tickets Available Here\nAuthor Michael Kathrens will present a compelling account of the luxury and splendor of Newport’s nineteenth-century summer “cottages\,” the subject of his most recent book. In the decades since 1835\, when the first private house was built exclusively for seasonal use\, scores of magnificent homes were commissioned by a burgeoning summer colony whose members were among America’s wealthiest and most prominent families\, including the Schermerhorns\, Lorillards\, Goelets\, and Joneses. They built their summer residences in neighborhoods known today as Kay-Catherine-Old Beach Road\, Bellevue Avenue\, Ochre Point\, and Ocean Drive\, commissioning local talents such as George Champlin Mason\, Sr.\, Seth C. Bradford\, and Dudley Newton as well as nationally renowned architects such as Richard Morris Hunt\, McKim\, Mead & White\, and Peabody & Stearns. These opulent private houses often rivaled the sumptuousness of the later Gilded Age mansions\, the subject of Kathrens’s earlier publication\, Newport Villas: The Revival Styles\, 1885–1935. Kathrens will discuss in detail some of the ownership histories of the 36 exceptional houses profiled in his new book\, including Cannon Hill\, Chateau-sur-Mer\, Elm Court\, Beaulieu\, Land’s End\, the original Breakers\, Ochre Point\, and Chastellux\, while sharing visual documentation not only of the original structures\, but also of later renovations\, including newly commissioned photography. \nBook signing to follow. \n \nMichael C. Kathrens is an independent scholar specializing in American residential architecture and interior decoration of the mid-19th through the early 20th centuries. His previous publications include American Splendor: The Residential Architecture of Horace Trumbauer\, The Great Houses of New York: 1880-1930\, Newport Villas: 1885-1935\, The Revival Styles\, and Kansas City Houses 1885-1938. Kathrens is currently working on three projects: The Houses of Ogden Codman Jr.\, New York Penthouses and Maisonettes\, and a comprehensive study of prominent historical Kansas City stores. \nCo-sponsored with: \nThe Alumni Association of the Victorian Society Summer Schools \nand \nVictorian Society in America
URL:https://vicsocny.org/calendar/newport-cottages-1835-1890-the-summer-villas-before-the-vanderbilt-era/
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://vicsocny.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/09/Newport-Cottages_cover_6in_final-scaled.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20230606T183000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20230606T200000
DTSTAMP:20260416T081707
CREATED:20230523T173958Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230531T130146Z
UID:10000121-1686076200-1686081600@vicsocny.org
SUMMARY:2023 Annual Meeting & Reception
DESCRIPTION:All are welcome at the Victorian Society New York’s Annual Meeting\, Awards Showcase\, and reception!\nWhen: Tuesday June 6th\, 6:30 – 8pm\nWhere: Church of the Ascension\, 5th Ave & W. 10th Street\nAbout the Event: \nCurrent members\, new members and guests are invited to join us at the lovely and historic Church of the Ascension in Greenwich Village where we will vote in new board members\, showcase this year’s award winners\, highlight our Margot Gayle Grant Awardees\, and hear our Treasurer’s and President’s report. \nCelebratory reception to follow with libations\, light bites\, and (of course) general merriment. \nTICKETS HERE!\nFree for members; $50 for guest tickets includes 1 year membership\nMargot Gayle Grantees to be recognized are: \nSalmagundi Club – book conservation project \nWoodlawn Cemetery – protective covering for restored Tiffany monument \nLandmarks West! – online database of religious structures on Upper West Side \nFriends of the Erben Organ – conservation \nSonia Abrego – research on Sweet-Orr and women’s workplace history \nWe so look forward to seeing you there!
