“Down to Earth”: Exhibition about Environmental Issues

 The following is a guest post by Helena Zinkham, Chief, Prints & Photographs Division.

The renowned editorial cartoon artist Herblock (1909-2001) was a vocal advocate for the environment throughout his long career. The new exhibition “Down to Earth” presents a fascinating look at toxic waste, air pollution, and land conservation by pairing Herblock’s hard hitting yet humorous original drawings with striking contemporary photographs.

The exhibition curators, Sara W. Duke and Carol Johnson, work in the Prints & Photographs Division. When I asked them about their creative idea to mix cartoons and photographs together, they agreed, “We were happy at how well the images matched. Due to the richness of our collections, we could represent many topics with strong images in both media.”

The formerly good earth / Herblock.

The Formerly Good Earth, Drawing by Herblock, 1970. © Herb Block Foundation, used with permission. http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/hlb.07676

Reveilletown, La. Photograph by Sam Kittner, November 1988.

Reveilletown, La. Photograph by Sam Kittner, November 1988. Gift of Kent and Marcia Minichiello, 2001. © Sam Kittner, used with permission. (photo appears in online version of the exhibition) http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/ppmsca.31925

In 1970, Herblock supported the passage of the Clean Air Act in a drawing about the world-wide risks of pollution. The photographer Sam Kittner showed the consequences of industrial pollution for a historic community in Louisiana that had to be relocated.

"All right, all right - I believe it" / Herblock.

“All right, all right – I believe it.” Drawing by Herblock, 1998. © Herb Block Foundation, used with permission. http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/hlb.13608

 

[River 1, 7/2007, position 69 degrees 40' 12" north, 49 degrees 54' 28" west, altitude 70 m, Greenland ice cap melting area]

River 1, position 16, 69 degrees 40′ 12″ north, 49 degrees 54′ 28″ west, altitude 70 m, Greenland ice cap melting area. Photograph by Olaf Otto Becker, July 2007. © Olaf Otto Becker, used with permission. http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/ppmsca.32160

In 1998, Herblock commented on the reality of global warming by drawing a heat wave that wouldn’t quit. A decade later, German photographer Olaf Otto Becker documented a river formed by melting ice in Greenland and used geographic coordinates in the image title to help track the impact of climate change in the future.

Generous support from the Herbert L. Block Foundation made the exhibition possible.

Learn More:

  • View the “Down to Earth” exhibition online.
  • Visit the show in person, through March 23, 2013, at the Graphic Arts Gallery in the Thomas Jefferson Building of the Library of Congress.
  • Several photographers and collectors are giving gallery talks about their work.

Glimpses of Soldiers’ Lives (American Civil War)

The following is a guest post by Helena Zinkham, Chief, Prints & Photographs Division When you look at a soldier’s portrait from the American Civil War, have you ever wondered what that particular person, or his regiment, experienced?  For twenty of the Union and Confederate soldiers whose names survived with their photographs in the Liljenquist …

Read more »

New for You: Presidential Campaign Posters Book

The following is a guest post by Helena Zinkham, Chief, Prints & Photographs Division. The creative staff members in the Library of Congress Publishing Office produce fascinating new books each year by digging deeply into our remarkable collections, aided by Prints & Photographs Division staff. The recently issued volume, Presidential Campaign Posters from the Library …

Read more »

The National Book Festival – please join us!

The Prints & Photographs Division will be on hand at this weekend’s National Book Festival (Sept. 22-23).  If you’re planning on attending, please look for us in the LC Pavilion. Our focus will be “reading photographs,” and we’re inviting visitors to participate in a photo captioning game called “What’s My Title?” We’ll be displaying a …

Read more »

An Olympic Tug of War

I love the Olympics. I love the competition, the ceremonies, the sportsmanship. My earliest personal experience with a festival of games was on a pretty small scale: the annual Field Day in grade school. My favorite event wasn’t the water balloon toss or the three-legged race. It was the ultimate battle between classes, Tug of …

Read more »

Join Us at the Library for a Photography Meetup!

The following is a guest post by Bronwen Colquhoun, Kluge Fellow. I’ve been invited to blog about an exciting event that we are organizing here at the Library on Saturday July 28, 2012. You are invited to a Photography Meetup in the Thomas Jefferson Building to capture some of the elaborate architecture and artwork rooted …

Read more »

P&P Snapshot: A Look at On Site Research

Our online collections support many a research project, but contact with physical photographs and graphic items can be eye-opening and reveal new avenues for investigation. Kya Mangrum, a doctoral candidate in English Language and Literature at University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, recently spent several days in the Prints and Photographs Reading Room exploring images of …

Read more »