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NEWS
INDEX
Archives
2005
September
U. of I. granted affiliate
status by Smithsonian Institution
Andrea
Lynn, Humanities Editor
217-333-2177; andreal@uiuc.edu
9/20/05
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Click
photo to enlarge |
| Photo
by Kwame Ross |
| The
renowned Smithsonian Institution has invited the University
of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign into its prestigious
Affiliations Program.Scott Schwartz, director of the
Sousa Archives and Center for American Music, will
serve as the liaison between university units and
the 159-year-old institution. |
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CHAMPAIGN, Ill.
— The 159-year-old Smithsonian Institution has opened its doors
– and collections – to a slightly younger cousin across
the country.
The renowned institution in Washington, D.C., has invited the 137-year-old
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign into its prestigious Affiliations
Program.
Affiliation with the institution that “offers the world a picture
of America, and America a picture of the world,” brings a host
of privileges, including greater access to the institution’s 137-million
objects, many of them priceless. The institution considers affiliation
with organizations whose mission is parallel to its own: “the
increase and diffusion of knowledge.”
Illinois is among only a handful of institutions of higher education
that have been granted affiliate status; most affiliates are individual
museums.
Joining Illinois in the class of 2005 is the San Diego Aerospace Museum
in California, bringing the number of SI affiliates to 142 in 39 states,
plus the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico and Panama.
Aaron Glavas, senior coordinator of the Smithsonian Affiliations Program,
said that Illinois and its museums, including the Sousa
Archives and Center for American Music (SACAM), “perform a
vital public service for the people of Illinois and visitors throughout
the region. We look forward to strengthening the relationship between
our institutions to expand and enhance that service.”
Three U. of I. units – the Krannert
Art Museum, the University
Library and SACAM, which is under the aegis of the Library –
got the affiliation process rolling. Those three units will be early
beneficiaries of the partnership, but the benefits will be available
campuswide, including to all other U. of I. museums, galleries and collections.
In its announcement on Sept. 2, the Smithsonian wrote that it was pleased
to announce the establishment of the partnership between its Affiliations
Program and Illinois.
“A world-class leader in research and education, the University
of Illinois also is home to the Krannert Art Museum, an AAM-accredited
facility, housing more than 8,000 works of art representing the cultures
of Africa, Asia, Europe and the Americas, and to the University Library,
one of the largest public university libraries in the world.”
Scott Schwartz, director of SACAM, will serve as the liaison or facilitator
between university units and the SI. He said he takes “great pride
in knowing that these two internationally recognized institutions of
higher knowledge – the SI and the U. of I. – have come together
for the betterment of learning for future generations.”
According to Schwartz, the SI sees its affiliates as “vehicles
to help get its collections out to the broadest public possible.”
Last year an estimated 21 million people visited Smithsonian-Affiliate
institutions.
The Smithsonian also helps promote the preservation and educational
missions of its affiliates, Schwartz said, and facilitates “greater
collaboration between its affiliates across the country and world –
“one of the greatest benefits of an affiliation with the SI.”
Others involved in the application for membership were Paula Kaufman,
university librarian, and Pauline Cochrane, professor emerita, both
in the University Library; Kathleen Harleman, director, and Karen Hewitt,
deputy director, Krannert Art Museum; and Richard Herman, chancellor
of the Urbana campus.
The affiliations program is available to 501 (c)(3) nonprofit cultural
or educational institutions interested in obtaining Smithsonian collections
on a long-term basis.
Affiliate organizations may integrate Smithsonian collections into exhibitions,
educational initiatives and research programs; incorporate the many
outreach services of the Smithsonian: curriculum development in local
schools, lectures, traveling exhibitions, workshops and study tours;
and “borrow” Smithsonian staff expertise in areas of conservation,
collections care and exhibition development.
Schwartz said that “significant artifacts and archival documents
that best complement the university’s exhibition and programming
of its historical collections would make the best use of this affiliation.”
He also sees “enhanced opportunities” for Illinois faculty
and students to participate in a variety of internships and fellowships
at and through the SI and working with “leaders from diverse academic,
museum, archives, library and preservation communities in our nation’s
capital.”
“But the opportunity to develop new and innovative collaborations
across academic disciplines at Illinois is perhaps the greatest benefit
of the new affiliation.”
Schwartz began the process to obtain SI affiliation more than a year
ago. He knew the effort to “establish a vital link and collaborative
relationship” would be well worth his time because he had been
an archivist for the SI’s Duke Ellington and American Music Collections
in the Archives Center of the National Museum of American History, Behring
Center, before coming to Illinois in 2003.
Thus Schwartz knew that as an affiliate, the university would be able
to share the SI’s public programming, educational outreach, academic
mentoring and borrowing of historical artifacts for exhibitions “in
ways that would not have been as possible had we not become an affiliate.”
He said he also recognized that the partnership would “expedite”
the process of borrowing objects from the SI, something with which he
also has some acquaintance.
Last year, for example, and largely the result of his existing relationship
with the staff of the NMAH, Schwartz borrowed John Philip Sousa sheet
music and piano rolls, and hired the Smithsonian Jazz Masterworks Orchestra.
The occasion was the Sousa Sesquicentennial, a month-long celebration
last November that Schwartz produced in honor of the “March King’s”
birth in particular, and of American music in general. Schwartz arranged
the music festival to coincide with the national American Music Month,
held annually in November.
For the 2006 celebration of American Music Month at Illinois, Schwartz
is planning once again to tap the SI, specifically, to bring to campus
the Smithsonian Chamber Ensemble and the SI’s Stradivarius and
Amati violins for a month-long festival tentatively titled “Illinois
Chautauqua: Life Long Learning Through the Performing Arts.”
“By becoming an affiliate, the university has elevated its loan
request for these historic music instruments by demonstrating that it
shares with the SI a mission of academic excellence, educational outreach
and public engagement.”
This November’s American Music Month celebration, detailed at
www.library.uiuc.edu/sousa
and titled “Lifescapes of America’s Music,” features
a performance of original jazz compositions by Billy Strayhorn and lectures
by Walter van de Leur, artistic director of the Dutch Jazz Orchestra
and the leading Strayhorn scholar; a youth fiddling contest and benefit
concert for the preservation of American music and a local theater,
the Virginia; lectures by prominent physicians on music and healing;
and exhibitions.
According to Schwartz, the Sousa Archives and Center for American Music
is “rapidly becoming a vital research and preservation repository
of archival papers documenting America’s wind band traditions,
the early evolution of electronic music and “an incredible ethnomusicology
collection.”
SACAM is home to the world’s largest collection of original music
composed and arranged by John Philip Sousa, including original scores
and parts, published music and manuscripts, personal papers, photographs,
programs, broadsides and artifacts.
With more than 10 million volumes, the University Library is the largest
public university collection in the world.
The Krannert Art Museum’s strengths include the Trees Collection
of European and American Painting, the Olsen Collection of pre-Columbia
Art and a small but exquisite collection of Asian art, and a large and
important collection of works on paper.
“This museum was one of the reasons the U. of I. was so attractive
to SI as an affiliate,” Schwartz said. He can be contacted at
217-244-9309 and at schwrtzs@uiuc.edu.
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