Exhibits

Bright Sparks: Photography and the Talbot Archive celebrates the Bodleian Libraries' acquisition of the archive of the British inventor of photography, William Henry Fox Talbot, and the legacy of h
The Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library hopes to inspire an engagement with the past to transform the future.
In traditional publishing, writers and artists entrust editors, designers, printers, and many others with making decisions about how to produce and distribute their work.
San Francisco Center for the Book and San Francisco Public Library join forces to present a retrospective look at the role the color copier played in avant-garde art movements in the Bay Area.
The creative career of Joseph Jacinto “Jo” Mora (1876-1947) was both compelling and diverse.
This is a rare opportunity to view the complete set of woodcuts known as The Great Passion, produced by the most famed artist of the German Renaissance, Albrecht Dürer (1471-1528).
'The Rankin Files' is a selection of highlights from the literary archive of Scottish crime writer Ian Rankin.

Ian Rankin is Scotland's best known contemporary crime writer.
Explore the beauty and complexity of moviemaking through sketches, storyboards, and designs that illuminate the production of motion pictures from the silent era to the present day in this new exhi
This facsimile exhibition covers the life and work of Amy Lowell (1874–1925), a controversial, cigar-smoking, outspoken, Pulitzer Prize-winning poet who was also a major collector of rare books and
The announcement of photography’s invention in January 1839, first in Paris and then in London, introduced a ‘new power’ into British life.