Showing posts with label sendak. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sendak. Show all posts

Sunday, February 20, 2011

Restoration at the Rosenbach

photo from www.visitphilly.com

The Rosenbach Museum & Library, located at 2010 Delancey Place in Philadelphia, was the very fortunate recent recipient of Maurice Sendak’s newly discovered mural (see yesterday’s entry).  The library began as the amazing rare book and decorative art collection of Dr. A.S.W Rosenbach and his brother, Philip Rosenbach.
The brothers lived at 2010 Delancey Place from 1926-1952 while they worked as successful dealers of rare books and manuscripts for their company, simply named, The Rosenbach Company.  Dr. Rosenbach was instrumental in building the collections at The Huntington Library and The Widener Library at Harvard.  In the process of helping clients build important private collections they also established an incredible personal collection.  Their home was packed with the treasures that they held onto over the years and includes Chippendale furnishing, silver from the British Royals, the only known portrait of Cervantes, the manuscript of Ulysses and the earliest letter of George Washington.  The brothers established the library as a public gift in 1954 in order to share their treasures with the world.  The library purchased the townhouse at 2008 Delancey Place in 1993 to expand their exhibition space.     
Maurice Sendak didn’t know the Rosenbachs personally but in the late 1960s he discovered that they shared a love for many of the same authors and artists and he decided to give his collection of illustrations and manuscripts to the library.  There are now over 10,000 Sendak artifacts in the collection including sketches, photos, proofs and original drawings.  The library has mounted several exhibitions of Sendak’s work and also houses a permanent gallery space.  Of course, there is also a museum shop that sells ‘authorized’ books, prints and toys.   
Their latest project is the Sendak Mural.  The Chertoff family donated their mural on the condition that the library would pay for its removal and conservation.  It has taken three years and over $200,000 to remove the mural from the Central Park West apartment in NYC and restore it to its original state.  The library launched ‘The Bring It Home Campaign’ to preserve the painting and offer complimentary programs.   The 1400 lb. mural wall was removed in two sections and then carefully put back together and moved to a restoration studio in Philadelphia.  Years of background paint were painstakingly removed and the mural was restored to its original condition. Finally it arrived at the Rosenbach and is now undergoing some final touch up work. If you are lucky enough to live near Philly you can head to the museum and watch the final restoration in person each week - what a great opportunity to learn about art conservation!  Sendak himself  is planning to visit the library and put the final touches on the mural for the official unveiling next month.  That is my idea of an exciting event (much better than the Superbowl).  I just can’t help feeling sorry for the next kids that move into the apartment on Central Park West and see the brand new, freshly painted, blank wall..

Saturday, February 19, 2011

A Scene from Sendak

from the Rosenbach Museum

I have already confessed to having a notoriously bad memory, so it won’t surprise you to know that I don’t remember the names of my elementary school teachers, can’t bring to mind what I did on family vacations and have trouble recalling old addresses.  I do remember, with frightening clarity, all the lyrics from the score of ‘Really Rosie’, a musical, and TV special,  written in 1975 by Maurice Sendak (story and lyrics) and Carole King (music) - with a pair like that it would be hard to go wrong.   The musical features the indomitable Rosie and the stories came from Sendak’s books set entitled the ‘Nutshell Library’.
My favorite songs from the album are ‘Chicken Soup with Rice’ and ‘Pierre’.  If you haven’t had the pleasure of hearing ‘Pierre’ you must take a minute to listen, I promise it will bring you a little joy and remind you to care (especially about important things like the library).  Maurice Sendak knows the heart and souls of kids...he captures their exuberance, determination and frustration and mixes them with whimsy before reflecting it back to us in stories, illustrations, movies, and now, a mural.
The mural is a revelation, even to Sendak fans.  It was made public when the announcement came that it would be moved from a 13th floor apartment in N.Y.C to the Rosenbach Museum and Library in Philadelphia (more on the Rosenbach tomorrow).  Apparently, Sendak painted the mural on the wall of his friend’s apartment in 1961 when he was 33 years old.  The wall was in the room of Nina and Larry Chertoff, two very lucky children that grew up with a happy gang of Sendak’s characters marching across their bedroom.  I saw several old friends in the parade participants... Jennie leads the way, she would become Max’s intended victim in Where the Wild Thing Are, published two years later in 1963.  Rosie follows along with Little Bear (from Elsie Minarik’s lovely stories) and I wonder if the boy and the lion in the parade were precursors to Pierre (published in 1962).  The lucky “kids” are now in their 50s and donated the mural, saving it for posterity, to the Rosenbach in their parent’s honor.  Now we are all lucky enough to enjoy the mural and to remember the magic that Maurice Sendak dispensed.