Harry Ransom CenterThe University of Texas at Austin

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Photograph

Fritz Henle: In Search of Beauty February 3, 2009 - August 2, 2009

This retrospective exhibition celebrates the art of freelance American photographer Fritz Henle (1909-1993). A contributor to such magazines as Life and Harper's Bazaar, Henle's distinctive style was characterized by a unique combination of the realistic and the romantic. This exhibition features a broad range of Henle's work including images of 1930s New York City, Mexico, and Paris; innovative nudes; and portraits of famous personalities. The exhibition will feature approximately 125 vintage and modern prints and numerous artifacts documenting Henle's career.

The exhibition is presented by the Judy and Steven Gluckstern Family through their Lucky Star Foundation and by the Danny and Robin Greenspun Family through their Culture Dog Foundation.

More information about the exhibition and media contacts


Painting

The Persian Sensation: The Rubáiyát of Omar Khayyám in the West February 3, 2009 - August 2, 2009

2009 marks the 150th anniversary of Edward Fitzgerald's landmark translation of the poetry of the medieval Persian astronomer Omar Khayyám. Fitzgerald's work became an unprecedented popular phenomenon in England and America: by the 1930s, the Rubáiyát was by some accounts the most published and translated text in English after Shakespeare and the Bible.

This exhibition draws on the Center's expansive Rubáiyát collections, ranging from Persian manuscripts and miniature editions to parodies and playing cards, to reveal how the Rubáiyát phenomenon constructed an idealized Orient even as Omar Khayyám and his poems helped readers understand their own lives.

More information about the exhibition and media contacts


Painting

Frida Kahlo, (Mexican, 1907-1954)
Self Portrait with Thorn Necklace
and Hummingbird

Oil on canvas, 61.25 cm x 47 cm
Collection of the Harry Ransom Center,
The University of Texas at Austin
© Banco de México
Diego Rivera and Frida Kahlo Museums Trust

Frida Kahlo's Self-portrait with Thorn Necklace and Hummingbird May 5, 2009 - January 3, 2010

The Ransom Center celebrates the homecoming of one of its most famous and frequently borrowed art works, the Mexican artist Frida Kahlo's Self-portrait with Thorn Necklace and Hummingbird (1940). Since 1990 the painting has been on almost continuous loan, featured in exhibitions at 28 museums in the U. S. and around the world, including Australia, Canada, France, and Spain.

Frida Kahlo (1907-1954) taught herself how to paint after she was severely injured in a bus accident at the age of 18. For Kahlo, painting became an act of cathartic ritual and her symbolic images portray a cycle of pain, death, and rebirth. Kahlo's affair in New York City with her friend, the photographer Nickolas Muray (American, b. Hungary, 1892-1965), and subsequent divorce from the artist Diego Rivera left her heartbroken and lonely, but she produced some of her most powerful and compelling self-portraits during this time period.

Muray purchased the Center's self-portrait from Kahlo to help her during a difficult financial period. It is part of the Nickolas Muray collection of more than 100 works of art, which was acquired by the Center in 1966.


Scroll manuscripts

Two scroll manuscripts in Poe's hand
containing the story, "The Domain
of Arnheim," undated

From Out That Shadow: The Life and Legacy of Edgar Allan Poe September 8, 2009 - January 4, 2010

This exhibition commemorates the bicentennial of Edgar Allan Poe, the great American poet, critic, and inventor of the detective story. One of the most comprehensive exhibitions ever devoted to Poe, this collaborative project draws upon the extensive holdings of the Harry Ransom Center at The University of Texas at Austin and the Small Special Collections Library at the University of Virginia, with additional materials from the Free Library of Philadelphia and other museums. Poe is one of the most widely read American author of the nineteenth century, and the exhibition investigates the enduring influence of his works as well as his tragic life. From Out That Shadow features manuscripts, books, art, and personal effects documenting Poe's career as a hard-working writer, his romantic relationships and mysterious death, the decline and rehabilitation of his literary reputation, and his profound influence on mystery and detective fiction and other genres. Among the exhibition's highlights are Poe's writing desk, letters by and about the author, records of his student days at the University of Virginia, manuscripts of landmark works such as "The Raven," and the original art for Arthur Rackham's illustrated edition of Tales of Mystery and Imagination.


Map

G. D. Cassini, Carte de la Luna (Map of the Moon), 1679

Other Worlds: Rare Astronomical Works September 8, 2009 - January 4, 2010

In conjunction with the International Year of Astronomy in 2009, the Ransom Center presents an exhibition that features items from the Center's science collections relating to early astronomy. Highlights include the Coronelli celestial globe (1688); two copies of Copernicus De Revolutionibus; first editions by Johannes Kepler, Galileo Galilei, Isaac Newton, and others; papers of the Herschel family of English astronomers; and the Cassini moon map.