URL:https://vicsocny.org/calendar/2023-annual-meeting-reception/
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20230524T183000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20230524T203000
DTSTAMP:20260416T081707
CREATED:20230415T204318Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230415T204318Z
UID:10000120-1684953000-1684960200@vicsocny.org
SUMMARY:Margot Gayle Fundraiser: Tour of Hunt Slonem's Studio
DESCRIPTION:Join Us! Annual VSNY Margot Gayle Fundraiser\nWhen: Wednesday\, May 24th 2023 6:30 PM – 8:30 PM \nWhere: Hunt Slonem’s Manhattan Studio (location confirmed with ticket purchase) \n\nContemporary artist Hunt Slonem is one of the most collected painters working today. His neo-Expressionist depictions of nature – including his iconic bunnies and parrots  — are eagerly acquired by adoring celebrity clients\, museums\, and galleries around the world. Beyond painting\, Slonem’s passion in life is for historic mansions. He has restored eight National Landmark homes\, curating a distinctive decor in which his own art sits alongside antiques and rare nineteenth-century furnishings.  Join the Victorian Society of New York for a rare and exclusive tour of Hunt’s extraordinary Manhattan studio\, where he works amongst a profusion of Victorian antiques\, rare tropical birds and art.  We will see a preview of Board member Brian Coleman’s upcoming book on Slonem’s homes and guests will receive a voucher for a signed copy when it is released this fall.  A festive toast will follow the tour and book presentation. \n Attendance is limited; please register early! \nGet Tickets Here\nTicket Prices: \nMembers: $100 (including signed book) \nNon-Members: $125 (including signed book)
URL:https://vicsocny.org/calendar/margot-gayle-fundraiser-tour-of-hunt-slonems-studio/
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20230510T183000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20230510T200000
DTSTAMP:20260416T081707
CREATED:20221122T010419Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230410T144309Z
UID:10000110-1683743400-1683748800@vicsocny.org
SUMMARY:2023 Emerging Scholars: The Woman's Era\, Maids' Uniforms\, and artist Maria Richards Oakey Dewing
DESCRIPTION:The Victorian Society’s Emerging Scholars Event will be on May 10th\, from 6:30 to 8:00 PM at the Jefferson Market Library on 6th Avenue. \nFree! Registration Required \nVSNY is pleased to host three scholars\, each giving a 20-minute presentation and followed by questions: \nNYU Costume Studies alumna Juliana Cirillo will explore aspects of ethnicity and class as revealed in 19th-century maids’ uniforms. \nYale University Art Gallery fellow Audrey Steinkamp will discuss turn of the century paintings by under-appreciated artist Maria Richards Oakey Dewing. \nColumbia University PhD student Julia Carabatsos will analyze visual and material strategies that Josephine St. Pierre Ruffin and her editorial staff employed in The Woman’s Era\, an 1890s periodical primarily written by and for Black women.
URL:https://vicsocny.org/calendar/save-the-date-emerging-scholars-2023-event/
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://vicsocny.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/11/a598c6ef61a11936ecdf9ceef59175b5-ninja-training-high-school-girls.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20230412T144500
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20230412T160000
DTSTAMP:20260416T081707
CREATED:20230322T153725Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230322T153725Z
UID:10000119-1681310700-1681315200@vicsocny.org
SUMMARY:In-Person Tour: Crafting Freedom: The Life & Legacy of Free Black Potter\, Thomas W. Commeraw
DESCRIPTION:At the New-York Historical Society \n170 Central Park West \nTickets Here!\nNew-York Historical Society curators will give a private tour of the first exhibition dedicated to Thomas Commeraw\, a skilled craftsman in Lower Manhattan active from the 1790s to 1819\, whose racial identity was long overlooked. \nBorn enslaved\, Commeraw rose to prominence as a free Black entrepreneur\, owning and operating a successful pottery. For two decades\, Commeraw amassed property\, engaged in debates over state and national politics\, and participated in the life of New York City’s free Black community. The exhibition explores Commeraw’s multi-faceted history—as a craftsman\, business owner\, family man\, and citizen—and sheds light on his milieu and techniques for making beautiful utilitarian forms. The potter’s personal\, political\, and civic activities come alive through other artifacts\, newspaper clippings\, broadsides\, books\, and documents\, including a certificate of freedom bearing Commeraw’s signature and first-hand accounts of his fraught journey to Sierra Leone with the American Colonization Society. \nTicket price includes full-day Museum admission\, individual vouchers for reduced Regular Admission tickets on a future visit\, a 10% discount in the Museum Store and access to screenings of films We Rise and New York Story.
