Archives Directory for the History of Collecting in America

Archives related to: Barber, Margaret L.

titleArt Association records, blk 1930-1938
repositoryDuke University Library
descriptionThe Duke University Art Association was formed by William K. Boyd in 1930. The Association planned and organized art exhibits, gallery talks, and other art appreciation activities on the Duke campus until the early 1940s.

Collection includes minutes, correspondence, photographs, exhibit catalogs, lists of objects, membership lists, and related materials. Major subjects include faculty spouses, art appreciation, the Woman's College Library, the American Federation of Arts, the Carl Shurz Memorial Foundation for the Development of Cultural Relations Between the United States and Germany, the College Art Association, and the Southern States Art League. The bulk of the materials range in date from 1930 to 1938.

Historical Note
In 1930, Duke University professor William K. Boyd, pursuing the early concept of a library-museum for the Woman's College Library, negotiated with Margaret L. Barber for a twenty-five year loan of a substantial part of her collection. Mrs. Barber, of Williamsburg, Missouri, spent her life collecting art and antiques.

In a letter calling the organizing meeting in October 1930, Boyd wrote: "I have a feeling that the time has come for us to organize a Duke Art Club or Art League with the immediate objective of finding ways and means to purchase the paintings and books sent to us by Mrs. Barber."

In response to Boyd's letter, a group of prominent Duke faculty and administrators and their spouses met in the Woman's College Library on October 21, 1930 to discuss the organization of the Art League of Duke University. The meeting minutes state: "Dr. Boyd appointed the following executive committee to serve with him: Mrs. White, Mrs. Webb, Dr. R. L. Flowers, Mrs. Few, Dr. Harvie Branscombe, Mrs. Gross, Dr. Paul Baum, and Mrs. Griggs.

The following officers were selected: W. K. Boyd, Chairman; Mrs. N. I. White, Vice-Chairman; Mrs. Lillian B. Griggs, Secretary-Treasurer." At one of the first meetings, members decided to change the name of the organization to the Art Association.

The Art Association continued to plan and organize exhibits, gallery talks, and other art events, until Boyd's death in 1938, after which the activities of the Art Association went into decline. However, the formal study of art at Duke University began with the establishment of the Department of Aesthetics, Art, and Music in 1942.

The Barber Collection was displayed at the Woman's College Library until 1956, when the twenty-five year plan ended. At that time, Duke University purchased a few pieces from the Barber estate.

Location
Library Service Center (Reading Room only)
extent1000 items (1.0 linear ft.)
formatsAdministrative Records Correspondence Photographs Exhibition Catalogs Exhibition Files
accessIn off-site storage; 24 hours advance notice may be required for use.
record linkhttps://proxy.lib.duke.edu/login?url=http://scriptorium.lib.duke.edu/dynaweb/univarchives/uaartassoc
record sourcehttp://library.duke.edu/catalog/search/recordid/DUKE003450885
finding aidInventory in repository and on web.
acquisition informationSource of Acquisition: Transfer; 1971-1981.
updated03/16/2023 10:30:02
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titleProfessor James Rogers' Reports
repositoryWilliam Woods University
descriptionReports concerning Margaret Lincoln Barber's art collection
formats
record sourceBurke, Marcus "Treasures of Mexican Colonial Painting"
updated11/12/2014 11:30:10
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