Posts By: Jeanne Schniedewind

25 Years of Program Notes

Published: April 9, 2025

If you have attended one of our Chamber Music at the Clark concerts, you have had the pleasure of reading the engaging program notes. These brief narratives that give concertgoers historical and artistic context for the music they’re hearing have been crafted by our very own Bruce Whiteman, Clark Librarian Emeritus. Bruce began composing program…

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Announcing New Head Librarian

Published: March 20, 2025

I am very pleased to announce that the Clark Library has hired Derek Quezada Meneses as Head Librarian, effective March 31, 2025. Derek brings to the role a wealth of experience in special collections and rare books librarianship. Having worked as a graduate student assistant in 2009-2010, Derek is no stranger to the Clark Library, As…

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Librarians and Conservators Lead Successful Family History Workshop at the Clark Library

Published: March 19, 2025

On Saturday, March 8, librarians from the UCLA William Andrews Clark Memorial Library partnered with conservators from the UCLA Library Preservation & Conservation Department to lead “Preserving Your Family History,” a workshop designed to teach members of the Los Angeles community to care for their paper-based family heirlooms. Participants brought their photographs, photo albums, scrapbooks,…

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Graduate Certificate in Early Modern Studies Provides Research Opportunities and Funding

Published: March 19, 2025

For over ten years the Center for 17th– & 18th-Century Studies has administered the Graduate Certificate in Early Modern Studies, an Interdisciplinary Certificate for Matriculated Graduate Students that has been approved by and adheres to the criteria set by the UCLA Graduate Council. This program opens pathways for graduate students at UCLA to explore the…

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The Center has a New Campus Address

Published: March 18, 2025

The Center for 17th– and 18th-Century Studies has moved from Royce Hall. After serving the University from both towers in Royce for many years, it was time to depart and move across the walkway to Rolfe Hall. Monday, March 17 was the first day in the new office space. Our new, freshly renovated, and newly…

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When Pi Meets Pie: The William Andrews Clark Memorial Library Celebrates Pi Day

Published: March 14, 2025

The William Andrews Clark Memorial Library celebrated the 38th Annual Pi Day along with schools, bakeries, and libraries across the United States. On March 14, 1988, physicist Larry Shaw inaugurated the holiday at the San Francisco Exploratorium. He connected pie with pi (π), a unique irrational yet constant number, to stimulate interest in mathematics (and…

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Ahmanson-Getty Fellow Dan Rafiqi Presents His Research at the Core Program Conference “Early Global Caribbean: Conference 2: Convictions”

Published: March 10, 2025

In 1688, Jean Olry, a Frenchman living in Martinique, savoured pineapple for the first time—a rare luxury for Europeans in the seventeenth century. Two years later, while writing his autobiographical account, he vividly recalled the pineapple’s exquisite appearance, declaring it “the most beautiful fruit in all the Indies…[and] indeed, the whole earth.” He also fondly…

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Historians, Literary Scholars, and Archaeologists Convened at the Clark Library for the Core Program Conference “Early Global Caribbean: Conference 2: Convictions”

Published: March 3, 2025

On February 21-22, historians Carla Gardina Pestana (UCLA) and Gabriel de Avilez Rocha (Brown) curated a lively second conference on the Early Global Caribbean. Historians, literary scholars, and archaeologists convened at the Clark Library to discuss the theme of “Convictions.” Both early career and established scholars delivered ingenious papers on the Caribbean before the sugar…

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Ahmanson Undergraduate Scholarship Seminar

Published: January 29, 2025
Oil Painting: Robert Lovelace Preparing to Abduct Clarissa Harlowe by Francis Hayman

Applications are now open for the Spring 2025 Ahmanson Undergraduate Scholarship Seminar, “The Greatest Novel in the English Language? Samuel Richardson’s Clarissa.” Application Deadline: Friday, February 7, 2025. The application form can be accessed at https://bit.ly/4g7xNBk. This seminar, taught by Professor Cass Turner, UCLA Department of English, offers a deep dive into a text that is…

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Watermarks in Early Modern Cookbooks

Published: January 20, 2025

During my time as a Fellow at the Clark Library, I focused on watermarks in early modern cookbooks, exploring how they can provide valuable insights and add new layers of meaning to our interpretation of manuscript culture. While working with the recipe books, I examined the collection of household manuscripts (MS.2016.009), which originated from a…

