ebook img

Palace of Culture: Andrew Carnegie’s Museums and Library in Pittsburgh PDF

359 Pages·2011·9.91 MB·English
Save to my drive
Quick download
Download
Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.

Preview Palace of Culture: Andrew Carnegie’s Museums and Library in Pittsburgh

Palac e of Cultur e A John D. S. and Aida C. Truxall Book P a l a c e o f C u lt u r e Andrew Carnegie’s Museums and Library in Pittsburgh robert J. GanGewere University of Pittsburgh Press Published by the University of Pittsburgh Press, Pittsburgh, Pa., 15260 copyright © 2011, University of Pittsburgh Press all rights reserved Manufactured in the United States of america Printed on acid-free paper 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 Text design and typesetting by Kachergis Book Design library of ConGress CataloGinG-in-PubliCation Data Gangewere, Robert J. (Robert Jay), 1936– Palace of culture : andrew carnegie’s museums and library in Pittsburgh / Robert J. Gangewere. p. cm. Includes bibliographical references and index. isbn-13: 978-0-8229-4397-6 (cloth : alk. paper) isbn-10: 0-8229-4397-2 1. carnegie Institute—History. 2. carnegie library of Pittsburgh—History. 3. Pittsburgh (Pa.)—Intellectual life—20th century. 4. Pittsburgh (Pa.)—History—20th century. 5. carnegie, andrew, 1835–1919. I. Title. II. Title: andrew carnegie’s museums and library in Pittsburgh. as36.P79G36 2011 069.09748'86—dc23 2011020990 For my wife, and first reader, Linda Contents Preface ix acknowledgments xv 1 The carnegie Years: “Pittsburghers Knew I Was One of Themselves” 1 2 Building a Palace of culture: “I Felt That aladdin and His lamp Had Been at Work” 25 3 The High command—a century of Governance: “Men capable of His Own Zeal” 63 4 carnegie Music Hall: “Music, Sacred Tongue of God” 91 5 carnegie library of Pittsburgh: “Free to the People” 107 6 carnegie Museum of art: “The Moral Mission of art” 129 7 carnegie Museum of Natural History: “Museum Science” 173 8 carnegie Science center and Buhl Planetarium: “Popular Science” 245 9 The andy Warhol Museum: “He Harvested Ideas from everything” 265 10 In Summary 287 appendix: Interview Subjects 291 Notes 295 Bibliography 311 Illustration credits 315 Index 319 PrefaCe The story of andrew carnegie’s Palace of culture has many themes, from changes in american museums and libraries in the twentieth century, to changes in art, technology, and science, and to Pittsburgh’s own remarkable rebirth from a dirty mill town into one of the nation’s most livable cities. Generations of people, in Pittsburgh and the United States, and internation- ally, have been influenced by carnegie’s remarkable Institute and library. This is a rare story about the myriad ways that one cultural institution shaped the life of a city and a region, a story whose roots lie in a singular experiment in bringing middle- and high-class culture to the masses in a city notably isolated in western Pennsylvania, without the richness in the arts and sciences that the great east coast cities were developing. Pittsburgh was for many years a microcosm of america, tucked away in the mountains of western Pennsylvania, and in that regard a kind of laboratory Petri dish, where one might see over the course of a century “the higher things of the spirit,” as carnegie phrased it, develop and grow on their own. as I wrote Palace of Culture, I realized that I had to think more broadly and deeply about the museums of carnegie Institute and library that I knew so well. as the editor of Carnegie Magazine for over thirty years, I could have simply recast much of what I knew. I was steeped in the culture of carnegie Institute and library, knew the familiar institutional stories, and at first thought my primary challenge would be organizing informa- tion. But this presumption was faulty for several reasons. It was a mistake to think that carnegie library, founded in 1895, and carnegie Institute, founded three months later in 1896, were only about 110 years old. collectively, all the institutions whose stories I was starting to tell had about five times that amount of history: carnegie library was 110, carnegie Museum of Natural History was 110, carnegie Museum of art was 110, and carnegie Music Hall (perhaps no longer an equal partner, but with its own powerful history and presence) was 110. each institution, then, had more than a century’s worth of accomplishments and memories. ix

See more

The list of books you might like

Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.