The Frick Fine Arts Library ~ Early History Main MenuThe Frick Fine Arts Library: Early HistoryOverview of the Early YearsThe Library's First CollectionThe Library TodayBibliographyKiana Jonesb8d0148cfe1a9b42c398d1fb4667b2c7d9509c1e
Resume of Expenditure
12016-07-13T11:45:46-07:00Kiana Jonesb8d0148cfe1a9b42c398d1fb4667b2c7d9509c1e101752Owned by The Frick Collection. Resume of Expenditure Involved in Founding the Department of Fine Artsplain2016-07-13T11:46:40-07:00Helen Clay Frick Papers, Series: Pitt Fine Arts Department. The Frick Collection/Frick Art Reference Library ArchivesKiana Jonesb8d0148cfe1a9b42c398d1fb4667b2c7d9509c1e
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1media/books2.jpg2016-07-11T07:52:13-07:00The Library's First Collection20plain3023422016-11-02T07:37:54-07:00The Frick Fine Arts Library's first collection was composed of a considerable amount of books, photographs, and slides. Planning for the collection itself involved budgeting the gift that Miss Frick had given the Fine Arts Department and taking note of everything purchased with those funds. Although the history discusses the first collection as made up of over 1,000 books, the expenditure notes that 3,000 were purchased as a foundation for the first collection (Friends of Frick Fine Arts 1987, 21). In a letter to Chancellor Bowman, Miss Frick outlined the trip that Dr. Clapp would take to Europe in order to collect materials for the first collection. She says, "[i]t is understood that he will sail shortly for a year's absence abroad: Six months of this time he will collect material, such as books, slides, and photos and the additional six months he will devote his time to the preparation of his courses" (Frick 1925-1985).
While Dr. Clapp was traveling Europe, he often wrote back to Miss Frick in order to update her on his progress. After his return, lists quantifying the amount of items that were to be a part of the first collection were made. Here is the list, for example, of how many books were purchased, from where in Europe, and for how much: Having knowledge of what materials were a part of the library's collection, not simply how much and from where, could be valuable to have in order to come to certain conclusions about what the founders' vision was for the library and the Fine Arts Department. Throughout this project I have focused on trying to discover the first books and where they were purchased, but discovering what slides and photographs were acquired, and where those collections were purchased, would be an equally interesting provenance project.