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CAAF Recommends

Keeping It Real: How Bob Shaw, Production Designer of “The Gilded Age,” Resurrects Nineteenth-Century New York
Link to Keeping It Real: How Bob Shaw, Production Designer of “The Gilded Age,” Resurrects Nineteenth-Century New York
November 12, 2024

Keeping It Real: How Bob Shaw, Production Designer of “The Gilded Age,” Resurrects Nineteenth-Century New York

From 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. The New York Metropolitan Chapter of the Victorian Society in America hosts 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. The talk will take place in the Veterans Room and Library of the Park Avenue Armory, designed by Centurions Louis Comfort Tiffany and Stanford White (who is responsible for the Century’s current clubhouse.)

Park Avenue Armory

Link to Keeping It Real: How Bob Shaw, Production Designer of “The Gilded Age,” Resurrects Nineteenth-Century New York
Belle da Costa Greene: A Librarian’s Legacy
Link to Belle da Costa Greene: A Librarian’s Legacy
October 25, 2024 through May 4, 2025

Belle da Costa Greene: A Librarian’s Legacy

The Morgan Library & Museum presents a major exhibition devoted to the life and career of its inaugural director, Belle da Costa Greene (1879–1950). Widely recognized as an authority on illuminated manuscripts and deeply respected as a cultural heritage executive, Greene was one of the most prominent librarians in American history. Greene is well known for the instrumental role she played in building the exceptional collection of rare books and manuscripts formed by American financier and Centurion J. Pierpont Morgan, who hired her as his personal librarian in 1905. After Morgan’s death in 1913, Greene continued as the librarian of his son, heir, and Century member J.P. Morgan Jr., who would transform his father’s Library into a public institution in 1924. Co-curators Philip S. Palmer and Erica Ciallela presented on the role of archives and archival research in telling the story of this remarkable woman’s life at a CAAF-sponsored event at the Century February 9, 2024, which you may view here.

The Morgan Library & Museum, New York City

Link to Belle da Costa Greene: A Librarian’s Legacy
Last Call: The Rise and Fall of Prohibition by Daniel Okrent
Link to Last Call: The Rise and Fall of Prohibition by Daniel Okrent

Last Call: The Rise and Fall of Prohibition by Daniel Okrent

CAAF trustee Daniel Okrent “offers a remarkably original account” (The New York Times) of an oft-explored but perennially interesting chapter in American history. Includes a few cameos by the Century, which proved quite skilled and proudly flagrant at skirting liquor laws (even as Presidents Warren G. Harding, Calvin Coolidge, and Herbert Hoover were amongst its members). Okrent has joked in presentations on the topic: “Prohibition was not much more than a rumor at the Century…”

Link to Last Call: The Rise and Fall of Prohibition by Daniel Okrent
Wish You Were Here: Guidebooks, Viewbooks, Photobooks, and Maps of New York City, 1807-1940
Link to Wish You Were Here: Guidebooks, Viewbooks, Photobooks, and Maps of New York City, 1807-1940
March 6 – May 10, 2025

Wish You Were Here: Guidebooks, Viewbooks, Photobooks, and Maps of New York City, 1807-1940

This Grolier Club exhibition will illustrate how New York City developed and was depicted in images for visitors and residents. Curated by Grolier Club and Century Association member Mark D. Tomasko from his collection, the exhibition features more than 130 objects, including guidebooks, viewbooks, photobooks, maps, and pamphlets. Guidebooks on view trace the growth of the city, including Dr. Mitchill’s Picture of New York (1807, the first guide to New York City), as well as specialty guidebooks and viewbooks, such as for the new Central Park, Ellis Island, speakeasies, restaurants, and skyscrapers. Street panoramas on view, such as Both Sides of Broadway (1910) and Fifth Avenue from Start to Finish (1911), show every building on those streets in detail, and featured photobooks include Bernice Abbott’s Changing New York (1939), and E. Idell Zeisloft’s The New Metropolis (1899) that celebrates the 1898 Consolidation of the City.

Grolier Club

Link to Wish You Were Here: Guidebooks, Viewbooks, Photobooks, and Maps of New York City, 1807-1940
Portraits of a Lady (2008) Documentary
Link to Portraits of a Lady (2008) Documentary

Portraits of a Lady (2008) Documentary

A documentary following the myriad depictions resulting when Supreme Court Justice Sandra Day O’Connor sits for 25 artists and amateurs. The portraitists are from the Painting Group, an art class and salon founded in 1958 by Centurions David Levine and Aaron Shikler, who feature charmingly in the film. An exhibition of Levine’s caricatures of Century members including Dwight D. Eisenhower, Saul Bellow, and John Lindsay is currently on view on the fifth floor of the clubhouse.

