February 2023
“Images of ‘Black life, Black joy,’ are immortalized in historic Charlottesville portraits” – from PBS NewsHour
A recent story from PBS NewsHour featuring the Library’s “Visions of Progress” exhibition, as well as the Memorial to Enslaved Laborers and other recent work at UVA, begins:
Behind serpentine walls: Centering enslaved laborers at UVA
This story was originally published as part of the 2021 Annual Report.
Inaugural “STEM for Everyone” lecture searches for extraterrestrial life
The Milky Way Galaxy seen over the Karl G. Jansky Very Large Array west of Socorro, New Mexico. (NRAO/AUI/NSF, Jeff Hellerman)
Staff prepare for book move as renovation nears end
The reopening of the new main library, Alderman, is just under a year away, but Beth Blanton, Director of Collections, is already deep in the process of mapping the book move into the new space. “I realized I have more than 50 spreadsheets — I stopped counting — keeping track of the collections in the book move,” she said, reflecting on a process that directly involves more than a dozen Library staff members and will touch more than a million printed books.
Just in time for Valentine’s Day: It’s Love Data Week!
In his “Sonnet 116” William Shakespeare describes what he sees as the truest kind of love — the marriage of two minds.
Recommended reels & reads this Black History Month 2023
Archives of architecture: Now available on Grounds and beyond
The Library’s rich collection of visual resources related to the history of the University of Virginia reached a new level of accessibility in September 2021. That month, the digital library JSTOR included five public collections from UVA in a project to add high-quality images to its more than 1,900 journal titles. With the exception of Culbreth Theatre’s image collection of stagecraft props, the UVA images that were added to JSTOR’s Open Community Collections platform are all from the Library.