Fashion Exhibition Struts its Stuff

Tuesday, March 15th, 2016 | Shef Rogers | Comments Off on Fashion Exhibition Struts its Stuff

‘Simplicity is the keynote of all true elegance.’ ― Coco Chanel

LIB-SC Fashionista Exhibition 420 Poster 16 (2)Entitled Fashion Rules OK, this truly special display opened last Friday at the de Beer Gallery, Special Collections, University of Otago and will run through 3 June 2016.

In Hollywood Costume (2012) Valerie Steele writes: ‘fashion is usually defined as the prevailing style of dress at any given time, with the implication that it is characterised, above all, by change… Fashion is also a system, involving not only the production and consumption of fashionable clothes but also discourses and imagery’. Some of these discourses and imagery are showcased in Fashion Rules OK, revealing both the allure and the work of fashion. Drawing on a diverse collection of books, magazines, and objects, Fashion Rules OK also presents some highs and lows of fashion style from the Regency period to the Moderns; some iconic Fashion Greats; and aspects (often forgotten) such as fashion etiquette, fashion marketing, fashion theory, and costume.

Notable items on display include historical works such as Sir Thomas More’s Utopia (1684), Racinet’s Le Costume Historique (1888), The Ladies’ Gazette of Fashion (May 1856), and The Glass of Fashion: Some Social Reflections by a Gentleman with a Duster (1921). Contemporary fashion magazines such as Vogue, Dazed & Confused, and Harper’s Bazaar will also feature. And there are (among others) the Fashionistas: Christian Dior, Issey Miyake, and Elsa Schiaparelli. New Zealand is not forgotten. There are sample fashion photographs and fashion house invitations from the Avice Bowbyes Collection; Bowbyes was a lecturer in the Home Science Department at Otago and for 20 years the reporter on French fashion for the Otago Daily Times. And there are samples of indigenous fashion items like the high summer issue of New Zealand Fashion Quarterly (1999) and Black Magazine (2015). In addition, spot Barbie, and the Pantone 2016 Spring colours!

For further information, please contact Dr Donald Kerr, Special Collections Librarian (Donald.kerr@otago.ac.nz), Romilly Smith (Romilly.smith@otago.ac.nz) or Dr Elaine Webster (elaine.webster@otago.ac.nz)

NZ Books hails Hocken biography

Tuesday, March 15th, 2016 | Shef Rogers | Comments Off on NZ Books hails Hocken biography

timthumbDonald’s book on Hocken as collector has garnered another strong review, this time fromChris Szekely, Chief Librarian of the Turnbull.  Click here to download a PDF of the review.

Well done, Donald.

Reminder about Book Collecting Talk at DPL next Wednesday, 10 March

Friday, March 4th, 2016 | Shef Rogers | Comments Off on Reminder about Book Collecting Talk at DPL next Wednesday, 10 March

poster of eventCome hear how the owner of the largest second-hand bookshop in New Zealand, and the largest online bookstore in Australasia, hunts down his literary treasures.

Warwick Jordan has spent over 30 years as a second-hand bookseller, and developed Hard to Find Bookshops, which at one time ballooned into nine stores in five cities. He has also dabbled in printing, publishing over 30 authors in the late 1980s. He is now happily running the highly successful Hard to Find Books in central Dunedin.

Event is free, but bookings are essential

When: 10th Mar 2016 6:00pm-7:00pm
Where: Dunningham Suite, 4th Floor, Dunedin City Library

North East Valley Project Lilliputian Library

Thursday, March 3rd, 2016 | Shef Rogers | Comments Off on North East Valley Project Lilliputian Library

Ruth Arnison, founder of the Lilliputian Libraries, Marty Cancilla, director of the NEV project, and Pat McCarty, the artist who decorated the book fridge, at the Leap Year Launch.

Ruth Arnison, founder of the Lilliputian Libraries, Marty Cancila, director of the NEV project, and Pat McCarty, the artist who decorated the book fridge, at the Leap Year Launch.

The NEV project recently launched its own rather Brobdingnagian Lilliputian Library created from a former fridge.  Shef Rogers has agreed to maintain the contents fresh and tasty, and so would welcome any donations, especially of children’s books, to keep both compartments well stocked.  And please feel free to stop by for a snack any time.

World Book Day Lecture: Rick Gekoski in conversation with Paul Tankard

Thursday, February 18th, 2016 | Shef Rogers | Comments Off on World Book Day Lecture: Rick Gekoski in conversation with Paul Tankard

GekoskiWe are delighted to have the opportunity to welcome Dr. Rick Gekoski to campus for the 2016 World Book Day Lecture.  To be held at 5:30 pm in Burns 2 on Thursday, March 3rd, the talk will take the form of an interview discussion with Dr. Paul Tankard of the Department of English and Linguistics.

Rick Gekoski is a lively raconteur who has enjoyed knowing many modern writers and helping them sell their libraries and archives. Author of Tolkein’s Gown and Other Stories of Great Books and Authors, Outside of a Dog: A Bibliomemoir, and Lost, Stolen, or Shredded: Stories of Missing Works of Art, Gekoski has been described by The Tatler as “Bill Bryson, only on books.” His reflections on a life filled with books will provide a fitting celebration for World Book Day in Dunedin.

 

World Book Day Annual Dinner–Tickets now available

Thursday, February 18th, 2016 | Shef Rogers | Comments Off on World Book Day Annual Dinner–Tickets now available

183_SanJose_Banquet_02Book now for one of the 50 spots available for dinner following the World Book Day Lecture with Rick Gekoski.  The dinner will be a buffet meal at the University of Otago Staff Club following the 5:30 lecture, and will cost $45.  A cash bar will be available, along with the usual raffles and general festivity.  We hope you can join us.  We need to know numbers for catering by next Friday, 26 February, so don’t delay in expressing your interest.

Warwick Jordan Presents, Dunedin Public Library, 10 March

Thursday, January 21st, 2016 | Shef Rogers | Comments Off on Warwick Jordan Presents, Dunedin Public Library, 10 March

Warwick Jordan in bookshopHow Do You Do…? Rare Book Collecting.

A chance to hear how the owner of the largest second-hand bookshop in New Zealand, and the largest online bookstore in Australasia, hunts down his literary treasures.

Warwick Jordan has spent over 30 years as a second-hand bookseller, and developed Hard to Find Bookshops, which at one time ballooned into nine stores in five cities. He has also dabbled in printing, publishing over 30 authors in the late 1980s. He is now happily running the highly successful Hard to Find Books in central Dunedin.

Event is free, but bookings are essential

When: 10th Mar 2016 6:00pm-7:00pm
Where: Dunningham Suite, 4th Floor, Dunedin City Library