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Category: LCM

Middle distance foto of a building shaped like a long silver fish with an open mouth and a red tail.

Is That a Giant Fish? The “Roadside America” of John Margolies

Posted by: Neely Tucker

The photographer John Margolies chronicled the weird and wonderful ways American businesses advertised themselves along the nation's roadways in the latter half of the 20th century. He felt dinosaur-shaped gas stations and a giant gunslinging shrimp advertising a restaurant weren't just roadside kitsch but a genuine expression of the national identity. The Library preserves more than 11,000 of his images.

Colorful drawing of a small Mexican town in the 19th century with a large church or civic building with two tall towers and several other buildings with domes or spires.

Antrim’s Mexican Journey, a 19th-century Time Capsule

Posted by: Neely Tucker

In 1849, a year after the end of the Mexican War, amateur American artist Benajah Jay Antrim and several others set out across Mexico. He recorded the journey in three diaries and two sketchbooks, creating a illustrated travelogue, a kind of time capsule that captured relatively undeveloped parts of rural Mexico, that's preserved at the Library.

Formal fortrait of a older man in 18th century attire, facing just left of the viewer.

“Amazing Grace” Didn’t Stand out as “Amazing” When First Published

Posted by: Neely Tucker

The beloved hymn “Amazing Grace,” written by John Newton, is one of the most recorded songs in history. But it didn't particularly stand out when it was published in the "Olney Hymns" collection in 1779. It's not even called "Amazing Grace," just numbered "Hymn 41." The hymn book was huge, containing 280 hymns by Newton and 68 by William Cowper, a poet and Newton's friend. The volume also contains Cowper's “Light Shining Out of Darkness,” which coined the maxim still in use today, “God moves in mysterious ways.”

Three people moving along a waterway on an airboat with clear blue sky in the background. A woman sits on the front row, a pilot and videographer sit behind and above her on the second row.

Indigenous History Kept Alive at the Library

Posted by: Wendi Maloney

The Library's American Folklife Center and the Mellon Foundation have teamed up over the past several years to set up a series of grants that help preserve traditions that may otherwise be absent from the national record. For the most recent year, these include dances of the Nottawaseppi Huron Band of the Potawatomi, artistic creations of the Comanche Nation of Oklahoma and traditional Hawaiian music. These works are then preserved in Library collections for future generations.

Half length portrait of woman with straight, long black hair, looking seriously at the camera. Her elbows are on an art studio table and her chin rests on folded hands. On the table in front of her is colorful artwork in geometric patterns.

Wendy Red Star, Searching for Chief Plenty Coups

Posted by: Neely Tucker

Wendy Red Star is a Native American visual artist whose work has received widespread acclaim and been awarded the MacArthur Fellowship, commonly called the "genius grant." Her work is also collected at the Library. In this short essay, she writes about a research trip to the Library and how the collections inform her work.

A closeup image shows the title page shows the "Whole Books of Psalmes" title page.

A Pearl-Studded Book of Psalms, from the 17th Century

Posted by: Neely Tucker

If you were a well-born English lady in a 17th-century family, you might be just as likely to accessorize your satin gown with earrings or a fan as you would an elaborately embroidered prayer book. The Library preserves a customized 1641 Book of Psalms, a marvel not only for its diminutive size, but also for its remarkable condition and lavish decoration. At more than 380 years old, its golden threads remain unfrayed and its intricate swirls of tiny seed pearls — hundreds of them — are perfectly intact.

Near dusk, a woman in a heavy parka stands in her snow-covered front yard, surrounded by dozens of chunks of whale meat. Two lights are on in the house behind her.

Native American (Artistic) Visions

Posted by: Neely Tucker

The Library has worked for more than two decades to boost its holdings of modern Native American art and now has more than 200 prints and photographs by more than 50 contemporary Indigenous printmakers and photographers from the United States, Canada and Latin America. These include dazzling works by artists and photographers such as Wendy Red Star, Kay Walkingstick, Brian Adams, Zig Jackson and Rick Bartow.