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Balourdet Quartet Returns to the Clark with a Special Guest

Published: January 18, 2025

On Sunday, December 15, 2024, the Center & Clark were delighted to host the Balourdet Quartet for a return engagement during the 30th anniversary season of Chamber Music at the Clark. Among the guests in attendance was composer Nicky Sohn, who introduced her composition “Galaxy Back to You,” which was premiered at this event. It’s…

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Digital Collections Librarian, Krystal Boehlert, joins the Clark Library

Published: January 17, 2025

We are pleased to welcome Krystal Boehlert, the new Digital Collections Librarian, to our Clark Library team. Krystal comes to us with a wealth of knowledge and experience. Her passion for photography launched her into the world of image management at the Rochester Institute of Technology (RIT) where she received a BFA degree in Photography…

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Carla Pestana and Librarians Share the Clark’s Holdings on Magic

Published: December 20, 2024

UCLA Newsroom contacted students and faculty for their reflections on the question, “What is magic?” Director Carla Pestana and Clark Librarians shared a wealth of holdings on the topic of magic at the Clark Library. Their contribution can be found at the end of the UCLA Newsroom article What is Magic?  under the heading “MAGICAL TOME TIME“….

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Clark Library Collaborates with American Trust for the British Library to Provide Fellowships

Published: December 10, 2024

The Clark Library, in collaboration with the American Trust for the British Library (ATBL), will offer the option for applicants for 2025-26 Clark Library Short-Term Research Fellowships also to be considered for ATBL Research Fellowship Program support, designated to fund research at the British Library. The ATBL Research Fellowship is an add-on short-term fellowship that…

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Celebrating the 30th Anniversary of Chamber Music at the Clark

Published: November 25, 2024

A performance by the New York-based Calidore String Quartet kicked off the 30th season of Chamber Music at the Clark. The Nov. 17 recital was dedicated to the memory of Peter Hanns Reill (1938–2019), who founded the concert series and served for nearly two decades as its director. In addition to the Calidore’s performance, the program featured…

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Early Global Caribbean: Core 1: Convergences Conference

Published: November 22, 2024

On October 18-19, the UCLA William Andrews Clark Memorial Library hosted the first conference in this year’s Core Program on the Early Global Caribbean, bringing together scholars to explore the cultural, political, and economic convergences that defined the early Caribbean world. The conference’s overarching theme, the interactions between Indigenous peoples, Africans, and European colonizers, showcased…

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Ida Altman lectures on the “Caribbean Kaleidoscope”

Published: November 22, 2024

The Caribbean has always been a region of dynamic convergence, where peoples, ideas, and technologies intermingled in complicated ways. In her talk, “Caribbean Kaleidoscope: Convergence and Transformation in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries,” Professor Ida Altman of the University of Florida explored this history on Thursday, October 17 at UCLA’s William Andrews Clark Memorial Library….

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Second Annual Spotlight Talk

Published: November 18, 2024
Wood engraving featuring hills and mountains receding into distance. Entitled "Monterey Hills" by Paul Landacre

Speaking in person to an intimate gathering of scholars, curators, students, and artists, followed by a lively discussion, Johanna Drucker’s spotlight talk on Los Angeles-based wood engraver Paul Landacre (1893-1963) provided important insights into an under-explored area in the Clark Library’s collection. Drucker outlined three main points: Landacre’s constant struggle to earn a living with…

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Reflections from a History of Science Fellow

Published: November 16, 2024

During my month’s residence as a History of Science Fellow at the Clark Library, I was able to conduct archival research to support my doctoral dissertation, “On Vegetables and Vermin: The Politics of Insect-Plant Encounters from the Early Modern to the Anthropocene.” This project foregrounds the ways in which interactions between plants and insects, from…

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Celebrating 30 Years of Chamber Music at the Clark

Published: November 2, 2024

In 2024-25 the Center for 17th-and-18th-Century Studies and Clark Library celebrate the 30th anniversary of Chamber Music at the Clark, which began in 1994 as a tribute to William Andrews Clark Jr. The Clark Library’s founder, William Andrews Clark, Jr., was also founder of the Los Angeles Philharmonic Orchestra and personally covered all of the…

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