Transcendence (Philosophy) in art; Androgyny (Psychology) in art; Jungian psychology; Art--Psychological aspects
From a Jungian perspective, this thesis investigates the ideal of androgynous transcendence by identifying the Jungian anima-animus archetype within three specific artworks produced by three differing traditions. As a result, this thesis...
In spring 2006, the Frazier International History Museum, in conjunction with the Ekstrom Library Photographic Archives at the University of Louisville, mounted an exhibit of 47 photographs taken by a young French foot soldier during World War I....
This thesis briefly describes my current body of work, both formally and conceptually. The section titled Pattern Within Form, describes the concepts behind the use of stamps and molds, and the process of separately throwing segments of a single...
Houses; Street lights; Agricultural machinery & implements; Railroad locomotives; Railroad stations; Dirt roads; Churches; Methodist Episcopal Church (Bucklin, Kan.); Christian Church (Bucklin, Kan.)
Montage of images from Bucklin, Kansas. Individual pictures are labeled. An image of a frame house is labeled, "Residence, Bucklin, Kans." There are pictures of two frame churches, one labeled, "Christain Church" [sic] and the...
Schools; Classrooms; Children; Desks; Teachers; Stoves; Newspapers; People
Boys and girls sit at iron and wood desks in a classroom while a woman observes. The students are reading a newspaper titled Southern Agriculturist. The boys wear sweaters or jackets over button up shirts with ties. One girl has short bobbed hair,...
Laboratories; People; Physics; University of Louisville
A man wearing a suit holds a piece of an apparatus that includes metal conductors and what might be a generator. Next to him is woman in a plaid blouse who has her hands on a panel which appears to be connected to the apparatus. There is an...
A booth at the Kentucky State Fair displays information about the Department of Labor. A table and three chairs sit in front of the display. From the display, "Dept. of Labor, Edward F. Seiller. Chief. Bureau of Agriculture, Labor and...
The Louisville Leader was an African-American newspaper published from 1917 to 1950 by I. Willis Cole in Louisville, Kentucky. This issue is sixteen pages and is titled "The National Medical Souvenir Edition".
A young girl, wearing a dress and apron, carries a wicker basket and tall stick, or staff, as she walks alongside a flock of geese in a field. Photographer Kate Matthews' signature is on the lower right corner of mount. Also handwritten on album...
An elderly African-American gentleman is sitting on a porch step with his head resting in one hand. He is holding a hoe in one hand. He may be Henry Porter. The photograph was titled "Unc' Henry" in an album assembled in the early 1930's...
Views of rural streets with one-story houses and factories, including the Wood-Mosaic Company. Although titled Eagen Avenue, these images are in the area of Louisville Avenue and Wabasso Avenue in the Highland Park neighborhood.
Construction equipment; Hoisting machinery; Sewerage; Culverts
Crane or other construction machinery on site where a culvert is being built. A large ditch has been dug out with vertical beams placed along part of the perimeter. One man stands on lumber titled into the hole, while other men stand by the...
An emaciated man lies in a hospital bed at Heritage House Nursing & Convalescent Care with a carton of Camel cigarettes on the table next to him. Titled edited by a cataloger to remove personal information.
Simmons University (Louisville, Ky.); School yearbooks; Schools; Students; African American college students; African American college teachers; African American educators; African Americans--Education (Higher); Alumni & alumnae; Alumni &...
Yearbook published by students of Simmons University, Louisville, Kentucky, 1920-1921. Includes images of the administration, seniors, undergraduates, organizations, activities, athletics and sections titled poetry and wit and humor. Pages are also...
Two figures, perhaps a woman and a child, walk along a snowy path by a woods toward a house. The caption is identified on the card as a quote from Wordsworth. The original has white glitter on the "snow." The signature "M...
Monuments & memorials; Sculpture; Parks; Swimming pools; Swimmers; Courthouses; Railroad stations; Automobiles; Schools; Young Men's Christian associations; City & town halls; Hospitals; Waterfronts; Ships; Post offices; Dwellings; Railroad...
Souvenir postcard folder from Hannibal, Missouri. Many of the postcards relate to Mark Twain and his characters. There are three pictures of Twain's home, one featuring Twain himself standing in front of the house. Other images include the...
Several people look over information tables and posters that appear to describe various kinds of pollution. A map titled "OPEN YOUR EYES" leans against one of the tables. A mannequin wearing a surgical mask stands in the foreground...
Photomontage (design for pamphlet cover); "Heartfield also produced a montage for the cover of the 1943 Free German League of Culture anthology, Freie deutsche Dichtung (Free German poetry), titled And Yet It Moves! […]. Like the world...
"Dali's variation on Paolo Uccello's work of the same title, this is probably his most sacrilegious painting." (Caption); The Profanation of the Host […] is one of Dali's most sacrilegious paintings (although later he tried to exonerate...