URL:https://vicsocny.org/calendar/in-person-tour-crafting-freedom-the-life-legacy-of-free-black-potter-thomas-w-commeraw/
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://vicsocny.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/03/unnamed.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20230401T133000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20230401T160000
DTSTAMP:20260416T081707
CREATED:20230322T153150Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230322T153150Z
UID:10000118-1680355800-1680364800@vicsocny.org
SUMMARY:In-Person Tour: The Rosen House at Caramoor
DESCRIPTION:At Caramoor \n149 Girdle Ridge Rd\, Katonah\, NY \nTickets Here!\nThis expert-led tour will explore Caramoor’s spectacular Mediterranean Revival mansion in Katonah\, NY\, with furnishings including entire rooms imported from Europe and a surprising connection to early electronic music. \nFinished in 1939 after more than a decade of work\, Caramoor was the country estate of Walter and Lucie Rosen. He was a Berlin-born\, Harvard and NYU Law School-educated arts patron and international banker specializing in railroads. Her many artistic interests included the theremin\, the world’s first electronic instrument\, which she played on concert tours in Europe and America. The Rosens worked with little-known architect Christian Rosborg to create a Mediterranean Revival compound of 25\,000 sq.ft. Meticulously preserved highlights include 18th-century Italian lacquer panels and hand-painted Chinese wallpaper; a 17th-century Burgundian library with biblical scenes painted on its periwinkle-blue vaulted ceiling; and architectural elements and artworks by or attributed to Tiepolo\, Andrea della Robbia\, and Lucas Cranach. The prominent New York firm Edward F. Caldwell & Co supplied the lighting and other metalwork\, making Caramoor’s Caldwell collection one of the largest in the United States. The Rosens also collected Urbino maiolica; armchairs from the 17th and 18th centuries upholstered in exquisite needlework; and Asian works in enamel\, porcelain\, limestone\, and jade. \nTour attendees will be given VIP access to special objects\, including examples of Lucie Rosen’s clothing and materials related to her 1913 “disappearance” in London just before her marriage. Tea and biscuits will be served in one of the mansion’s stunning dining areas. \nTicket price covers the tour only\, not transportation to Caramoor. If taking MetroNorth a group will plan to leave from Grand Central in the morning – meeting time to be announced closer to the day.
URL:https://vicsocny.org/calendar/in-person-tour-the-rosen-house-at-caramoor/
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://vicsocny.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/03/unnamed-1.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20230327T173000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20230327T190000
DTSTAMP:20260416T081707
CREATED:20230322T152627Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230322T152627Z
UID:10000117-1679938200-1679943600@vicsocny.org
SUMMARY:In-Person Tour: Gilded Age Reformer Zoe Anderson Norris Rediscovered
DESCRIPTION:At the Grolier Club \n47 East 60th Street \nTickets Here!\nIndependent scholar Eve M. Kahn will give a tour of her exhibition at the Grolier Club (47 East 60th Street)\, To Fight for the Poor with My Pen: Zoe Anderson Norris\, Queen of Bohemia. Norris (1860-1914)\, although little remembered today\, was a foremother of modern-day social-justice advocates and confessional bloggers baring souls in print. In millions of published words of fiction and journalism – including in her own bimonthly magazine\, The East Side (1909-1914) – she documented desperate immigrant poverty in New York and called for the world to heed and help. \nKahn’s show features the only complete run of The East Side known to survive in private hands\, as well as Norris’s novels and dozens of periodicals featuring her work alongside illustrations by major Gilded Age artists. Also on view are artifacts from Norris’s childhood and youth in Kentucky and Kansas; publications by her friends\, including members of her bohemian organization\, the Ragged Edge Klub; and souvenir postcards and even dinnerware from the Klub’s favorite restaurants. \nNorris covered issues that still resonate: corrupt policemen harassing street peddlers\, powerful male editors going unpunished for plagiarism or sexual assault\, trafficked sex workers futilely pleading for help escaping the streets. Norris’s goal: “To fight for the poor with my pen.” Sometimes she reported undercover\, dressed as a blind beggar or a stranded tourist\, to gauge reactions from policemen and philanthropists. She went broke as she wrote about poverty and reflected on her own life journey\, battling incompetent printers and distributors\, and granting herself all East Side masthead titles including bootblack\, circulation liar\, and “the whole shebang.” \nEve Kahn\, former weekly Antiques columnist for The New York Times\, is finishing a biography of Norris for an academic press. The elevator pitch: “the Nellie Bly you’ve never heard of.” \nThe tour will also include the Grolier Club’s little-known but spectacular interior\, with one room modeled after a 17th-century British university library and another after a 17th-century New York taproom. Keen-eyed visitors will spot a blowfish and a secret stairway.
