Tompkins
County Public Library will launch a year-long commemoration of its
Sesquicentennial April 4 with “150 Years and Counting: A Community
Celebration of Library Service.”
Anniversary
festivities planned for April 4 through 6 include exhibit openings,
proclamations and presentations by state and local legislators, a local history
presentation by County Historian Carol Kammen, and a special storytime
featuring Beauty and the Beast Storytellers.
April
marks 150 years since Ezra Cornell’s vision of a public library was endorsed by
the New York State Legislature. The sixth public library to be chartered
in New York State and the first to be located within a village, the Cornell
Public Library was located on the southeast corner of Tioga and Seneca Streets
where it served patrons until 1960. In 1964, the Tompkins County
Legislature assumed responsibility for Library funding. Shortly
thereafter, its name was changed to Tompkins County Public Library.
Noting
TCPL’s storied history, Susan Currie, the
Library’s fifth director, said the Sesquicentennial is a time for the entire
community to celebrate the Library’s past and plan for its future.
“The
vision that Ezra Cornell had all of those years ago still inspires what we do
today,” Currie said. “His understanding that every community deserves a
vibrant public library has carried us a century and a half and will continue to
drive our plans for 150 more.”
The
Library’s community celebration begins April 4 at 5 p.m. with special Gallery
Night access to “150 Years and Counting” the Library’s sesquicentennial art
exhibit. This three-part exhibit includes “Artists in the Archives,” an installation
of works by Carla Rae Johnson, Barbara Page and JoAnn Wilcox designed to
showcase the delights, discoveries and priceless connections made possible at
libraries through re-envisioned and repurposed library cards and card catalogs.
“Artists in the
Archives” includes, “The Alternet,” Johnson’s 50-drawer card
catalog featuring cards from more than 85 artists, poets, writers, musicians
and creative thinkers; “Call to Everyone,” Wilcox’s exhibition of nearly 600
discarded library catalog cards that have been re-purposed as canvases for cell
phone photos; and “Book Marks,” Page’s two-drawer catalog featuring library
charge cards representing books that have made an impression on her life.
Also included in this
celebratory exhibit are: “Talk Tompkins,” an audio visual exhibit of
photographs of, and interviews with, members of the Tompkins County community
created by photographer Ben Altman, and “Diary of a Library: A Community
Card Catalog of Pictures, Memories and Stories.”
A multi-year project, “Diary
of a Library,” was launched by longtime TCPL Exhibit Coordinator Sally
Grubb. The exhibit features a 15-drawer, card catalog
representing-- through drawings, poems, stories and photographs submitted
by community members, libraries staff, trustees and friends-- 150 years of Tompkins
County Public Library service to the community.
On
April 5 at noon, Library Director Susan Currie will join local and state
legislators in the Library’s Avenue of the Friends for a cake cutting and
reading from the Library’s charter and presentation of proclamations
recognizing a century and a half of Library contributions to the
community. This event will be followed by a 1 p.m. presentation by
Tompkins County Historian Carol Kammen on life in and around Tompkins County in
1864.
The
“150 Years and Counting,” weekend concludes Sunday, April 6 with a 2 p.m.
family-friendly storytime by Beauty and the Beast Storytellers.
Storytellers Mitch Weiss and Martha Hamilton will read “It’s Not Always Easy to
See the Elephant,” an adorable story, written by Kammen, about the first
elephant to visit Ithaca.
Additional
commemorative events are planned throughout 2014.
For
more information, contact Carrie Wheeler-Carmenatty at (607) 272-4557 extension
248 or cwheeler@tcpl.org.
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