Collections

Online Exhibitions and Resources

Exhibitions

 

 

Chronological Overview of Online Exhibitions

Beauty Beauty, Virtue and Vice: Images of Women in Nineteenth-Century American Prints Most of the prints in this exhibit were designed simply to please the eye, but they are also useful to historians who would like to understand how 19th century Americans thought about the world in which they lived. Explored are artistic depictions of the standard of beauty, ideal beauty, women as objects, variations on the standard, true womanhood, women at home, American slavery, women in public life, women as performers, use of women as advertising strategies and more.

 

Food Exhibition Big Business: Food Production, Processing & Distribution in the North, 1850-1900

This online exhibition features lithographs, chromolithographs, trade catalogues, trade cards, and product labels from the American Antiquarian Society's collection that help shed light on major changes in the way Americans in the North produced and sold their food in the second half of the nineteenth century.

 

Frohsinn Bal Masque An Invitation to Dance: A History of Social Dance in America showcases the unique print culture items on the subject of dance within the Society's holdings. From its fashion and origins, to its etiquette and opposition, this online exhibit features a sampling of artifacts from the 18th and 19th centuries. Click on the image to the left from Stephen Salisbury's "Bal Masque" ticket to attend.

 

Architecture Architectural Resources at the American Antiquarian Society highlights the excellent design books, architectural drawings, lithographs, engravings, periodicals, and photographs of architecture found in the Society's collections.


 

Wells Beach Summer Vacationing
in New England

This exhibition brings together a selection of images from the Society's collections that illustrate the most popular and most beautiful New England destinations for summertime visitors.


 

A Stunner The David Claypoole Johnston Collection

This exhibition highlights the Society's outstanding collection of lithographs, watercolors, and drawings of artist David Claypoole Johnston.


 

Portraits! Portraits!
Worcester Portraits in the American Antiquarian Society Collection
features the images of thirty-one Worcester residents depicted in the Society's portrait paintings, miniatures, and sculpture collections.


 

Women's Work in the 
Civil War A Woman's Work is Never Done

A look at women's work, from before the American Revolution through the Industrial Revolution, using selected images from the Society's collection.


 

Valentine's Day card Making Valentines: A Tradition in America is designed to show the evolution of the Valentine's Day card. This exhibition is drawn, in part, from an original display created by AAS staff member Audrey Zook in 1985. It includes a select group of Valentine's Day cards belonging to the Society.


 

Chirstmas Visions of Christmas exhibts an array of Christmas images from the Society's collections. Among the featured artists are F.O.C. Darley, Thomas Nast, Louis Prang, and the McLoughlin Brothers.

Resources

Freedmen Preview the AAS online resource, Northern Visions of Race, Region and Reform in the Press and Letters of Freedmen and Freedmen's Teachers in the Civil War Era, created by Professor Lucia Knoles of Assumption College working from primary resources at the American Antiquarian Society.

 

Grant-Burr Family Papers
Read, browse and search transcriptions of the nineteenth-century papers of the Grant-Burr Family more ...

 

A number of collection inventories, checklists, and finding aids are fully illustrated

 

Additional 
Information

The items appearing in these online exhibitions and resources are all contained in the Society's collections. The Society offers reproduction services as an aid to scholarly research in accordance with its mission to provide access to materials while preserving them for the use of future generations.

All uses (both nonprofit/scholarly and commercial) of images from the collections of the American Antiquarian Society must be licensed by the Society in consequence of its proprietary rights.    more ...