URL:https://vicsocny.org/calendar/in-person-tour-gilded-age-reformer-zoe-anderson-norris-rediscovered/
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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20230317T183000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20230317T203000
DTSTAMP:20260416T081707
CREATED:20230207T013351Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230207T013819Z
UID:10000116-1679077800-1679085000@vicsocny.org
SUMMARY:In-Person Event: Gilded Age Reformer Zoe Anderson Norris Rediscovered
DESCRIPTION:In-Person Event at the Grolier Club  \n47 East 60th Street \nNew York\, NY 10022 \nTickets Here\nPart of the Tin Pan Alley American Popular Music Project collection. \nLecture with music and reception celebrates exhibition “To Fight for the Poor with My Pen: Zoe Anderson Norris” and Tin Pan Alley songs. \nOn March 27\, 5:30 to 7 pm\, independent scholar Eve M. Kahn will give a tour of her exhibition at the Grolier Club (47 East 60th Street)\, To Fight for the Poor with My Pen: Zoe Anderson Norris\, Queen of Bohemia. Norris (1860-1914)\, although little remembered today\, was a foremother of modern-day social-justice advocates and confessional bloggers baring souls in print. In millions of published words of fiction and journalism – including in her own bimonthly magazine\, The East Side (1909-1914) – she documented desperate immigrant poverty in New York and called for the world to heed and help. \nKahn’s show features the only complete run of The East Side known to survive in private hands\, as well as Norris’s novels and dozens of periodicals featuring her work alongside illustrations by major Gilded Age artists. Also on view are artifacts from Norris’s childhood and youth in Kentucky and Kansas; publications by her friends\, including members of her bohemian organization\, the Ragged Edge Klub; and souvenir postcards and even dinnerware from the Klub’s favorite restaurants. \nNorris covered issues that still resonate: corrupt policemen harassing street peddlers\, powerful male editors going unpunished for plagiarism or sexual assault\, trafficked sex workers futilely pleading for help escaping the streets. Norris’s goal: “To fight for the poor with my pen.” Sometimes she reported undercover\, dressed as a blind beggar or a stranded tourist\, to gauge reactions from policemen and philanthropists. She went broke as she wrote about poverty and reflected on her own life journey\, battling incompetent printers and distributors\, and granting herself all East Side masthead titles including bootblack\, circulation liar\, and “the whole shebang.” \nEve Kahn\, former weekly Antiques columnist for The New York Times\, is finishing a biography of Norris for an academic press. The elevator pitch: “the Nellie Bly you’ve never heard of.” \nThe tour will also include the Grolier Club’s little-known but spectacular interior\, with one room modeled after a 17th-century British university library and another after a 17th-century New York taproom. Keen-eyed visitors will spot a blowfish and a secret stairway.
URL:https://vicsocny.org/calendar/in-person-event-gilded-age-reformer-zoe-anderson-norris-rediscovered/
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20230317
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20230318
DTSTAMP:20260416T081707
CREATED:20230116T031350Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230116T031443Z
UID:10000114-1679011200-1679097599@vicsocny.org
SUMMARY:Margot Gayle Fund - Application Deadline
DESCRIPTION:The Margot Gayle Fund for the Preservation of Victorian Heritage was established in 2003 to honor Margot Gayle (1908-2008)\, an eminent preservationist who was one of the founders of the Victorian Society in America. The Victorian Society New York (officially known as the New York Metropolitan Chapter of the Victorian Society in America) regularly awards monetary grants from this fund to projects related to the preservation\, conservation\, and/or interpretation of material culture in the New York metropolitan area from c. 1837 to 1919. Projects may focus on any aspect of material culture from this period\, including but not limited to\, architecture\, landscape design\, fine and decorative arts or other aspects of visual culture\, technology\, and industry. \nDeadline: Friday\, March 17th\, 2023 for May award(s) \nDownload Margot Gayle Grant Application 
URL:https://vicsocny.org/calendar/margot-gayle-fund-application-deadling/
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20230310
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20230311
DTSTAMP:20260416T081707
CREATED:20221122T005822Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221122T005822Z
UID:10000109-1678406400-1678492799@vicsocny.org
SUMMARY:Call for Proposals: Emerging Scholars 2023 Event - Submissions Deadline
DESCRIPTION:Submissions Deadline March 10th\, 2023 \nEvent will be held evening of May 10th\, 2023 in NYC\, 6:00 p.m.- 7:30 p.m. \nThe Victorian Society New York invites university student historians and recent graduates to submit proposals by March 10 for its annual “Emerging Scholars” evening event on May 10\, 2023. \nThe nonprofit VSNY (vicsocny.org)\, founded in 1966\, supports scholarship about every aspect of 19th-century and early-20th-century culture\, including architecture\, literature\, theater\, fine and decorative art\, immigration\, economics\, politics\, education\, gender roles\, reform movements\, music\, fashion\, and food. Topics for recent event winners have included an electric gown\, Civil War panoramas\, and accusations of hatpin savagery. \nFor the May 10 event\, 6 to 7:30 pm (in person if global health conditions permit\, otherwise via Zoom)\, VSNY will bring in three current students or recent grads to each give a 20-minute presentation and then field questions. Send 200-word proposals (preference given to American/New York topics) and CVs by March 10 to info@vicsocny.org. \nSpeakers will receive a free VSNY year membership ($40 value)\, and their talks will be recorded and made publicly available on VSNY’s website. \n  \n 
URL:https://vicsocny.org/calendar/call-for-proposals-emerging-scholars-2023-event-submissions-deadline/
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