Link to Portraits of a Lady (2008) Documentary

CAAF Recommends

Belle da Costa Greene: A Librarian’s Legacy
Link to Belle da Costa Greene: A Librarian’s Legacy
October 25, 2024 through May 4, 2025

Belle da Costa Greene: A Librarian’s Legacy

The Morgan Library & Museum presents a major exhibition devoted to the life and career of its inaugural director, Belle da Costa Greene (1879–1950). Widely recognized as an authority on illuminated manuscripts and deeply respected as a cultural heritage executive, Greene was one of the most prominent librarians in American history. Greene is well known for the instrumental role she played in building the exceptional collection of rare books and manuscripts formed by American financier and Centurion J. Pierpont Morgan, who hired her as his personal librarian in 1905. After Morgan’s death in 1913, Greene continued as the librarian of his son, heir, and Century member J.P. Morgan Jr., who would transform his father’s Library into a public institution in 1924. Co-curators Philip S. Palmer and Erica Ciallela presented on the role of archives and archival research in telling the story of this remarkable woman’s life at a CAAF-sponsored event at the Century February 9, 2024, which you may view here.

The Morgan Library & Museum, New York City

Link to Belle da Costa Greene: A Librarian’s Legacy
Keeping It Real: How Bob Shaw, Production Designer of “The Gilded Age,” Resurrects Nineteenth-Century New York
Link to Keeping It Real: How Bob Shaw, Production Designer of “The Gilded Age,” Resurrects Nineteenth-Century New York
November 12, 2024

Keeping It Real: How Bob Shaw, Production Designer of “The Gilded Age,” Resurrects Nineteenth-Century New York

From 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. The New York Metropolitan Chapter of the Victorian Society in America hosts 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. The talk will take place in the Veterans Room and Library of the Park Avenue Armory, designed by Centurions Louis Comfort Tiffany and Stanford White (who is responsible for the Century’s current clubhouse.)

Park Avenue Armory

Link to Keeping It Real: How Bob Shaw, Production Designer of “The Gilded Age,” Resurrects Nineteenth-Century New York
Last Call: The Rise and Fall of Prohibition by Daniel Okrent
Link to Last Call: The Rise and Fall of Prohibition by Daniel Okrent

Last Call: The Rise and Fall of Prohibition by Daniel Okrent

CAAF trustee Daniel Okrent “offers a remarkably original account” (The New York Times) of an oft-explored but perennially interesting chapter in American history. Includes a few cameos by the Century, which proved quite skilled and proudly flagrant at skirting liquor laws (even as Presidents Warren G. Harding, Calvin Coolidge, and Herbert Hoover were amongst its members). Okrent has joked in presentations on the topic: “Prohibition was not much more than a rumor at the Century…”

Link to Last Call: The Rise and Fall of Prohibition by Daniel Okrent
Wish You Were Here: Guidebooks, Viewbooks, Photobooks, and Maps of New York City, 1807-1940
Link to Wish You Were Here: Guidebooks, Viewbooks, Photobooks, and Maps of New York City, 1807-1940
March 6 – May 10, 2025

Wish You Were Here: Guidebooks, Viewbooks, Photobooks, and Maps of New York City, 1807-1940

This Grolier Club exhibition will illustrate how New York City developed and was depicted in images for visitors and residents. Curated by Grolier Club and Century Association member Mark D. Tomasko from his collection, the exhibition features more than 130 objects, including guidebooks, viewbooks, photobooks, maps, and pamphlets. Guidebooks on view trace the growth of the city, including Dr. Mitchill’s Picture of New York (1807, the first guide to New York City), as well as specialty guidebooks and viewbooks, such as for the new Central Park, Ellis Island, speakeasies, restaurants, and skyscrapers. Street panoramas on view, such as Both Sides of Broadway (1910) and Fifth Avenue from Start to Finish (1911), show every building on those streets in detail, and featured photobooks include Bernice Abbott’s Changing New York (1939), and E. Idell Zeisloft’s The New Metropolis (1899) that celebrates the 1898 Consolidation of the City.

Grolier Club

Link to Wish You Were Here: Guidebooks, Viewbooks, Photobooks, and Maps of New York City, 1807-1940
Portraits of a Lady (2008) Documentary
Link to Portraits of a Lady (2008) Documentary

Portraits of a Lady (2008) Documentary

A documentary following the myriad depictions resulting when Supreme Court Justice Sandra Day O’Connor sits for 25 artists and amateurs. The portraitists are from the Painting Group, an art class and salon founded in 1958 by Centurions David Levine and Aaron Shikler, who feature charmingly in the film. An exhibition of Levine’s caricatures of Century members including Dwight D. Eisenhower, Saul Bellow, and John Lindsay is currently on view on the fifth floor of the clubhouse.

Link to Portraits of a Lady (2008) Documentary

Do you have a recommendations related to Century and Century-adjacent history? 

The CAAF is interested in all external exhibitions, events, publications, and more that highlight the achievements of members or relevant New York history.

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