Rogers, H. Carton
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Publication Welcome and Keynote Presentations(2016-06-09) Rogers, Carton H.Welcome address from Carton Rogers, the Vice Provost & Director of LibrariesPublication Welcome(2017-02-24) Rogers, Carton H.Publication The Treasured Hunt: Collecting Medieval and Renaissance Manuscripts, Past, Present, and Future(2007-11-02) Matter, E. Ann; Ransom, Lynn; Steiner, Emily; Sherman, Claire Richter; Rundle, David; Stallybrass, Peter; Tanis, James; Dreher, Derick; Rogers, H. Carton; Maxwell, Robert; de Hamel, Christopher; Wallace, David; Linenthal, Richard; Schoenberg, Lawrence J.; Combs, Gifford; Takamiya, Toshiyuki; Dutschke, Consuelo W.; Noel, WilliamWelcome and Opening Remarks: E. Ann Matter, University of Pennsylvania, and Lynn Ransom, Free Library of Philadelphia Session 1. Beginnings: Collecting in the Middle Ages and Renaissance Session Chair: Emily Steiner, Department of English, University of Pennsylvania Claire Richter Sherman, Center for Advanced Study in the Visual Arts at the National Gallery of Art, "The Manuscript Collection of King Charles V of France: The Personal and the Political" David Rundle, History Faculty and Corpus Christi College, Oxford University, "The Butcher of England and the Renaissance Arts of Book-Collecting" Session 2: Civic Service: The Legacies of Philadelphia-Area Collectors Chair: Peter Stallybrass, Department of English, University of Pennsylvania James Tanis, Director of Libraries and Professor of History Emeritus, Bryn Mawr College, "Migrating Manuscripts" Derick Dreher, Director, The Rosenbach Museum & Library, "Of Private Collectors and Public Libraries: Dr. A. S. W. Rosenbach and John Frederick Lewis" Session 3: Keynote address Welcome: H. Carton Rogers, Vice Provost & Director of Libraries, University of Pennsylvania Chair: Robert Maxwell, Department of the History of Art, University of Pennsylvania Christopher de Hamel, Gaylord Donnelley Fellow Librarian, Corpus Christi College, Cambridge University, "The Manuscript Collection of C. L. Ricketts (1859-1941)" Session 4: The Hunters and the Hunted: A Roundtable Discussion with Private and Institutional Collectors Chair: David Wallace, Department of English, University of Pennsylvania Moderator: Richard Linenthal, Bernard Quaritch Ltd. Panelists: Lawrence J. Schoenberg, Private Collector Gifford Combs, Private Collector Toshiyuki Takamiya, Private Collector, Keio University Consuelo Dutschke, Curator of Medieval and Renaissance Manuscripts, Columbia University William Noel, Curator of Manuscripts and Rare Books, The Walters Art MuseumPublication Equus Unbound: Fairman Rogers and the Age of the Horse (Panel Discussion)(2007-06-14) Moelis, Herb; Moelis, Ellen; Rogers, H. Carton; Kemmerer, Douglas; Greene, Ann Norton; Richardson, Dean W; Farrington, LynnePodcast introduction, Kristin Winch, 00:00-01:17 Welcome and introduction, H. Carton Rogers, 01:17-05:06:30 Remarks by panel moderator Ann N. Greene, 06:35-20:15 Remarks by Herbert Moelis, 20:33-28:58 Remarks by Ellen Moelis, 28:58-39:45 Remarks by Dean Richardson, 39:45-46:45 Remarks by Douglas Kemmerer, 46:45-1:07:45 Questions and answers, 1:07:45-1:10:18 Concluding remarks, Lynne Farrington, 1:10:18-1:11:19 To download a podcast of this event, choose either the standard quality mp3 file (shorter download) or the high quality m4a file (longer download), below. To view the exhibition poster, select Download button at upper right.Publication Francis Johnson: Music Master of Early Philadelphia(2008-04-10) Griscom, Richard; Ramsey, Guthrie P.; Rogers, H. CartonGuthrie P. Ramsey, Jr., Associate Professor of Music, University of Pennsylvania, delivers a lecture on Francis Johnson (1792-1844), Philadelphia band leader and composer. Johnson holds a special place in the history of American music. Although a free African American, he lived in an age when racial segregation and prejudice were commonplace. Despite these obstacles, he was able to achieve extraordinary renown and respect among the elite of Philadelphia through performances of his band at balls, parades, and promenade concerts. Following a series of concert tours late in his life, Johnson's fame eventually extended through the Midwest and across the Atlantic to London. His music survives today in piano arrangements published during his lifetime. The lecture marked the opening of an exhibition in the Otto E. Albrecht Music Library. The exhibition included a selection from the over forty pieces of Johnson sheet music in the collection of the late Kurt Stein. Also part of the exhibition were prints, period newspaper articles, and a Kent bugle like that favored by Johnson. To download a podcast of the lecture, select one of the additional files below. Welcome, H. Carton Rogers, 00-04:52 Introduction, Richard Griscom, 04:52-13:06 Lecture, Guthrie P. Ramsay, Jr., 13:15-37:27 The event announcement is also available for download, by selecting the download button, at upper right. The exhibition is available in an online version, at: https://web.archive.org/web/20160422121347/https://www.library.upenn.edu/exhibits/music/fjohnson/